Kagurabachi is one of those rare manga that catches fire so quickly that fans usually expect an anime adaptation within a year or two. Instead, they’ve taken destiny into their own hands by animating entire scenes with such skill and passion that people are starting to wonder if the community itself might finish the anime before any studio does.
And with the latest fan animation by Endomame, the Kagurabachi fandom has gone into overdrive, setting social media ablaze with reactions ranging from awe to disbelief. The fluidity of motion, the impact frames, and the cinematic presentation rival the work of professionals. It doesn’t just feel like a passionate fan project; it looks like something straight out of a high-budget anime.
The result? An explosion of fan voices across Twitter, Reddit, and Discord declaring what they’ve always believed: Kagurabachi is peak. For many, this was the first time they saw Kagurabachi in motion, and it cemented the belief that the manga’s cinematic paneling was born to be animated.

The most striking part about Endomame’s work is how professional it looks. The project doesn’t carry the rough edges of amateur animation; it’s polished, deliberate, and bursting with flair. Fans were quick to notice similarities to legendary animator Yutaka Nakamura, known for his explosive fight choreography in Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood and My Hero Academia.
The person behind the project, known online as Endomame, is quickly becoming a folk hero in the Kagurabachi fandom. This isn’t their first time either; previous works like Chihiro vs. Sojo and The Samurai Standoff already set the standard, but this latest piece has elevated them to legend status.
In many ways, Endomame represents the best of anime fandom: someone so passionate about a series that they give their time and talent freely, lifting an entire community’s excitement along the way.
Why this series inspires this kind of fandom

Part of the reason Kagurabachi fans are so intense is that the manga itself invites cinematic imagination. Hokazono Takeru’s paneling is dynamic, his fight choreography feels storyboarded, and his tone is unapologetically serious.
Every clash of swords, every sorcerer’s spell, every quiet stare-down, it all screams “anime adaptation.” That’s why fan animators can take a single-panel sequence and expand it into something breathtaking without having to invent much from scratch.
Why fans are already waiting for the Kagurabachi anime

Kagurabachi may only be nearing its 92nd chapter, but the conversation around its anime adaptation is already louder than most series with double that run. The reason is simple: Hokazono’s manga reads like it was born for animation.
Every sword clash, every pause in combat, and every cinematic panel feels storyboarded in advance, making it incredibly easy for fans to imagine how fights will play out on screen. With the Sword Bear Assassination arc raising the stakes, people are beginning to speculate about how those brutal battles and emotional beats will translate when adapted.
Adding fuel to the fire is the leak suggesting Cygames Pictures might handle production. That puts Kagurabachi in the same timeline as Kaiju No. 8, which received its anime announcement between its 90th and 111th chapters.
By that logic, fans believe Kagurabachi could receive confirmation any day now, with an anime dropping as early as late next year. But excitement is also paired with caution; viewers don’t want a rushed or poorly executed adaptation, fearing it could fall into the same traps as Record of Ragnarok or Go! Go! Loser Ranger!
That’s why the fandom is already debating key requirements: superb animation, clean direction, and a muted yet cinematic art style akin to Chainsaw Man. Add to that the buzz around potential voice casting, fans are calling for heavyweights like Gojo’s, Megumi’s, and Overhaul’s actors, and it’s easy to see why Kagurabachi’s community is impatient. They know the story has the potential to become the next anime juggernaut, and they’re not willing to settle for anything less.
The future: Will fans finish the job themselves?

Here’s the question nobody thought they’d be asking: Will Kagurabachi fans animate the whole thing themselves? And honestly? With the momentum building, it doesn’t feel impossible.
If Endomame and others keep producing shorts, the community could stitch them together into a kind of unofficial anime. It wouldn’t be the first time fandoms have carried a series beyond its official life, but it would be one of the most impressive.