logo
All the winners of the 2025 Anime Awards

All the winners of the 2025 Anime Awards

Daily Maverick28-05-2025
Despite a very impressive gathering of Asian animation talent, one series dominated the 2025 Anime Awards. Here are all the winners announced during the 25 May ceremony in Tokyo.
Between enchanting fantasy, high school romance, and supernatural thrillers, the 2025 Crunchyroll Anime Awards looked set to be a showdown between heavyweights of the animation industry in Asia. This year, series like Frieren: Beyond Journey's End, The Apothecary Diaries, Dan Da Dan, and Delicious in Dungeon all went head-to-head, but out of nowhere, it was Solo Leveling that dominated the awards show, which was hosted in Tokyo on 25 May.
Winning nine of the 13 awards it was nominated for, Solo Leveling took home all the glory when it clinched the coveted Anime of the Year prize. It's worth noting that this year's Crunchyroll Anime Awards covered all anime released from October 2023 through to December 2024, meaning that only the first season of Solo Leveling was eligible. The show, which is based on the South Korean web novel of the same name and its webtoon adaptation, has been a massive hit since it first debuted in January 2024. A power fantasy about a monster-hunter named Sung Jin-woo, who rises in status from weakling to an absurdly powerful necromancer, Solo Leveling has been a critical and commercial smash hit so far. The series is available with a Crunchyroll subscription.
While Solo Leveling was a lock to win awards like 'Best Action,' there has been spirited debate online over the other awards it bagged. With anime like Frieren – about an elven mage who outlives her adventuring companions – and Dan Da Dan – where high schoolers battle both aliens and the supernatural – also nominated for 'Best New Anime Series,' fans of those shows (both on Netflix) felt that Solo Leveling's win was underserved compared to how those series feature more nuanced and layered storytelling in comparison.
Other notable 2025 winners included Anime Film of the Year Look Back, from Chainsaw Man creator Tatsuki Fujimoto, about two young girls who bond over drawing manga (and which is on Prime Video); ever-popular Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba (Best Continuing Series and Best Animation); and Blue Box (Best Romance), where teens deal with complicated feelings as they train for basketball Nationals. Both Demon Slayer and Blue Box are in the South African Netflix library.
For the record, voting for the Anime Awards is weighted 70/30 between a panel of anime industry judges and public opinion. The accolades have been dished out since 2017, when groundbreaking figure skating drama Yuri on Ice became the first Anime of the Year winner.
The 2025 Awards Ceremony was an emotional night for the people who worked on the iconic Attack on Titan anime, as well as it was awarded Crunchyroll's first-ever Global Impact Award to honour the mark it had made on pop culture worldwide since debuting back in 2013.
Looking ahead, this year will see several highly anticipated anime films and TV series released. A trilogy of Demon Slayer films will wrap up the anime, and the next arc of Chainsaw Man will also be on the silver screen. Meanwhile, on TV, while anime series like Dragon Ball Daima, Sakamoto Days, and Lazarus are earning rave reviews from critics and fans alike, new seasons of megapopular properties like Spy x Family, One-Punch Man, and My Hero Academia are lined up for home viewing later in 2025. DM
This story was first published on PFangirl.
Below you'll find all of this year's winners, while a full list, including nominees, can also be found here.
2025 Crunchyroll Anime Awards Winners
Anime of the Year
Solo Leveling
Film of the Year
Look Back
Best Original Anime
Ninja Kamui
Best Continuing Series
Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba – Hashira Training Arc
Best New Series
Solo Leveling
Best Opening Sequence
'Otonoke' – Creepy Nuts (Dan Da Dan)
Best Ending Sequence
'request' – krage (Solo Leveling)
Best Action
Solo Leveling
Best Comedy
Mashle: Magic and Muscles – The Divine Visionary Candidate Exam Arc
Best Drama
Frieren: Beyond Journey's End
Best Isekai Anime
Re:ZERO – Starting Life in Another World – Season 3
Best Romance
Blue Box
Best Slice of Life
Makeine: Too Many Losing Heroines!
Best Animation
Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba – Hashira Training Arc
Best Background Art
Frieren: Beyond Journey's End
Best Character Design
Dan Da Dan
Best Director
Keiichiro Saito (Frieren: Beyond Journey's End)
Best Main Character
Sung Jinwoo (Solo Leveling)
Best Supporting Character
Fern (Frieren: Beyond Journey's End)
'Must Protect At All Costs' Character
Anya Forger (Spy × Family, Season 2)
Best Anime Song
'Otonoke' – Creepy Nuts (Dan Da Dan)
Best Score
Solo Leveling – Hiroyuki Sawano
Voice Performance Awards
Japanese
Aoi Yuki (Maomao – The Apothecary Diaries)
English
Aleks Le (Sung Jinwoo – Solo Leveling)
Arabic
Hiba Snobar (Anya Forger – SPY × FAMILY Season 2)
Brazilian Portuguese
Charles Emmanuel (Sung Jinwoo – Solo Leveling)
Castilian Spanish
Masumi Mutsuda (Sung Jinwoo – Solo Leveling)
French
Adrien Antoine (Kafka Hibino – Kaiju No. 8)
German
Daniel Schlauch (Monkey D. Luffy – One Piece)
Hindi
Lohit Sharma (Satoru Gojo – Jujutsu Kaisen, Season 2)
Italian
Ilaria Pellicone (Kyomoto – Look Back)
Latin Spanish
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mermaiding magic offers a playful escape
Mermaiding magic offers a playful escape

The Star

time3 hours ago

  • The Star

Mermaiding magic offers a playful escape

In a suburban Maryland swimming pool, amid scuba divers practicing with oxygen tanks and young children wearing floaties while holding paddle boards, more than a dozen technicolored mermaid tails glittered through the surface in the nine-foot deep end. The tails - fabric and silicone, purple and gold, some dotted with sequins or lined with seashells - swaddled the lower bodies of the swimmers, adorned with seashell crowns and necklaces, bright blue wigs and colorful streams of tinsel flowing through their hair. 'Go,' Margaret Emerick shouted, after the mermaids - most of them members of the Metro MerFolk Facebook group - undulated over to pool's back wall and assembled in a line. They then swam in pairs from one end of the Merritt Clubs swimming pool in Eldersburg to the other while a photographer filmed underwater, their fluttering tails creating what looked like an underwater kaleidoscope. Amid an era of escalating stress in which live-action role-playing and other forms of cosplay are a popular escape, 'mermaiding' is spreading through the Washington region - its lure attracting merfolk who are either looking for a unique form of exercise, a deep sense of community or something to take them out of their everyday human lives. 'Living here is fast; everything is fast. There's traffic. There's so many people, and it feels so suffocating sometimes,' said Montara Hewgill, a Gaithersburg resident who does supply-chain work for a company that makes space equipment. 'But, to escape into something magical, anything as far from this reality as you can, feels really nice, even if it's just for a couple of hours.' Although there is no official census, the mermaids of the Washington area estimate that they have the second-highest population in the country, behind Florida. In 2023, their community was featured heavily in the Netflix docuseries 'MerPeople,' which focused on several aspiring mermaids' volatile journeys to earn admittance into elite pods, such as the Circus Siren Pod in Laurel, Maryland.

Mermaiding magic offers a playful escape
Mermaiding magic offers a playful escape

IOL News

time8 hours ago

  • IOL News

Mermaiding magic offers a playful escape

'Go,' Margaret Emerick shouted, after the mermaids - most of them members of the Metro MerFolk Facebook group - undulated over to pool's back wall and assembled in a line. The tails - fabric and silicone, purple and gold, some dotted with sequins or lined with seashells - swaddled the lower bodies of the swimmers, adorned with seashell crowns and necklaces, bright blue wigs and colorful streams of tinsel flowing through their hair. In a suburban Maryland swimming pool, amid scuba divers practicing with oxygen tanks and young children wearing floaties while holding paddle boards, more than a dozen technicolored mermaid tails glittered through the surface in the nine-foot deep end. In an era of escalating stress where live action role-playing and other forms of cosplay are a popular escape, mermaiding is gaining popularity in the area. Although there is no official census, the mermaids of the Washington area estimate that they have the second-highest population in the country, behind Florida. In 2023, their community was featured heavily in the Netflix docuseries 'MerPeople,' which focused on several aspiring mermaids' volatile journeys to earn admittance into elite pods, such as the Circus Siren Pod in Laurel, Maryland. 'Living here is fast; everything is fast. There's traffic. There's so many people, and it feels so suffocating sometimes,' said Montara Hewgill, a Gaithersburg resident who does supply-chain work for a company that makes space equipment. 'But, to escape into something magical, anything as far from this reality as you can, feels really nice, even if it's just for a couple of hours.' Amid an era of escalating stress in which live-action role-playing and other forms of cosplay are a popular escape, 'mermaiding' is spreading through the Washington region - its lure attracting merfolk who are either looking for a unique form of exercise, a deep sense of community or something to take them out of their everyday human lives. They then swam in pairs from one end of the Merritt Clubs swimming pool in Eldersburg to the other while a photographer filmed underwater, their fluttering tails creating what looked like an underwater kaleidoscope. The Metro MerFolk group, which was founded in 2017 and now has nearly 1,000 members, includes women, men and nonbinary people who enjoy getting together to swim as 'a pod' at pools across the D.C. region. Colleen McCartney, a.k.a. the Celtic Siren, created the Facebook group after being wonderstruck by a pod of mermaid performers at a fantasy convention. She decided to shimmy into a tail and see what it was like. Soon, once she located some pools willing to let swimmers wear tails, she started hosting weekly meetups with a friend. A few months later, McCartney, who runs a marketing agency, founded a convention known as MerMagic Con for the budding community of mermaids to keep the momentum going. 'It was just creating space for people to have fun,' McCartney said. 'There's also a lot of people who needed a place to feel accepted, whether they were neurodivergent or they were the alphabet mafia, the LGBTQIA - finding a place that you can let your guard down and actually get in touch with your inner child and play. That's not a space that exists very often.' The group quickly became a refuge from the stressors of work and other aspects of everyday life for dancers, swimmers, government workers, military spouses and parents. For a few hours a week, they could slip on their 'mersona,' take some 'shellfies' with friends and let their creativity flow just for the sake of the enjoyment of playing. But some are also professional mermaids. For example, Hewgill runs the Sugar Sirens pod, whose 13 members perform at Renaissance festivals and events across the mid-Atlantic. Those in the community suspect that the D.C. region's pressure-cooker environment and number of residents with enough disposable income to spend on tails that can cost several thousand dollars contribute to the popularity of mermaiding so far from the ocean. Leigh Targaryen, a member of the Circus Siren Pod who lives in Elkton, Maryland, and works as a dance costume designer and dance teacher, said the allure is intangible. 'There's no other way to describe it other than euphoric,' said Targaryen, who legally changed her last name about 15 years ago to that of the 'Game of Thrones' royal family and also goes by SeaLeigh the Blue Dragon Mer (age: 878). For professional mermaids such as Targaryen and Hewgill, who goes by Mermaid Montara, the meetups provide a welcome reprieve from the physically and financially taxing life of a professional mermaid. At meetups, they're not worrying about evading hypothermia in enormous fish tanks full of frigid water that stings their eyes. They're also not stressing over making the next payment for their specialized insurance covering dangerous performance-oriented jobs, which can range from about $350 to $600 a year. Or, navigating a difficult economy in which event hosts are becoming hesitant to spring for 'luxury' features such as mermaid performers, Hewgill said. At the meetups, all they have to do is play, she said. 'Playing - it keeps the magic alive. It keeps us young. It's one of the things that makes life worth living,' Hewgill said. And for nonprofessional mermaids such as Emerick, it's just a chance to shed any artifice used to get through the real world and transform - through costume, fins, makeup, hair and nails - into something that feels more authentic. 'It's one place that I feel comfortable in my own - would you say skin, or in my own scales?' said Emerick, an organizer for Metro MerFolk who described her occupation as a technical writer for the federal government, without providing specifics. 'You can don that persona that you, maybe in your everyday life, do not feel as comfortable doing, whether you want to be more of a sultry siren or if you want to be a bubbly mermaid. You get to explore those different things.' At the Merritt Clubs pool in Eldersburg, Emerick called out to the group. 'Hey, everyone, we're going to take a 'shellfie' really quick,' she said as she sidled onto the pool deck in her tail and lifted herself onto her knees. Mermaids gathered behind her and smiled for the photo before breaking back into smaller groups, doing flips underwater, helping one another unfasten corsets decorated with images of octopus tentacles and swimming, hand in hand underwater, toward the shallow end. As the sunlight danced on the pool's rippling surface and off their brightly colored scales, they shimmered.

Tyla's ‘We Wanna Party' tour is headed to Asia - and it's giving global groove
Tyla's ‘We Wanna Party' tour is headed to Asia - and it's giving global groove

IOL News

timea day ago

  • IOL News

Tyla's ‘We Wanna Party' tour is headed to Asia - and it's giving global groove

Tyla is set to electrify Asia with her 'We Wanna Party' tour, which kicks off in November. Image: X The partying continues as Tyla announces her 'We Wanna Party' tour. The 'Is It' hit maker recently revealed tour dates for Asia via her Instagram story, and the Asian 'Tygers' are going wild. The tour is set to kick off in November, with stops in Tokyo on November 11, Bangkok on November 14, Hong Kong on November 23, Manila on December 3, and Singapore on December 5. According to the "Live Nation" website, the global superstar will hold her concert in Manila, the Philippines, on December 3 at the SM Mall of Asia Arena in Pasay City. Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Next Stay Close ✕ Ad loading The Singapore leg of the tour will take place on Friday, December 5, at the vibrant Arena @Expo. Ticket sales will go live on August 8. The Grammy Award-winning singer has not revealed any further details so far, and more venue details are yet to be announced. Tyla's 'We Wanna Party' tour comes hot on the heels of her successful mixtape release, which dropped on July 25. It features hits such as 'Bliss', 'Mr Media' and 'Dynamite' (with Wizkid), which is currently taking over TikTok. Additionally, in a recent interview with UK-based digital radio station, Capital Xtra, the 23-year-old singer opened up about the direction she's taking with her new music and her world tour alongside her 21-year-old sister, Sydney Seethal. 'With the music I'm releasing and making now, I really feel like I'm in a stage of experimenting again. I wanna rap, sing, do pop … just try a bunch of stuff without the pressure of dropping an album,' said Tyla. She added that what's coming feels different and would not stand next to 'Water' and feel the same.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store