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  • (#1) Neon Genesis Evangelion

    • Megumi Ogata, Megumi Hayashibara, Kotono Mitsuishi

    Evangelion is considered to be one of the greatest anime ever made. It's also considered to be one of the most difficult anime to wrap your head around, and the bizarre ending to the 24-episode series is no exception.

    After 23 episodes of convoluted theology, Freudian sexual drama, and smashy-crashy mecha-action, protagonist Shinji finds out that the shady and powerful organization he worked for decided to merge all of humanity into one big soup of souls.

    The resulting finale wasn't the climactic conclusion fans had hoped for. Instead, Shinji mopes about in a chair for a few minutes before having an epiphany about his self-worth. When this happens, everyone he knew in life appears to applaud and congratulate him.

  • (#2) School Days

    • Chiaki Takahashi, Daisuke Hirakawa, Kaname Yuzuki, Haruka Nagami, Yoshiro Matsumoto, Megu Ashiro, Keiko Imoto, Ryōko Tanaka, Tae Okajima

    At first glance, School Days seems like your typical, innocuous, slice of life romantic drama. The story revolves around high school student Makoto and his troubled relationships with two girls: Totohona, who he falls head over heels for, and Sekai, who becomes increasingly jealous of the lovebirds she accidentally played matchmaker for.

    But none of the rising tension throughout the series could prepare viewers for the explosive and graphic ending. Sekai — suddenly demonically possessed by the "scorned woman" trope — goes all knife-happy on Makoto, killing him. After discovering Makato's body, Totohona then turns the knife on Sekai in order to find out whether or not she fibbed about being pregnant. In the end, her hunch that turns out to be correct. Yay?

  • (#3) Clannad

    • Yûichi Nakamura, Mai Nakahara, David Matranga

    If you love to empty tissue boxes in one sitting then you should definitely binge Clannad. On the other hand, if you enjoy endings that make logical sense then maybe this is one to avoid. 

    Clannad centers on a young man named Tomoya whose life goes from bad to worse. First, the love of his life dies right after she gives birth to their daughter. Then, after years of depression-fuelled neglect, the daughter dies too.

    The collective tragedy compels Tomoya to inexplicably travel back in time to when his wife was still alive. Or maybe he just slips permanently into a trauma-induced dream. Or maybe he wakes up in the real world at the end to discover the whole thing was a nasty dream? We'll never really know for sure.

  • (#4) Gurren Lagann

    • Nikolas Freeman, Jacob Hope Chapman, Doug Walker

    Gurren Lagann was produced by Gainax, the same studio who made Evangelion. While this connection doesn't exactly inspire confidence in the show's ability to conclude with an understandable and satisfying ending, Gurren Lagann's last episode is not the crushing disappointment that Evangelion's was.

    Unlike EvangelionGurren Lagann's finale delivers with mech-fighting on a cosmic level. After securing victory at great cost, the hero Simon is finally free to host his dream wedding. Right after vows are exchanged, his bride Nia — who turns out to be an alien powered by the very entity that Simon heroically blew up — dissolves before his eyes. Apparently, Gainax doesn't want to give Simon a break. 

  • (#5) Berserk

    • Nobutoshi Canna, Unshô Ishizuka, Marc Diraison

    The legendarily gruesome shonen series Beserk follows the medieval warriors Griffith and Guts on their bloody quest for kingly status. Though there's plenty of political commentary to ground the action, the fantasy elements really crank up to 11 at the end, delivering a truly twisted finale.

    After Guts rescues Griffith from wasting away in a torture dungeon, Griffith's necklace suddenly becomes a horrifying, screaming face, turns the world into a living nightmare, and offers Griffith the chance to become the ruler of Hell. After slaughtering all of his friends to secure the deal (and engaging in an absolutely sickening rape scene) Griffith takes the job, and the series abruptly ends with Guts walking off towards his next adventure.

  • Panty & Stocking with Garterbelt on Random Most WTF Anime Endings

    (#6) Panty & Stocking with Garterbelt

    • Jamie Marchi, Arisa Ogasawara, Mariya Ise

    With The Powerpuff Girls's aesthetic and Adult Swim's sense of raucous humor, Panty & Stocking with Garterbelt is yet another example of Gainax pushing creative boundaries. It's also another example of a classic WTF Gainax ending.

    Titular sisters Panty and Stocking are angels with super-powered lingerie and a love of sugar. Like most celestial beings, their job involves slaying evil things, with Garterbelt acting as the "Charlie" to their "Angels."

    The show is wonderfully surreal, but nothing could prepare viewers for the curveball it throws in the final episode. As the two sisters are enjoying their "walk off into the sunset" moment, Panty suddenly chops her sister into pieces and reveals that she's been a demon the whole time. It's hilariously fitting, but super frustrating in terms of closure. 

  • Akira on Random Most WTF Anime Endings

    (#7) Akira

    Based on Katsuhiro Otomo's groundbreaking manga of the same name, the plot and imagery in Akira is absolutely bonkers, and the ending doesn't leave viewers with any easily decipherable answers.

    After Tetsuo — teen motorbike hooligan living in Neo Tokyo in 2019 — is infected by the byproduct of a covert military experiment, his body and mind become monstrous, and he is instilled with godlike powers.

    The resulting saga ends with a bang (a Big Bang, in fact). The closing shot of the film sends the audience rushing through a psychedelic tunnel that — though this is not immediately obvious — is actually the start of a whole new universe. Woah.    

  • Magikano on Random Most WTF Anime Endings

    (#8) Magikano

    This seinen series follows a young witch named Ayumi, who is cursed to lose her powers, and Haruo, the only person who can save her from this fate. Ayumi's mission is to try to awaken Haruo's magical potential, but first she has to get around his three super-protective sisters, who also happen to secretly be witches.

    In the final episode, Haruo's potential is dramatically revealed to be linked to the evil and powerful Demon King. However, this actually doesn't matter, because the entire world is stuck in a never-ending Groundhog Day loop with no evidence to suggest that each new reoccurrence will be any different from the last. So, the whole show was pointless then? 

  • Fullmetal Alchemist on Random Most WTF Anime Endings

    (#9) Fullmetal Alchemist

    • Vic Mignogna, Aaron Dismuke, Romi Pak

    Alchemy, mysticism and philosophy collide in the world of Fullmetal Alchemist. The series is full of WTF moments, from cruel and sudden deaths, to hidden identity revelations, to that chimera scene involving an unfortunate dog, a more unfortunate family, and one very disturbed man.

    While the show is no stranger to insanity, it saves its biggest "wait... WHAT?" moment for the very end of the series. After Alphonse sacrifices himself to revive Edward using the philosopher's stone, Ed repays his brother's sacrifice with one of his own.

    Except, Ed doesn't die. Instead, he's transported into a parallel world. Our world, circa World War II, where he'll spend the next two years attempting to get back to his own universe.

  • Macross Frontier on Random Most WTF Anime Endings

    (#10) Macross Frontier

    • Maaya Sakamoto, Kikuko Inoue, Houko Kuwashima, Sōichirō Hoshi, Jun Fukuyama, Megumi Toyoguchi, Aya Hirano, Kenta Miyake, Katsuyuki Konishi, Tomomichi Nishimura, Rie Tanaka, Sanae Kobayashi, Hirofumi Nojima, Yuichi Nakamura, Aya Endo, Hiroshi Kamiya, Tadashi Miyazawa, Kaori Fukuhara, Megumi Nakajima

    Set in the Macross universeFrontier mixes mechs and aliens with love triangles and pop idols for maximum melodrama. Macross Frontier: The Wings of Goodbye was the second and final theatrical spin-off of the series, intended to tie up any hanging plot threads for a proper send-off.

    Rather than do that, the film sees Alto — the dashing male lead — decide that an inter-species space battle is the perfect time to break the heart of one of his love interests (Ranka). However, before he can confess his true feelings to his other potential match (Sheryl), he unexpectedly dies. Sheryl promptly faints from the shock of it all, and — skipping forward in time — we see her cryogenically frozen body with Ranka sitting next to her. In short, nobody really wins.

  • Happy Lesson on Random Most WTF Anime Endings

    (#11) Happy Lesson

    • Nana Mizuki, Kikuko Inoue, Daisuke Kishio, Mie Sonozaki, Kimiko Koyama, Larissa Wolcott, Tamaki Nakanishi, Josh Meyer, Ruri Asano, Kahoru Sasajima, Lana Lesley, Leigh Anderson Fisher, Shawn Sides, Shaneye Ferrell, Carla Witt

    Happy Lesson is a harem anime with one notable distinction. While most examples of the harem genre feature an awkward male character surrounded by potential love interests, Happy Lesson subverts the trope by making its cluster of women the "mothers" to lonely teen boy Chitose.

    Then, in the final moments of the last episode, the show totally drops this subversion. The five mothers decide that Chitose doesn't need maternal love anymore. No, he needs wifely love. In the most Oedipal twist imaginable, all five of Chitose's "mothers" marry him on the spot, which probably causes him lasting psychological damage.

  • Mirai Nikki - Another: World on Random Most WTF Anime Endings

    (#12) Mirai Nikki - Another: World

    • Ayame Goriki

    Imagine if the kids from Battle Royale were all equipped with prophetic digital diaries containing entries from the future. Got that? Good, you pretty much understand the premise of Mirai Nikki (also known as Future Diary.)

    The series actually has a wholly satisfying and conclusive ending, up until the post-credits scene. Skipping 10,000 years into the future, we're shown that the god of the "Second World" and future diary holder, Yuki, is the lone survivor of the deadly game.

    Zooming in on the last entry in Yuki's diary, the words, "Yumo came to meet me" appear just before the screen goes black, leaving an annoyingly large slew of questions unanswered. (Luckily, Redial was created to tie up these loose ends.)

  • The Big O on Random Most WTF Anime Endings

    (#13) The Big O

    • Mitsuru Miyamoto, Steve Blum, Akiko Yajima

    The Big O follows "Negotiator" Bruce Wayne Roger Smith, who is regularly called to action in his Batmobile Big O mech — a leftover weapon from a forgotten era — to protect Paradigm City from emerging threats. The domed city appears to be the last human stronghold left on Earth, for reasons that are shrouded in mystery.

    The ending — though an interesting one — kind of wraps the "it was all a dream" and "Groundhog Day" tropes up into one frustrating revelation: Paradigm City is a simulated reality that the Big O can reset by melding with another mech, Big Venus. Once this happens, the show rewinds back to the first episode.

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About This Tool

The ending of an anime has a huge impact on the rating and evaluation of the work itself. Anime fans have been followed the updating of animated series for months or even years in order to watch the ending they want. Some endings are often unexpected, but they must be reasonable. However, in order to attract attention, many authors or production teams often create totally unacceptable endings.

To be honest, creating a perfect animation ending is a task that requires a huge effort from the studio or the writer. The random tool lists 13 animes with the most WTF anime endings.

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