I’ve been surrounded by anime for years, especially as a dedicated fan. But it wasn’t until I started my blog, All About Anime, back in 2015, that I really stopped to consider what “anime” actually means, and how that meaning keeps evolving. As I’ve watched the industry grow and the global fandom expand, it’s clear that “anime” now stretches far beyond Japan’s borders.

 As someone who’s binged hundreds of series from Japan and beyond, I realised it’s time to unpack what anime really means, especially since its style now influences creators worldwide. So what is anime?

Image showcasing the term 'Anime' with a definition. It features four distinct characters from various anime styles, highlighting the essence of anime as a unique storytelling medium. Anime definition explained with characters showing different anime styles and genres in Japanese animation. Anime definition explained with characters showing different anime styles and genres in Japanese animation

Anime is the Japanese shortened form of the English word “animation”. In its simplest sense, it refers to animation produced in Japan or created in the distinctive Japanese animation style. It is characterised by its stylised art, diverse storytelling, and cultural roots.

Outside Japan, the term almost always points to this specific visual and storytelling approach. Inside Japan, however, “anime” is used far more broadly; it simply means any animated work, no matter where it comes from.

Anime is not a genre; it is a medium. Within anime, you’ll find every genre imaginable: action, romance, horror, slice of life, science fiction, and more. It spans demographics from children’s shows to adult dramas, and it influences manga, games, and fandom culture worldwide. Unlike Western cartoons, anime prioritises emotional depth and stylistic flair over broad appeal.

For me, anime is first and foremost animation used as a storytelling medium. It isn’t limited by geography, language, or even a single visual formula. It covers every genre and every type of narration imaginable: high-stakes action, quiet slice-of-life, psychological thrillers, romance, horror, and everything in between. That’s why my blog, even though it’s called All About Anime, happily covers animation from across the globe. Animation becomes anime when it embraces the art form’s full potential for visual storytelling. I’ve started differentiating by visual styling as more countries produce “anime-influenced” works.

A couple watching a vibrant fireworks display at night, with bright fireworks illuminating the sky in various colours.

The history of anime stretches back to the early 20th century. Japan began experimenting with animation in the 1910s, drawing inspiration from Western techniques but quickly developing its own identity. The oldest surviving Japanese animated short is Namakura Gatana (The Dull Sword), released in 1917. Early works were short, experimental, and often lost to fires or earthquakes, but they laid the foundation for what was to come.

The real explosion happened after World War II  as Japanese studios like Toei Animation experimented with Disney-inspired shorts. Osamu Tezuka, often called the “Godfather of Anime,” revolutionised the medium with limited animation techniques that allowed for longer stories on tighter budgets. His 1963 TV series Astro Boy (Tetsuwan Atom) became the first major anime hit and helped define the format we still recognise today: episodic storytelling, expressive character designs, and cinematic camera work.

It exploded globally in the 1980s via VHS and fansubs, shifting from niche to cultural phenomenon. Culturally, anime grew alongside manga (Japanese comics), which often serve as source material. The two mediums, anime and manga, have always fed each other, creating a powerful feedback loop that turned animation into one of Japan’s most successful cultural exports.

A stylised illustration of a character with long, flowing hair in pastel colours, raising a finger in a gesture of emphasis. The background features dynamic rays radiating outward. anime

Anime isn’t a genre or a trope; it is the canvas. Every story, every character arc, every emotional beat is painted with animation rather than live action. This gives creators freedom to show impossible physics, exaggerated expressions, or breathtaking worlds without the constraints of real-world filming.

In manga, the same principles apply in static form: panel layouts, speed lines, and detailed backgrounds do the heavy lifting that animation achieves through movement. The two mediums are inseparable; most major anime series begin life as manga or light novels.

A character with dark, wavy hair and a sly smile, wearing a black off-shoulder dress, set against a night sky.

1910s–1960s: Pioneering Era Early shorts like Namakura Gatana (1917) mimicked Western styles. Tezuka’s influence birthed TV anime with Astro Boy.

Close-up of a large, sparkling eye with a golden iris and a black pupil, surrounded by shimmering stars.

While anime has no single “look,” certain visual and narrative patterns have become associated with the style:

These patterns allow anime to tell stories that would be prohibitively expensive or impossible in live action. Anime adaptations boost manga popularity, creating a feedback loop where hits like Dragon Ball have come to define the medium.

Anime thrives on recurring patterns that make it instantly recognisable:

  • Scene composition and background detail, animators historically were given whole scenes to direct, rather than just characters.
  • Sound design that works hand-in-hand with visuals, often featuring seiyuu (voice actors) who bring characters to life with incredible range
  • Cinematic directing, unusual angles, dramatic lighting, and fluid (or deliberately limited) motion
A young person lies on a futon, holding a remote control and resting their head on their arm, while watching television.

One of the biggest debates in fandom is the “gatekeeping” question: Is animation made outside Japan still anime?

Some traditionalists insist that only works produced in Japan qualify. I am not one of those people. I have started differentiating by styling rather than geography. As more countries release ‘anime,’ the medium has outgrown its birthplace. For me, anime is less about where it was made and more about how animation becomes a storytelling art form.

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  • Anime is just cartoons for kids: No, more anime series are not child-friendly, like Berserk, which is mature and violent, than series that are child-friendly.
  • All anime is weird/hentai: Ecchi exists, but most is plot-driven; hentai is a porn subgenre, not core anime.
A person with red hair stands in an art gallery, illuminated by sunlight, admiring various framed paintings and sculptures. A large golden statue and a floral arrangement are prominently displayed in the room.

I’ve also noticed clear visual differences worth celebrating:

  • Donghua often features incredibly detailed textures—clothing patterns, fabric folds, hair strands, even skin pores.
  • Classic anime shines in its background scenery and environmental storytelling; the world itself feels alive.
  • Western animation (especially traditional American cartoons) tends to focus heavily on character performance and movement while keeping backgrounds simpler and more stylised.

None of these approaches is “better”; they’re just different artistic choices that enrich the global animation landscape.

A young girl joyfully embraces a dragon with a long, flowing mane against a night sky filled with stars.
  1. Astro Boy (1963) – The godfather of TV anime, pioneering robot boy adventures and limited animation techniques.
  2. Spirited Away (2001) – A masterclass in detailed, painterly backgrounds that make the spirit world feel tangible and alive.
  3. Neon Genesis Evangelion (1995) – Shows how anime can tackle deep psychological themes through symbolic animation and innovative direction.
  4. Attack on Titan (2013–2023) – Demonstrates the medium’s ability to blend intense action with intricate world-building and moral complexity.
  5. Violet Evergarden (2018) – Highlights emotional storytelling through exquisite animation of facial expressions and scenic beauty.
  6. Jujutsu Kaisen (2020–) – Represents modern high-production shōnen with fluid fight choreography that feels cinematic.
  7. Your Name (2016) – Proves anime can deliver breathtaking visuals and heartfelt romance on the big screen.

Anime, to me, has always been about possibility. It’s the reason my blog covers animation from every corner of the planet, even though the name says “All About Anime.” When creators anywhere use animation as their primary storytelling language—whether they call it anime, donghua, or something else entirely—they’re continuing the same artistic tradition that started in those tiny 1917 shorts.

Close-up of hands typing on a laptop keyboard.

As the root term of the entire dictionary, “anime” connects directly to:

What are your favourite examples of anime that showcase the medium’s strengths? Have you noticed the same visual differences between Japanese anime, donghua, and Western animation? What does anime mean to you today? Has your definition changed over time? Drop your thoughts below.


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