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The 8 Best Horror Anime to Scare You Out of Your Comfort Zone

Vampires, ghouls, stalkers, and even a killer notebook haunt the greatest horror stories in Japanese animation.

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In the nineties, any anime fan who fell asleep to Toonami probably remembers jolting awake to the sound of Goku yelling at the top of his lungs on Dragon Ball Z. But as popular as the macho action series was (and still is!), this era of animation was also full of jaw-dropping horror. Whether reacting to the cutesy side of the genre or just experimenting with what they could get away with, animators flocked to horrific monstrosities, ghost stories, demons, vampires, and the kind of gore that you were scared to find in the back of a Blockbuster video store. Today, there’s a more palatable mix of the two genres in popular anime series, including Attack on Titan, Death Note, Hellsing, and Maniac. But for the best horror anime of all time, there’s no beating our eight picks below.

Death Note

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American horror films have their tropes: creepy smiles, little dolls, demonic possessions. But what about a cursed notebook? In Death Note, an emo teenager finds a notebook that kills anyone whose name you write into it. It’s an impressive power—and now it’s in the dangerous hands of a Hot Topic–shopping narcissist. Can the greatest detective in the world stop him before everyone ends up dead?

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Hellsing

In an alternate-history version of post–World War II England, vampires run amok. The Hellsing organization—run by a descendant of the famous vampire hunter Van Helsing—is the only line of defense. Partnering with a powerful vampire named Alucard (yes, read that backward), the Hellsings may finally curb the bloodsucking menace once and for all.

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Tokyo Ghoul

In this dark horror series by Sui Ishida, Tokyo is overrun with flesh-eating humans called Ghouls. When a horrific accident transforms college student Ken Kaneki into a half-human/half-ghoul, he sets out to curb his hunger and resist becoming a monster.

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Parasyte

One fateful night, tiny aliens invade Japan and latch onto their human hosts by infecting their brains. High schooler Shinichi Izumi wakes up in time to stop an alien from crawling up his nose, but the creature burrows itself into his hand instead. Since both beings maintain their sentience, Izumi and his new parasite work together to survive a crazy new world.

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Mononoke

More like a fever dream than a comprehensible narrative, Mononoke is an experimental twelve-episode series that takes its inspiration from old Japanese folklore paintings. Focusing on a creepy “medicine seller” who feeds off others’ negative energy, the colorful and uniquely animated series is certainly unlike anything you’ve ever seen before.

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Vampire Hunter D

Much like Blade, Vampire Hunter D is a half-human/half-vampire dhampir who retains all the powers of a vampire but none of the weaknesses. He is the perfect vampire hunter—and one of the coolest protagonists in late-eighties anime. Oh, and he also rides a cybernetic horse.

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Perfect Blue

Directed by the late Satoshi Kon, Perfect Blue follows a Japanese pop star who slowly loses her mind after she is stalked by an obsessive fan. The 1998 film often tops lists as one of the greatest Japanese animated films of all time—and its horrifying bathtub scene was even re-created in Darren Aronofsky’s Requiem for a Dream. Though Aronofsky only publicly recognized the similarities between those two films, Perfect Blue likely also inspired his 2010 hit thriller, Black Swan.

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Attack on Titan

The newest entry on the list is a fantasy series that dives as deeply into war and politics as it does giant monsters. In the wake of a massive attack, humans are forced to build massive walls around their cities to keep out fifty-foot-tall cannibals called Titans. No one knows where they came from or what they want, but the young Eren Yeager is determined to put an end to the tragedy. Regardless of how you feel about the series’ controversial politics, there’s no denying the chokehold that Attack on Titan’s horrifying imagery has had on anime for the past decade.

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Honorable Mention: Uzumaki

Junji Ito, Japan’s celebrated master of horror, will finally see his 1998 series, Uzumaki, adapted into an anime later this year. With animation that looks like the manga pages are literally moving before our eyes, it’s no wonder that the production has been heavily delayed over the past five years in the pursuit of perfection. After seeing the first trailer last year, I’m certain that this adaptation about a town that becomes obsessed with spirals is nothing short of amazing.

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