The Spring 2024 AniTAY Sequel Guide
As our eagle-eyed readers have no doubt noticed, the number of anime sequel seasons has increased precipitously over the past few years. When AniTAY first launched in 2014, it was a miracle for a show to receive a second season. Now, My Hero Academia haters pray for the sweet release of death as they brace themselves for round seven (more on that one below).
For those of us who have not seen every anime of the previous seasons, each new sequel season is another chance to jump into a popular franchise. But is it worth it? It’s probably safe to say that no matter your taste in anime, some series will be a better fit for you than others. That is where we come in. Below, we have selected the most exciting anime sequel seasons currently airing. We outline the strengths of each series and what it will take to catch up to the current season. One might even go so far as to call this a “guide” of current anime sequels, if you would.
Two quick notes: First, the following entries were written before the start of the current season, so they do not reflect any of the content that has aired since April. Second, fans of Spice and Wolf may notice its absence here. This is because the new series is a remake, not a sequel. You do not need to see the original to enjoy this one!
With that out of the way, let us begin!
Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba- Hashira Training Arc
Presented By: Requiem
Studio: ufotable
Genres: Action, Adventure, More Action
Spoiler-Free Synopsis: In the Taisho era, the Demons Slayer Corps…You know what, this franchise absolutely prints money, it’s everywhere, y’all know the Synopsis: Tanjiro Kamado is a kid with a scar and mysterious flame dance powers taught to him by his dad. His family gets killed by demons, except his cute sister who becomes a pseudo-demon. Then he joins a group slaying demons to try and cure her. Add in two morons who ‘help’ him, super powerful demon captains who each show up for one arc, and mix it together to create a hit anime.
Why You Should Catch Up: Demon Slayer is a staggeringly successful franchise, making money hand over fist, even when they make cheap cash in movies out of episodes stitched together; it is mind-bogglingly popular. Despite this, there has been growing discontent in some corners of the Internet, with viewers complaining of lackluster writing and character development during the last two arcs. To be honest, those concerns are not totally unfounded. The show has not spent as much time showing character growth or building relatable villains, especially in the Swordsmith VIllage arc.
However, the simple fact is that the show still looks incredible. The animation and effects, especially in big fight scenes, are eye-wateringly beautiful and a wonder to behold. The voice acting and music are still utterly top-tier. The villains haven’t been as interesting as characters, but are still great as opponents in battle sequences. The presentation of the show is still fantastic, and as long as it’s doing big anime fights better than anyone else, this show will be worth watching. End of story.
So come on, it’s ufotable and Demon Slayer. You’re gonna watch. We’re all gonna watch. Just embrace it.
What You Need to Watch + Time to Catch Up:
- Season 1, Unwavering Resolve Arc: 26 episodes, (10.5 hours)
- Season 2, Mugen Train Arc (also released as a movie): 7 episodes (3 hours)
- Season 2, Entertainment District Arc: 11 episodes (4.5 hours)
- Season 3, Swordsmith Village Arc, 11 episodes (4.5 hours)
- OPTIONAL: Demon Slayer: The Movie: Mugen Train (119 minutes) Note: this is more or less exactly the same story as the Season 2 Mugen Train arc
Where to Watch: Crunchyroll
The Duke of Death & His Maid Season 3
Presented By: Marquan
Studio: J.C. Staff
Genres: Supernatural, Romance, Comedy
Spoiler-Free Synopsis: The titular Duke is cursed to live without being able to touch anybody, lest he kill them. In order to be with the family and friends he loves, he aims to find out all he can about the witch who cursed him, the reason behind it, and how to break the curse.
Why You Should Catch Up: The Duke of Death and His Maid is an anime that immediately captures your attention. The almost Gothic horror premise of its cursed protagonist not being able to touch those around him without killing them already sets itself apart from many anime. Replete with a dangerous mystery and a colorful cast of characters, this is a great show.
The second season ups the ante from the first season in every way: we get a crop of new characters, we get more lore on the world of the witches and what makes some of them tick, and we also learn some revelations regarding the Duke and his curse. There is also the bonus of seeing other relationships outside of our adorable main duo. There are pairings offered that I never knew I needed and I feel more complete getting to see them grow. This offers a reprieve from the dark and borderline depressing reality that even though they’re finding a way to make it work, the Duke’s life is one I wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy.
Having to be conscious of your touch every moment of every day has to be emotionally and mentally taxing. The fact that the love of his life is always within arms reach, but there’s little that can be done about it, emotionally wounds the viewer with its heartbreak. But those painful moments make the sweet that much more impactful. Despite the curse hanging over their heads, the Duke, his family and friends find a way to live life to the fullest, despite the limitations the curse places on the smallest of interactions. With romance, comedy and magic abound in this one, I guarantee the viewer will be drawn into this wonderful and bittersweet world of magic, curses and love.
What You Need to Watch + Time to Catch Up:
- Season 1:12 episodes (~ 4 hours)
- Season 2: 12 episodes (~ 4 hours)
Where to Watch: Crunchyroll
Irregular At Magic High School Season 3
Presented by: Requiem
Studio: 8 Bit
Genre(s): Sci-Fi, Action, Magical Nonsense
Spoiler-Free Synopsis: In a world where magic has become a science and those who can use it are valuable commodities, First Magic High School is the most prestigious magic school in Japan. Our story follows two students, siblings Tatsuya and Miyuki Shiba. Miyuki is a beautiful honor student with incredible magic abilities, whilst Tatsuya is considered a failure, at least by the testing standard the school is using. This means Miyuki is a “Bloom” and Tatsuya is a “Weed”, in the parlance of the student body. Of course, things are hardly what they seem, and the siblings and their friends get involved in an ever-escalating amount of magical and political shenanigans.
Why You Should Catch Up: You should catch up so you can truly appreciate how bonkers it is that this show continues to get new seasons. Over an OVA and 2 seasons this series has truly elevated magical nonsense to a true art form by making rules for how magic works just so Tatsuya can pull off his Atomic Magic Batman Jesus act.He’ll save the day by breaking all the rules they just said couldn’t be broken. Don’t hand Tatsuya that rule book, he’s a loose cannon!
I know this sounds like a negative take, but I assure you it is not. Irregular is truly sublimely ridiculous, piling twists and turns and gimmicks and villains and reveals on top of each other in a mish-mash of utter nonsense that it somehow manages to be completely entertaining. Does any of the plot really make sense? No! Is it compelling to watch the siblings whoop ass and beat their opponents whilst inching ever closer to crossing the incest line? Hell yes! This show is a hoot and we wouldn’t want it any other way.
It appears this new season introduces a new course at First High, Tatsuya’s Magical Engineering course, continues the various government conspiracy politics nonsense from Season 2, and ramps up the internal family conflict within the Shiba household. It sure looks like a whole lot of poorly explained plot broken up by awesome magic combat scenes and we are here for it.
So c’mon, watch Irregular At Magical High School Season 3. You know you want to.
What You Need Watch + Time to Catch Up:
- Season 1: 26 episodes (10 hours)
- Season 2: 13 episodes (5.5 hours)
- Movie: Reminiscence Arc (1 hr 11min)
- Optional: The Honor Student At Magic High School (13 episodes, 5.5 hours)
This is set during events of S1 from Miyuki’s POV, it’s fun but unnecessary
Where To Watch: Crunchyroll
KONOSUBA: God’s Blessing on This Wonderful World! Season 3
Presented By: Doctorkev
Studio: Drive
Genres: Isekai, Fantasy, Comedy
Spoiler-Free Synopsis: Japanese teenager Kazuma Satou is a shut-in NEET who dies in ridiculous circumstances, and finds himself reincarnated in a parallel world alongside useless goddess” Aqua. Together they form a dysfunctional party with overpowered explosion magic-using mage Megumin, and the worryingly masochistic crusader Darkness. Kazuma and his friends are never far from trouble or disaster during their comedic adventures in a JRPG-like fantasy world.
Why You Should Catch Up: Surely we’re all sick of isekai by now, right? Main character is a Japanese teen, reincarnated/summoned into a video game-like fantasy world as an overpowered hero who levels up as he fights monsters blah blah blah… However, KONOSUBA’s source light novel series predates most of the later derivative dreck by years, considering its first volume was published twelve years ago, and even then it was interested in mainly sending up the conventions of its nascent genre.
KONOSUBA’s first two anime seasons were well-regarded by anime fandom as elevating the source material by streamlining the story and enhancing the humour. Essentially, KONOSUBA takes the basics of the isekai fantasy genre, twists them into knots, and takes the piss while abusing the hell out of them.
KONOSUBA’s very funny, rude humour is primarily character-based, and its characters are all pretty funny. Kazuma’s favourite spell, for example, is “steal”. He uses this to relieve opponents of weapons and valuables, and sometimes their underwear. Yeah, it’s very juvenile but that’s part of the charm.
Aqua is a gorgeous but extremely dumb goddess. Kazuma thinks he should find her attractive, but can’t bring himself to do so because she’s so empty upstairs. Megumin’s rigid adherence to her singular magical specialty causes no end of (extremely destructive) chaos, while Darkness…Well, I don’t know what the hell Darkness’ deal is, but her perverted personality triggers all kinds of wild scenes.
All four of the main characters are bonkers in their own way, though they also all genuinely care for one another. This isn’t like Seinfeld where they’re all awful people. Okay, they are all awful people, but at least they’re sympathetic. KONOSUBA’s never going to challenge your brain cells (in fact it may even rot a few), but with each episode you’re guaranteed to grin from ear to ear, laughing at whatever ridiculous mess Kazuma and friends have fallen into this time.
What You Need to Watch + Time to Catch Up:
Essential:
- KONOSUBA Season 1: 10 episodes (4 hours approx)
- KONOSUBA Season 2: 10 episodes (4 hours approx)
- KONOSUBA: Legend of Crimson: The Movie (90 minutes)
Optional:
- KONOSUBA Season 1 OVA: 23 minutes
- KONOSUBA Season 2 OVA: 28 minutes
- KONOSUBA: An Explosion on This Wonderful World! (Megumin spinoff): 12 episodes (5 hours approx)
Where to Watch: Crunchyroll
Laid-Back Camp Season 3
Presented By: umrguy42
Studio: 8bit
Genres: Slice of Life
Spoiler-Free Synopsis: Nadeshiko Kagimahara, an extreme extrovert, joins her new high school’s “Outdoor Activity Club” after cycling to see the view of Mt. Fuji and meeting Rin Shima, an introverted classmate who enjoys camping solo. Nadeshiko continues to learn more about camping, while Rin learns about how nice it can be to camp with others. The two of them, along with their friends Chiaki Ohgaki, Aoi Inuyama, Ena Saitou, and the club’s semi-reluctant faculty advisor Ms. Toba, experience camping and adventures in and around the Yamanashi Prefecture.
Why You Should Catch Up: Laid-Back Camp is not just a Slice of Life anime, it’s a contender for the ur-example of iyashikei “healing” anime series. It’s a show that allows you to just watch and relax, knowing that Nadeshiko, Rin, and the Outclub will have some fun, go on some adventures, and probably learn something new about camping. The stakes of the occasional “crisis” are so low as to be virtually non-existent, and it’s wonderful to just be able to watch these girls having a great time.
The show’s production values are great, with loving attention paid to camping equipment, outdoors environments, and the scenery. (One concern, however, is the switch in studios for this season, and the potential effect on the artwork.) The voice cast is excellent, and all of them appear to be scheduled to return for the new season. The series has also had fantastic theme songs. For the first two seasons, singer Asaka has provided the opening things, while Eri Sasaki sings the closing themes (including one of my all-time favorites, the first season’s “Fuyu Biyori”) — both providing perfect complements, with Asaka’s energetic openings matching Nadeshiko’s energetic personality, and Eri Sasaki’s slower closings serving to match Rin’s more reserved demeanor, as well as providing a calming way out of each episode. According to online sources, Asaka at least is again slated to provide one of the new season’s themes. The soundtrack and incidental music are also fantastically matched to the show and are endlessly listenable.
The series also frequently includes short lessons on the differences between various camping equipment options or how to make use of them. Additional vignettes provide other helpful camping tips and tricks. I would totally show a supercut of the various firebuilding and cooking segments to my son’s Scouts troop to learn from. If you’re a fan of camping (solo or otherwise), or just interested in it, you won’t be disappointed in the faithfulness of the depictions. There are plenty of lovely shots of scenery as well as food that makes me want to renew my passport and book a tasting trip.
In summary, you’d be hard-pressed finding many better ways to spend your anime-watching time. So if a fantastic, calming slice of life is your thing (and even if it isn’t), and you somehow haven’t seen this one yet, go on and give it a try!
What You Need to Watch + Time to Catch Up:
- Season 1: 12 episodes (approximately 276 minutes total viewing time)
- Season 2: 13 episodes (300 minutes)
- Optional: 1 movie (2 hours)
- Optional: Room Camp (spin-off, short): 12 episodes (36 minutes)
Where to Watch: Crunchyroll
Mushoku Tensei: Jobless Reincarnation Season 2 Part 2
Presented By: Raitzeno
Studio: Studio Bind
Genres: Adventure, Fantasy, Tragedy, Isekai
Spoiler-Free Synopsis: Formerly a disgusting otaku, Rudy has made a name for himself in this fantastical world as an adventurer and magician. However, his past is catching up with him. Bad habits from his previous life and the consequences of his choices during this new one are popping up in rapid succession, and he’ll need to make some hard choices about where to go from here.
Why You Should Catch Up: Mushoku Tensei is ultimately a story of redemption and healing. The main character starts off as an honestly terrible person, but the combination of challenges and solutions available in a sword-and-sorcery world slowly polish him into… perhaps still not an amazing person overall, but he’s become genuinely decent.
One of the biggest draws of the series is the absolutely phenomenal animation. Each and every episode looks like it has the budget of an entire anime film release. The world Rudy’s been sent to is just gorgeous, and the colorful cast of characters have been brought to life in stunning detail.
Speaking of, the supporting cast is stellar. Rudy’s family is both very believable and tragically human. His parents are former adventurers. His father never really grew out of the various negative behaviors that led him to that life, and his mother struggles to deal with the fallout. Many isekai stories have the new parents either flawlessly devoted to the reincarnator or entirely absent; here, they’re just parents, learning as they go.
The people he meets on his journeys are an even more wildly diverse bunch, and they all interact with Rudy in very entertaining ways. (The way Rudy interacts with some of them can be…less so.) This is especially true in the new school setting for the season, as Rudy’s point of view is rather novel for many of this world’s denizens — though perhaps in different ways than you might expect if you’ve been dumpster diving through later isekai series.
Why You Should Not Catch Up: Especially at the beginning of the anime, Rudy is a terrible person, and his new dad’s not much better. The show deals with some seriously heavy themes right from the start, many of which recur in even darker forms later on. Even if you end up liking Rudy, the flow of events is often pretty dire; the world itself seems to go out of its way to kick him (and, vicariously, the viewer) when he’s down. There’s an element of misery porn that never really let up, and the fact that the hardships are usually almost-entirely deserved on Rudy’s part doesn’t exactly soften the blows.
What You Need to Watch + Time to Catch Up:
- Season 1 Part 1: 11 episodes — approx. 4.5 hours
- Season 1 Part 2: 12 episodes — 5 hours
- Season 2 Part 1: 12 episodes — 5 hours
- Optional (after S1P2): Extra Episode: Eris the Goblin Slayer: 1 episode — 0.5 hours
- Optional (after S2P1): Guardian Fitz: 1 episode — 0.5 hours
Where to Watch: Crunchyroll
My Hero Academia Season 7
Presented By: Doctorkev
Studio: Bones
Genres: Superhero, Action, High School
Spoiler-Free Synopsis: In a world where almost everyone manifests “quirks” that grant them superpowers, schoolboy Izuku Midoriya is one of the few “quirkless” people. Then his superhero idol All Might chooses him to “inherit” his incredibly overpowered quirk “One For All”, bestowing upon Midoriya a legacy that spans multiple generations of heroes who have nurtured and developed this power. With hero society crumbling under a relentless assault from immortal mastermind All For One and his successor Tomura Shigaraki, Midoriya and his classmates at hero academy UA High School must join the professional heroes in a desperate war against the forces of evil and chaos.
Why You Should Catch Up: My Hero Academia (MHA) is without a doubt one of the best long-running shonen anime still airing. It’s essentially anime’s answer to X-Men, set at a Japanese high school that is an analogue to Professor Xavier’s School for the Gifted. Unlike in X-Men where superpowered mutants are in the minority, in MHA it’s “normal” people who are vastly outnumbered by those with superhuman abilities. MHA explores the ramifications of a society where almost everyone is special.
In later seasons, the cracks in MHA’s superhero society have begun to fracture and spread, as All For One and Shigaraki extend their influence and manipulate public opinion against professional heroes. Season six in particular explored darker and more violent territory than ever before, and that trend is only likely to continue in season seven as this story ramps up towards its intense conclusion.
MHA is full of creative and interesting characters with clever powers that evolve and develop with time. Its villains are also sympathetic, with understandable drives and desires. Even stereotypically wholesome main hero Midoriya has grown, developing shades of grey, and suffering significant psychological trauma. The responsibility of living up to retired hero All Might’s role as “Symbol of Peace” weighs heavily on him.
It’s not merely another one of those endless battle shonen shows, either. It’s generally very well paced, and manga author Kohei Horikoshi clearly has a detailed plan for where he intends the story to go. His exploration of conflicting ideologies not just between heroes and villains but between characters on the same “side” makes for compelling storytelling. It’s not too late to catch up to what’s likely to be a wild (presumably?) penultimate season.
What You Need to Watch + Time to Catch Up:
Essential:
- My Hero Academia Season 1: 13 episode (5 hours approx)
- My Hero Academia Season 2: 25 episodes (10 hours approx)
- My Hero Academia Season 3: 25 episodes (10 hours approx)
- My Hero Academia Season 4: 25 episodes (10 hours approx)
- My Hero Academia Season 5: 25 episodes (10 hours approx)
- My Hero Academia Season 6: 25 episodes (10 hours approx)
Optional:
- My Hero Academia The Movie: Two Heroes (97 min)
- My Hero Academia The Movie: Heroes Rising (104 min)
- My Hero Academia The Movie: World Heroes Mission (105 min)
- My Hero Academia Season 2 episode 13.5 — Hero Notebook (24 min)
- My Hero Academia Season 4 OVA — 2 episodes (48 min)
- My Hero Academia Season 5 OVA — 2 episodes (48 min)
- My Hero Academia Season 6 OVA — 1 episode (24 min)
Where to Watch: Crunchyroll (seasons 1–6, movie 1), Netflix (seasons 1–5, movies 1&2), blu-ray/VOD (movie 3)
Sound! Euphonium Season 3
Presented By: TheMamaLuigi
Studio: Kyoto Animation
Genres: Music, Drama, Coming-of-Age
Spoiler-Free Synopsis: Kumiko Oumae is a euphonium player in Kitauji High School’s ensemble concert band. Under the tutelage of the strict Taki-sensei, she and her friends navigate the complex worlds of music, relationships, and growing up as they learn about who they are as both members of the band and individuals. Season 3 picks up as Kumiko, now a third-year, must deal with her new responsibilities as a senior in the band, a soon-to-be-graduate, and a girl struggling with feelings of romance, responsibility, and identity.
Why You Should Catch Up: Sound! Euphonium is Kyoto Animation’s best work in their oeuvre of stellar shows. It captures the anxieties that come as we grow into who we are while figuring out who we want to be with a sense of grace, maturity, and depth that so many club-focused high-school anime neglect. It also centers around the notion of passion and what it means to find, stick with, and embody what impassions us. Kumiko herself is awkward, apathetic, dispassioned — until she isn’t, and it’s in her development and growth as a character that Eupho shines most brightly. She embodies its core themes through how she slowly realizes what and who she loves alongside her extreme desire to improve and stand out. It’s unlike anything I’ve watched before, and seeing how she continues to grow and mature as she enters her last year of high school is sure to be a treat for this third season.
Sound! Euphonium stands out for its production as much as it does for its writing and characters. As with all KyoAni shows, its visuals are sumptuous, vividly coloured, and highly detailed — characters’ fingers are animated accurately to the notes they play and subtle changes in body language or facial expression are deliberately depicted and imbue characters with a sense of life. The show often places its camera in unconventional places — the corners of rooms, the bottom halves of characters, an extreme close-up of a character as they play — to illustrate space, place, and setting. Finally, Eupho’s band-accurate soundtrack is equal parts fun, moving, and bombastic and its voice acting is naturalistic and grounded. Tomoyo Kurasawa as Kumiko is an all-time performance.
Watch Sound! Euphonium because it’s my favourite anime of all time. Watch Sound! Euphonium because it’s sure to be a highlight this season. Watch Sound! Euphonium because it might just inspire you to find your passion. After all, we all just want to improve.
What You Need to Watch + Time to Catch Up:
- Sound! Euphonium Seasons 1 and 2: 26 episodes — approximately 10.4 hours
- Optional (takes place between seasons 1 and 2): Sound! Euphonium: Ready, Set, Monaka!: 1 OVA — 24 minutes
- Optional (but highly recommended and encouraged): Liz and the Blue Bird: 1 movie — 1 hour and 30 minutes
- Sound! Euphonium: Our Promise: A Brand New Day: 1 movie — 100 minutes.
- Sound! Euphonium: Ensemble Contest Arc: 1 OVA — 57 minutes.
- Optional (recap movies): Sound! Euphonium the Movie: Welcome to the Kitauji High School Concert Band and Sound! Euphonium the Movie: May the Melody Reach You!: 2 movies — 3 hours and 48 minutes
Where to Watch:
- Seasons 1, 2, and Monaka OVA: https://www.crunchyroll.com/series/GRDQNQW9Y/sound-euphonium
- Liz and the Blue Bird: https://www.crunchyroll.com/series/G0XHWM5E2/liz-and-the-blue-bird
- Movies: https://www.crunchyroll.com/series/G9VHN91V2/sound-euphonium-movies
Note: Ensemble Contest Arc is unavailable legally as of writing.
That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime Season 3
Presented By: Doctorkev
Studio: 8-bit
Genres: Isekai, Fantasy, Empire Building
Spoiler-Free Synopsis: Murdered Japanese man Satoru Mikami is reincarnated into a fantasy world as the lowest of the low of magical creatures — a humble slime. Aided by a seemingly omnipotent voice in his head and a friendship with imprisoned dragon Veldora, Satoru — now renamed “Rimuru” seeks to become stronger, and to build a civilisation open to humans and monsters alike. To keep his people safe, Rimuru negotiates with neighbouring states, battles his nation’s enemies, and even ascends to Demon Lord status…
Why You Should Catch Up: Slime is one of the better isekai fantasy anime shows, of which there are at least several hundred too many now. It’s full of colourful, fun characters, and there’s a nice sense of game-like plot progression as Rimuru gains new allies and skills, all the while leveling up his nation. Rimuru’s new world is a detailed place, with a long history and similarly long-lived and powerful adversaries for him to face against.
Rimiru himself has gradually become less human the longer he’s developed godlike powers, and there is a sense that he’s so overpowered now that almost nothing can stand against him. This isn’t quite as marked as the amoral deterioration in the superficially similar Overlord’s main character’s link to humanity, but Rimuru certainly is the cutest, squishiest, roundest war criminal you ever did see. If you’re Rimuru’s friend, you’ve nothing to worry about. If you work for his enemies, though… Oh dear.
Occasional “minor” genocides apart, Rimuru’s generally easy to root for, and many of his friends are just as interesting as he is. It’s not a spectacularly-written or insightful fantasy, but it is entertaining and easy to watch.
What You Need to Watch + Time to Catch Up:
Essential:
- That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime Season 1: 24 episodes (9.5 hours approx)
- That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime OAD: 5 episodes (2 hours approx)
- That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime Season 2: 24 episodes (9.5 hours approx.)
Optional:
- That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime season 1 episode 24.5: Veldora’s Journal: 1 episode (24 min)
- That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime season 2 episode 24.9: Digression: Hinata Sakaguchi: 1 episode (24 min)
- The Slime Diaries: 12 episodes (5 hours approx)
- That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime season 2 episode 36.5: Veldora’s Journal 2: 1 episode (24 min)
- That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime: The Movie: Scarlet Bond (108 min)
- That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime: Visions of Coleus: 3 episodes (72 min)
- That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime season 3 episode 48.5: Digression: Diablo’s Journal: 1 episode (24 min)
Where to Watch: Crunchyroll
Contributors in Alphabetical Order:
- Doctorkev
- Marquan
- Nomad
- Protonstorm
- Raitzeno
- Requiem
- TheMamaLuigi
- umrguy42
A special thank you to Stanlick for his continuously creative header images!
First time experiencing our seasonal sequel guide list? Check out last season’s here!
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