---
title: 'Video 6DqS9RVLbus'
source: 'https://youtube.com/watch?v=6DqS9RVLbus'
video_id: '6DqS9RVLbus'
date: 2026-06-14
duration_sec: 0
---

# Video 6DqS9RVLbus

> Source: [Video 6DqS9RVLbus](https://youtube.com/watch?v=6DqS9RVLbus)

## Summary

Spring 2026 is packed with new anime, and this video highlights the top 10 must-watch shows, ranging from psychological thrillers to post-apocalyptic epics, including hidden gems and critically acclaimed adaptations.

### Key Points

- **Marriage Toxin** [0:28] — An assassin named Gero must find a wife or his sister is forced into an arranged marriage, leading to hilarious and heartfelt situations.
- **Kill Blue** [1:34] — A feared assassin wakes up in a 13-year-old's body after a mission goes wrong and goes undercover at a middle school, blending action and comedy.
- **The Barbarian's Bride** [2:35] — A female knight captured by a barbarian king is proposed marriage instead of torture, leading to a story about war and emotional depth.
- **Mao** [3:37] — Rumiko Takahashi's latest work follows a modern-day girl pulled into Taisho era Japan, teaming up with a cursed exorcist.
- **Akane Banashi** [4:44] — A girl enters the world of rakugo to avenge her father's career destruction, with performances treated like battles.
- **Liar Game** [5:46] — A honest woman is forced into a tournament of lies and manipulation, teaming up with a genius con artist to survive.
- **Demons of the Shadow Realm** [6:52] — Hiromu Arakawa's new anime about twins prophesied to control demons, set in an isolated village, animated by Bones.
- **Release That Witch** [7:52] — A mechanical engineer isekai'd into a medieval kingdom uses science and magic to start an industrial revolution.
- **Witch Hat Atelier** [8:52] — A girl discovers magic can be learned by anyone, leading to a journey of apprenticeship and redemption after a spell turns her mother to stone.
- **Nippon Sangoku** [9:50] — Post-apocalyptic Japan split into three warring nations, with a rational officer seeking unification, inspired by the Three Kingdoms.

### Conclusion

Spring 2026 offers a diverse lineup of anime, from comedic assassins to deep political epics, ensuring there's something for every viewer.

## Transcript

Spring 2026 has been absolutely stacked.
With so much dropping at once, it's easy
to miss the shows that actually matter.
So, [music] I went through everything,
the hype picks, the hidden gems, the
ones critics are quietly losing their
minds over, and [music] put together the
ones you cannot afford to skip.
Psychological thrillers,
post-apocalyptic war epics, a legendary
mangaka making her return. Let's not
waste any more time. On number 10,
Marriage Toxin. Okay, so hear me [music]
out. What if the most dangerous weapon
in an assassin's arsenal was a wedding
ring? That's literally the energy
Marriage Toxin is walking in with. Our
guy Gero is a professional killer, cold,
calculated, never misses. But his
organization drops the most unhinged
assignment on him. Find a [music] wife
or his little sister gets forced into an
arranged marriage. So now this man, who
has spent his entire life mastering the
art of death, has to master the art of
dating. And it goes exactly as badly as
you'd think. Every girl he approaches
becomes a mission, every conversation
becomes a tactical operation. The man
treats romance like a hostage situation,
and honestly, it is hilarious. But what
keeps this from being just a gag show
[music] is that there's genuine warmth
underneath all the chaos. Gero actually
cares about his sister, [music] about
the people around him, and slowly that
starts to matter. If you want something
that hits hard on action and then
immediately makes you laugh out loud,
this is your anime. Don't sleep [music]
on it. Number nine, Kill Blue. Imagine
being the most feared assassin alive,
perfect record, never failed a single
hit, and then one mission goes sideways.
A genetically modified wasp stings him,
[music] and he wakes up in the body of a
13-year-old kid. I'm not kidding, that
is the actual plot. His mind stays the
same though, the instincts, the
experience, the cold [music] calculating
killer brain, all still there, trapped
inside a middle schooler. And his boss
has the audacity to give him a new
order. Go undercover at a middle school.
>> [music]
>> What follows is this insane mix of
deadly serious assassin action and
absolutely chaotic school life comedy.
One second, he's neutralizing a threat
like a professional. Next second, he's
fumbling through lunch with
12-year-olds. The contrast alone carries
the whole show. From the creator of
Kuroko's Basketball, [music] so you know
the character writing is going to hit.
If you want action, comedy, and a
premise you've genuinely never seen
before, Kill Blue might just be the most
fun you have this season. On number
eight, The Barbarian's Bride. Let me set
the scene before you judge the title.
[music] Serafina is the strongest female
knight in the west. She spent her entire
life proving herself in a world that
constantly told her women don't belong
on a battlefield. She fights anyway. She
wins anyway. [music]
And then, she gets captured. In any
other story, you know what happens next,
torture, humiliation, the worst. She
knows it, too. She literally asks them
to just kill her instead. But the
barbarian king proposes marriage. Viorg
isn't some brute. He's composed,
intentional [music]
genuinely trying to win her over. So
now, Serafina's entire worldview is
being dismantled episode by episode.
Everything she believed about these
people is slowly falling apart.
Underneath the romance, there's a real
story about two rulers carrying the
weight of a war neither of them started.
[music] That layer is what separates
this from every other enemies to lovers
setup. If dark fantasy with actual
emotional depth is your thing, this one
will catch you completely off guard.
Number seven, Mao. If you grew up
watching Inuyasha, let me stop you right
there, because this one is going to hit
different. Mao is the latest work from
Rumiko Takahashi, the same woman who
gave us Inuyasha, Ranma 1/2, and Urusei
Yatsura. The woman is a legend, and with
Mao, [music] she's doing what she does
best, throwing a modern-day girl into a
completely different era and building
something genuinely haunting around her.
Nanoka is a middle schooler who
technically died at age 8. Somehow, she
didn't. And one day, walking past an
abandoned shopping arcade, she gets
pulled straight into Taisho era Japan.
There, she meets Mao, a cursed exorcist
who has been alive for 900 years hunting
a cat demon that's been destroying lives
for just as long. Here's what gets me,
though. These two aren't just paired up
by coincidence. The same [music] curse
connects them. Their pasts are tangled
in ways neither of them fully
understands yet. And slowly, [music]
episode by episode, those answers start
coming. If Inu Yasha shaped your
childhood, Mao might just do the same
for your 2026. On number six, Akane
Banashi. I want you to think about
something for a second. Imagine your
father spent his entire life chasing one
dream. Years of practice,
>> [music]
>> sacrifice, everything he had. And then,
on the single most important day of his
career, someone crushes [music] it. Not
fairly, just crushes it. That's where
Akane Banashi begins. Akane watched her
father get destroyed on the day that
should have been his [music] greatest
moment. And instead of walking away, she
decided she's going to climb to the very
top [music] of rakugo herself and make
the man responsible eat every single
word. Now, I know what you're thinking.
Rakugo? That old Japanese storytelling
art? Hear me out. The manga is one of
the best things running in Weekly Shonen
Jump right now, [music] and it works
exactly like a battle shonen. The stages
are the battlegrounds. The [music]
performances are the fights. The rivals
are vicious. And Akane herself is the
kind of protagonist you just cannot stop
rooting [music] for. A girl, a
male-dominated world, and a revenge
story with real heart behind it. This
one earns its place on this list. Number
five, Liar Game. You know what's
actually wild? The creator of Squid Game
literally cited this manga as one of his
inspirations. And for 20 years, Liar
Game just sat there. No anime, no
English translation, just a cult
following keeping it alive through sheer
passion. That wait is finally over.
Here's the setup. Nao Kanzaki is one of
the most honest people you'll ever meet.
She trusts everyone, assumes the best in
people. [music] And then one day, she
receives a suitcase with 100 million yen
and a letter telling her she's been
entered into the Liar Game tournament,
where lying, manipulation, and betrayal
are the only tools that matter. She is
completely out of her depth, so she
finds Akiyama, a genius former con
artist. And together, they try to
survive a game designed to destroy
people exactly like her. What makes this
special is the dynamic, pure honesty
versus pure strategy. And somehow, her
naivety becomes a weapon nobody sees
coming. Madhouse is handling this. 24
episodes, no breaks. They are not
playing around. On number four, Demons
of the Shadow Realm. Let me just say the
name first, Hiromu Arakawa, the woman
who created Fullmetal Alchemist, one of
the greatest manga ever written. And
this is her first new anime since
Brotherhood. That alone should make you
stop scrolling. Yuru grows up in an
ancient isolated village, completely cut
off from the modern world. He thinks
airplane contrails are dragon gas.
That's how disconnected this place is.
He has a twin sister named Asaup,
separated from him since childhood. And
then one [music] day, armed forces storm
the village looking specifically for
him. Everything he knew gets destroyed
in a single episode. Two twins, [music]
prophesied to control all demons, have
to find each other and stop the world
from falling apart. The power system is
layered and strategic, exactly like
alchemy was in FMA. No random power-ups.
Every fight means something. Bones Film
is animating this, [music] the same team
behind Brotherhood. If that doesn't make
you want to watch it immediately, I
don't know what will. Number three,
Release That Witch. I want you to think
about the most overused isekai setup,
guy dies, gets transported to another
world, gets overpowered abilities,
destroys everything. You've seen it a
hundred times. Release That Witch does
something completely different. Cheng
Yan is a mechanical engineer who wakes
up as Roland Wimbledon, the fourth
prince of a medieval kingdom. No magic
system, no cheat skill, [music]
just his knowledge of physics,
chemistry, and engineering. Instead of
conquering the world with brute force,
he starts an industrial revolution. He
saves a witch from execution, then
another. Instead of fearing their
powers, he studies them and realizes
magic can fuel steam engines, build
weapons, reshape an entire civilization.
Yes, this is a Chinese donghua, but if
Lord of Mysteries showed you what
Chinese animation can do, Release That
Witch continues that conversation.
Mature story, intelligent protagonist,
layered world. Don't sleep on this one
because of where it came from. Number
two, Witch Hat Atelier. Here's something
[music] that hit me. Coco has dreamed of
magic her entire life, but she grew up
believing what everyone around her
believed, [music] that magic is
something you're born with. If you don't
have it in your blood, you simply don't
get it. And then one day, she discovers
that's a lie. Anyone can use magic. It
just requires the right knowledge and
tools. That secret has been deliberately
hidden from ordinary people for
centuries. And the moment Coco finds
out, everything falls apart. A spell
goes wrong, her mother gets turned to
stone, and suddenly this girl who just
wanted to be a witch is carrying a
burden she never [music] asked for. She
becomes an apprentice under Qifrey, a
mysterious witch with his own secrets,
learning magic while trying to undo what
she accidentally did. The manga has won
the Harvey Award and the Eisner Award.
Critics are already calling this one of
the best anime of 2026. [music] This is
not just a good show, it's the kind of
anime that reminds you why you fell in
love with this medium. On number one,
Nippon Sangoku. I saved this one for
last because nothing else this season
comes close for me. Near future Japan,
nuclear war, pandemics, natural
disasters. The country didn't just
collapse, it regressed. Technology fell
back to the Meiji era. The population
was decimated, and what remained split
into three warring nations locked in a
brutal fight for dominance. At the
center of all of it is Aotearu, not a
warrior, not a king, just a sharp,
rational officer who sees what nobody
else is willing to see, that this war
has no winner, that the only way forward
is unification, and he decides to make
that happen. The story draws from the
legendary Three Kingdoms period of
history and drops it into a
post-apocalyptic future. Political
intrigue, war strategy, dark humor,
>> [music]
>> real human stakes, all wrapped in
animation that looks like nothing else
airing right now.
>> [music]
>> This is the kind of anime that only
comes around once in a while, the kind
that stays with you. My number one of
spring 2026, no competition. And that's
it. If you found something new to watch,
make sure to smash that subscribe button
for more anime content just like this.
I'll see you in the next one. Peace out.
