I want to say that I came to Dandelion purely as a fan of Gintama who knew the creator’s history and had been curious about what he was up to before the samurai antics took over his career. That would make me sound very measured and intentional. The truth is, I found it on Netflix and clicked play. I had no plan to finish it that night. Then episode 1 happened, and I didn’t stop.

I watched the English dub and binged all seven episodes in one night. I love Gintama. I love Onizuka. There is something in the Dandelion DNA that carries the same energy as both, that sense that something ridiculous is about to happen, that the absurdity is deliberate, and that underneath all of it is something that actually means something. The anime didn’t try to announce this. It just got on with it, which is exactly the right move.

What I got was a weird, heartfelt, occasionally messy supernatural comedy about afterlife bureaucracy and a department that might get axed because some petty higher-up holds a grudge.

There’s something about a series that doesn’t take itself too seriously that just hits the spot for me.

Tap any section below to jump straight there in the review.

Three characters in formal attire, with the one in the foreground having pink hair and glasses, all appearing serious against a softly lit background.
  • Humour: Random, fast, childish in the best possible way.
  • Tone: A balanced mix of lighthearted chaos and grounded, emotional beats.
  • Characters: Distinct enough to carry the show, but several are underdeveloped.
  • Predictability: The plot beats are not surprising, but the execution is. You will guess where it is going and still enjoy how it gets there.
  • Vibe: A quintessential binge that feels best watched alone.
  • Full genre list: Comedy, Supernatural, Fantasy
  • Key themes: Death and grief, corporate bureaucracy and quotas, empathy versus efficiency, found family
  • Type: ONA
  • Episodes: 7
  • Duration to watch in full: +/- 3 hours 30 minutes
  • Age restriction: PG-13
  • Trigger warnings: Brief depictions of past trauma, mild cartoon violence
  • Release date: April, 2026
  • Animation studio: NAZ
  • English dub: Yes
  • Source: Manga (one-shot originally published in Weekly Shonen Jump in 2002)
  • Kanji: だんでらいおん
  • Average rating: 7.4/10
  • Where to stream: Netflix
  • Official hashtags: だんでらいおん
  • Does the story continue in the source material? No
Three characters stand in a room with a red backdrop. A young boy with blue hair and a black outfit looks concerned, while an adult man in a slightly disheveled suit grins confidently. Next to him, another adult man in formal attire, wearing glasses, stands with a neutral expression. A small, winged creature hovers above them, adding a whimsical element to the scene.

Set within the Send-Off Department of the Japanese Angel Federation, Dandelion follows two “Angels,” Tetsuo Tanba and Misaki Kurogane. Their job is simple in theory: track down Earthbound spirits who can’t find peace and guide them to the afterlife. In practice, however, the federation is a bureaucratic mess, and most of their peers are only interested in hitting their quotas. Tetsuo and Misaki prefer a different, much slower approach, choosing to listen to the spirits’ regrets instead of rushing them. Their quiet routine is upended, however, when they encounter a particularly stubborn spirit on the run.

A dramatic scene featuring a character with blue hair and red eyes, covered in blood, expressing shock. In the background, an elderly man looks on in terror while another figure in a suit stands nearby.

I binged all 7 episodes in one go. The story is a hybrid: episodic “spirit-of-the-week” cases layered over an overarching “save the department” plot. The constant “take down the department” plotline provided a nice, steady backbone to the chaos. The motivation behind it? Gloriously petty, the kind of corporate jealousy that feels frustratingly real, and I loved how grounded that conflict remained even when the show got weird.

What did not quite work was the two elder Kyoga sons. I understood the system, family loyalty, and fear of their father, but their willingness to go along with the plan felt underdeveloped. They just… did what they were told and eagerly. The youngest son, however, had the arc I wanted to see: desperate for approval, then finally telling his dad to stuff it. That moment was glorious.

An intense scene featuring two male characters, one in a suit holding a gun to the head of another character dressed in casual attire, who looks frightened. A third character with blue hair watches the situation unfold.

Pacing and plot go hand in hand here. Seven episodes is short. I mean, really short. The anime knows it has limited time, so it moves fast. Sometimes that works; the episodic cases keep things fresh, and you are never bored. Other times, it left me wanting more. The final two episodes introduce Proto (an AI robot) and escalate to a vengeful spirit crisis. It works as a climax, but the transition from “quirky angel workplace comedy” to “full supernatural disaster” happens faster than I would have liked. Still, the fact that I want more is not a criticism. If we get a season two, I will be happy. If it remains a standalone, I will not mind. We got a full story arc. 

The humour and randomness are where this show truly shines. If you’re a fan of Gintama or Onizuka, you’ll likely feel right at home here. The wackiness is infectious, and you never really know what’s coming next. Episode 1 remains my favourite; it perfectly set the tone with a story about a spirit who just wanted to apologise to his wife. I’m with the characters; pudding really is an impossible treat to resist.

Three characters riding a bicycle, with one person seated on the back while the other two pedal. The background features a city scene with shops and trees.

The animation style is clean and uncluttered. The character designs are simple, expressive, and consistent. It’s clean, functional, and lets the character expressions do the heavy lifting, especially when things get chaotic. The colour palette leans warm in the human realm and cooler in the Netherworld, which helped distinguish the two spaces.

Action sequences, particularly the chase scenes and the finale, ran smoothly enough. It never reaches “must-watch-for-the-visuals” territory, but it does not need to. This is a dialogue-driven comedy with occasional action beats, and the animation serves that purpose well enough.

An illustration of a boy's face, viewed upside down, featuring exaggerated facial expressions and spiky black hair, with various Japanese text and logos surrounding the image on a bright turquoise background.

The ending theme animation is a different conversation entirely and is worth watching properly at least once.

The animation is perfectly fine for what the show is. The English dub is solid, too. I rarely feel like seven episodes is enough, but in this case, we got a complete, self-contained story. I wouldn’t complain about a season 2, but I’m perfectly content with how it ended.

Three animated characters in stylish outfits posing against an orange background, with swirling text and musical notes.

The English dub is genuinely well done. The script handles the comedy naturally, and the cast earns the emotional weight of the quieter moments without pushing too hard.

Three characters sitting at a counter in a restaurant, enjoying bowls of ramen. The character on the left is a young boy with short blue hair, smiling as he stirs his noodles. The middle character is a man in a suit with glasses, looking serious while holding a spoon. The right character, also in a suit, appears focused on his bowl. The background features vibrant red decorations.

Misaki Kurogane is a lot of fun to watch. Her dynamic with Tetsuo is the engine of the whole show — they push against each other without ever tipping into actual hostility, and there’s a rhythm to how they argue and then just get on with things anyway.

I found myself really connecting with Tetsuo; he’s the type of character who says the important things without needing a grand speech. His approach to life is something I think I’ll be chewing on for a while.

Masaki Kyouga, the uptight new member assigned to monitor them, grew on me. His arc from rigid rule-follower to someone who understands why the Dandelion does things its way was handled well, given the limited runtime. My favourite scene featuring him is the joke scene: “Now you see me, now you don’t”, and then he just takes off his glasses. That moment made me laugh out loud. Someone in the writer‘s room missed the pun opportunity, though. “Now I see you, now I don’t” was right there.

Harukawa Jun, as a ghost with pretty privilege, was an inspired choice. The recurring bit where every angel present agrees she is too attractive to shoot had me cackling every single time. It never got old. The joke runs longer than you expect, and it is right to do so.

A man in a suit appearing startled as a large creature, resembling a dog, lunges towards him, with motion lines indicating movement.

The pacing is uneven in the middle stretch, specifically in episodes where the resolution of a spirit’s case takes longer to arrive than the build-up can sustain. It’s not a dealbreaker, and the show recovers, but there are moments where you’re waiting for a payoff that the episode isn’t quite ready to deliver. The final two episodes move quickly and purposefully, which actually works in their favour given the tonal shift they’re navigating.

A woman in a pink robe is seated between two men, one with pink hair and glasses and the other with dark hair. They appear concerned and focused.

The show is, at its core, about what it means to sit with someone in their regret rather than processing them through it efficiently. That has a practical application for the spirit cases, and it has a thematic application for how the Dandelion s operates in opposition to institutional pressure. The tension between productivity and genuine care, between closing cases fast and actually helping someone, runs under the entire series without ever becoming a lecture.

Still, for all its flaws, Dandelion made me laugh, think, and tell my dad to watch it. That counts for a lot.

Close-up of a young man in a dark alley, wearing a blazer, with a cigarette in his mouth and a serious expression.

I’m the target audience for this show, and I knew it approximately eight minutes into episode 1. The humour is my kind of humour, unpredictable, committed, and occasionally unhinged in exactly the right ways. The emotional beats landed because the show placed them carefully and didn’t use them too often.

A chaotic, supernatural workplace comedy that surprises you with its emotional maturity and grounded perspective on the present. It is a refreshing, bite-sized watch that proves you don’t need 50 episodes to leave a lasting impression.

 It is its own weird, flawed, deeply watchable thing.

A tall man in a black suit stands beside a girl with blue hair, both looking upwards. A small, angelic creature with a halo hovers in front of them, against a backdrop of green trees.

Strengths:

  • Excellent chemistry between the two leads.
  • A well-paced story that feels complete in just seven episodes.
  • Sharp, witty dialogue that doesn’t rely on tropes.

Weaknesses:

  • Some character motivations—specifically the antagonists—felt a bit forced.
  • The jealousy-driven plot to fire a department felt slightly undercooked at times.
  • Not enough screen time for the supporting cast.
A bowl of ramen topped with sliced pork, soft-boiled egg, green onions, and a piece of nori on a wooden table.

Very much so. I watched all seven episodes in one sitting, and I would do it again. At only seven episodes, you can clear the whole thing in an evening and still be in bed at a reasonable hour. The pacing moves fast, and the cliffhangers between episodes are just compelling enough to keep you clicking “next.” This is not a show you stretch over a week. It is a show you tear through on a Friday night with snacks and zero regrets.

What hooked me was the wackiness and randomness, never knowing what comes next, in a fun way. It reminded me of Onizuka (Great Teacher Onizuka) and Gintama in that regard. Episode one is my favourite of the series. The pudding scene alone? Perfection. I loved the messaging in that episode, and Harukichi and his wife gave me genuine couple goals. They also showed a reality to married life that felt earned, not melodramatic.

What lost me, briefly: the motivation behind getting an entire department fired due to jealousy of one character felt a little stretched. I understood it, but I did not always feel it. Also, some of the younger supporting characters’ motivations felt weak or forced at times. The show has seven episodes, and you can tell which characters got the screen time and which got left behind.

A dramatic scene featuring two animated characters, one with dark hair and a suit, holding a cigarette, and the other with blue hair, engaged in a conversation under a moody light.

High, specifically episode 1. Not immediately, I just binged it, but in six months or a year, when I want something low-stakes and funny and warm? Absolutely. This is the kind of show you put on when you are sick, or when you need a laugh after a bad day, or when you just want to spend time with characters who feel like friends.

It is not a show you rewatch for hidden details or mind-blowing twists. It is a show you rewatch for comfort.

A scene featuring two characters, one carrying another on their back, while a third character walks alongside them. The background has a warm, textured hue.

Misaki Kurogane telling Tetsuo Tanba to lead by example after he suggested she should smile. I have been told to smile for as long as I can remember, by strangers, by family, by people who genuinely thought they were being nice. I have never had a comeback for it. Now I have two. I might not call anyone creepy when they demonstrate a smile, but I will keep that line in my back pocket, too, just in case.

Also, Harukichi’s final conversation with his wife. The whole episode is about his refusal to pass on until he apologises to her and when the apology finally comes, it is not for anything grand. The wife’s exasperation, the husband’s genuine remorse, Tetsuo and Misaki watching from the sidelines, and then back to the office.

The old couple, having been together for fifty years and showing a more realistic view of marriage, which gave me couple goals. I have had thirteen years with my husband so far. I want a full lifetime more.

An animated character holding a gun and smiling, set against a backdrop of autumn trees and a warm sunset.

He says a lot of important lines, and I like his approach to things. The man is tired, cynical, and deeply compassionate underneath all that resting grump face. He reminds me of characters I am always drawn to — the quietly capable ones who carry burdens without making a show of it.

An animated character with short blue hair and red eyes stands confidently, clenching their fist, in front of a dessert, against a dramatic red background.

Chaotic, empathetic, and absolutely lethal when she needs to be. Her dynamic with Tetsuo is the heart of the show, and her backstory in episode four made me see her in a completely new light.

I transcribed these while watching, and I have been thinking about them ever since.

“It’s pointless trying to dwell on the past or depend on the future. It’s just a waste of time. Doing that will only make you miss the present.”
— Tetsuo Tanba, Episode 1

An anime character with black hair and a serious expression, wearing a black suit, holding a cigarette. The image includes a quote by Tetsuo Tanba about the importance of living in the present.

“You know, the world changes depending on what lens you see it through. If you have the courage to laugh, not only when things are fun, but when they’re tough, you know, really tough, then nothing will ever scare you.”
— Tetsuo Tanba, Episode 1

A stylised illustration of a male character with black hair, wearing a suit, smiling confidently while standing in an urban setting. The image features a quote attributed to Tetsuo Tanba about perspective and courage in facing life's challenges.
A small, angelic character with a halo and wings, looking confidently at the viewer against a bright blue sky with clouds.

Is Dandelion worth watching? Yes, especially if you’re in the mood for something fun, fast, and surprisingly grounded.

Is Dandelion suitable for beginners? Definitely. It doesn’t rely on deep lore or prior anime knowledge to make sense.  If you know someone who is curious about anime and comedy but intimidated by long series, Dandelion is a great entry point.

Does Dandelion have a satisfying ending? Yes and no. It resolves the main plot, but it leaves the door open for more.

Overall

Watching Dandelion felt like a breath of fresh air. It’s rare to find a show that balances slapstick humour with legitimate life lessons so well. I loved seeing the reality of the couple in episode 1; it reminded me that the “happily ever after” isn’t a destination, but a daily choice. I’ve already recommended it to a friend, and I’m definitely going to get my dad to watch it—he’ll appreciate the workplace dynamics as much as I did.

An animated scene featuring three characters on a bicycle, with one character pedalling vigorously while two others ride along. The background shows motion lines and dust clouds, indicating speed and urgency.

Yes. If you enjoy character-driven comedies with a touch of the supernatural, this is a must-watch. I have already recommended Dandelion to several people, and I will be making my dad watch it.

A group of four characters in formal attire stands on a pathway, with one character in a suit covering their mouth and looking contemplative, another character with glasses expressing shyness, a cute flying creature above them with a halo, and two others observing, in a colourful anime setting.

Have you watched Dandelion? What did you think? Did the humour land for you, or did it miss more than it hit? Who was your favourite character?

A complete, well-structured story that knows when to be funny and when to be quiet. The lead characters are excellent, the humour lands more often than not, and the emotional core is genuine.


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