Sports

One-Punch Man Season 3 Is Bad, but Uzumaki's Failure Is Straight-Up Unforgivable

2025-11-30 00:00
994 views
One-Punch Man Season 3 Is Bad, but Uzumaki's Failure Is Straight-Up Unforgivable

A year before One-Punch Man's season 3 spiral, a different long-awaited anime was circling the drain.

One-Punch Man Season 3 Is Bad, but This 2024 Anime Failure Is Straight-Up Unforgivable One-Punch Man Season 3 Opening Saitama One-Punch Man Season 3 Opening Saitama 4 By  J.R. Waugh Published 23 minutes ago J.R. has been reading manga since the first printing of Shonen Jump in North America. This passion drove him to write about anime, manga, and manhwa since 2022, having recently served as Lead Anime Editor for ComicBook.com. His favorite moments in media coverage include reviewing the series premieres of Zom 100 and Bleach: TYBW Part 2 back-to-back and briefly meeting Junji Ito at a VIZ gallery event in 2023. Sign in to your ScreenRant account Summary Generate a summary of this story follow Follow followed Followed Like Like Thread Log in Here is a fact-based summary of the story contents: Try something different: Show me the facts Explain it like I’m 5 Give me a lighthearted recap

As One-Punch Man's painful season 3 continues to roll out new installments, it often deceptively feels like this is an abnormal disappointment among anime fans. Yet, one year prior, the long-delayed release of Production I.G and Adult Swim's Uzumaki had already proven what true disappointment can look like. Beyond downgrades in animation, its horrid pacing was what broke fans' hearts.

Officially announced at 2019's Crunchyroll Expo, Uzumaki featured the collaborative output of Production I.G and Adult Swim. On the surface, everything looked great, with strong directors attached and a clear, visible devotion to adapting Junji Ito's uncanny visuals. However, the premiere acted as a smokescreen ahead of the rest of the 4-episode miniseries, where the source material's true betrayal unfolded.

Uzumaki's Anime Failure Rivals One-Punch Man

If one were solely to watch Uzumaki episode #1, they'd not see the problem. The grayscale scheme dodged the visual issues plaguing other Ito anime adaptations. Character animation was fluid, scenes boasted depth without backdrops pulling too much focus. The dissonant mix of amelodic and ambient music enhanced the tension. It was the best Junji Ito anime adaptation ever.

Uzumaki episode #1, in a way, felt like a microcosm of One-Punch Man season 1: everything was where it needed to be, Hiroshi Nagahama's series direction was strong, and it felt like the best possible anime adaptation. Upon the premiere of episode #2 onward, these qualities are largely diminished, a noticeably condensed disappointment resembling One-Punch Man seasons 2 and 3.

While there's been plenty of lamentation about where the blame lies in Uzumaki's adaptation woes, rushing the final product was the true spiral curse, circling the drain.

Each subsequent episode traded the fluidity of small moments like Kirie's vibrant and lively classroom for stiff, static characters in similar situations. Running animation became embarrassingly poor, especially in episode #2. While there's been plenty of lamentation about where the blame lies in Uzumaki's adaptation woes, rushing the final product was the true spiral curse, circling the drain.

Uzumaki and One-Punch Man Have Horrible Pacing

Saitama looking worried in One Punch Man Season 3 anime Saitama looking worried in One Punch Man Season 3 anime

With four episodes adapting 19 chapters, and missing the 20th chapter, "Galaxies", Uzumaki's anime was painfully, noticeably rushed. Individual stories from various chapters were blended in like b-stories, but utterly lacked gravitas, in the case of "Twisted Souls". As the show rapidly reached its climax, new viewers likely didn't have enough time to care about even the key characters' struggles.

In the case of One-Punch Man, though, the pacing problem is similar but nuanced. While the anime ranged from reasonable (season 1) to brisk pacing (season 2), season 3 ventured into Yusuke Murata's most detailed, bulky chapters, praised for their intricate details yet wholly missing in the show. While now adapting only 2-3 chapters, season 3's source material is deceptively massive.

But in Uzumaki's case, this pacing actively hurt it more, especially when combined with the animation downgrades. Complex animation opportunities were addressed with cheap jump cuts like in episode #4 to avoid renditions of a man contorting himself inside a giant snail-person shell. It'd be one thing for the anime to be rushed, but Uzumaki's finale was jarringly lazy.

The result is a rushed production where every great moment from the manga feels unearned in anime form. Yamaguchi's Jack-in-the-box return in episode #3 is awfully executed, failing to be scary or ironically funny. While One-Punch Man's anime has fallen off completely, at least it had more than one good episode, preceding its decade of waiting and disappointment.

Uzumaki Spiral Into Horror 6.2/10

Uzumaki: Spiral into Horror

10 stars 9 stars 8 stars 7 stars 6 stars 5 stars 4 stars 3 stars 2 stars 1 star Like Follow Followed TV-MA Animation Mystery Horror Release Date 2024 - 2024-00-00

Cast

See All
  • Cast Placeholder Image Uki Satake
  • Cast Placeholder Image Shin-ichiro Miki

Genres Animation, Mystery, Horror Powered by ScreenRant logo Expand Collapse Follow Followed Like Share Facebook X WhatsApp Threads Bluesky LinkedIn Reddit Flipboard Copy link Email Close Thread Sign in to your ScreenRant account

We want to hear from you! Share your opinions in the thread below and remember to keep it respectful.

What bothered you the most about either anime?

JR User Display Picture ScreenRant logo JR User Display Picture ScreenRant logo JR #RZ371902 ScreenRant logo Editor 0 Reviews 6 Ratings Following 0 Topics 1 Users Follow Followed 0 Followers View 23 minutes ago While it's easy to complain about stuff like the hilarious motion-comic-style falling animation from Uzumaki episode #4 or Atomic Samurai's radical new ponytail flat-top resulting from a chopped panel adapted for One-Punch Man season 3, the pacing really is frustrating for both. One-Punch Man has an incredible manga, and it remains excellent even with this disappointing adaptation, and it's truly sad that there are plenty of people turned off by the anime that will never see its beautiful source material. This issue reminds me that, for both series and many other adaptations, there's a reason I prefer to stick to the manga, and it extends beyond these examples, with Berserk probably being my most adamant position.It also hurts to see the brilliant rotoscope animation helping Uzumaki's premiere stand out, followed up with stiff animation, overdependence on CGI in later episodes. I understand the staff changed, and it's been talked to death, but for a brief moment, it looked like it would truly bring a manga, and its distinctive author's style, to unprecedented life. Reply / Post Images Attachment(s) Please respect our community guidelines. No links, inappropriate language, or spam.

Your comment has not been saved

Send confirmation email

This thread is open for discussion.

Be the first to post your thoughts.

  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Feedback
Recommended Rosario Dawson as Ahsoka Tano inside her ship 9 hours ago

Apple TV's 10/10 Sci-Fi Masterpiece Shows Star Wars How It's Done

Reze appearing angry during the rooftop scene in Chainsaw Man – The Movie: Reze Arc. 4 hours ago

Chainsaw Man’s New Devil Feels Like an Anime Version of Wolverine

Josh O'Connor holding up bloody fingers in Wake Up Dead Man 7 hours ago

Wake Up Dead Man Breaks Knives Out Franchise's Box Office Streak With Disappointing Thanksgiving Run

Zachary Quinto as Spock in Star Trek 11 hours ago

Star Trek Secretly Threatened Vulcan Extinction Not Once But Twice

More from our brands

CBR logo

The 50 Saddest Anime That Will Make You Cry

GameRant logo

Chainsaw Man: Every Main Character’s Age, Height, and Birthday

GameRant logo

The Greatest Sports Anime Of All Time, Ranked

GameRant logo

The Best Shonen Anime Of All Time (April 2025)

One Punch Man Season 3 Saitama Dropped By Fans

GameRant logo

After 5 Episodes, It's Time To Drop The One-Punch Man Anime Forever

One-Punch Man Season 3 anime's Saitama, Genos and other main characters

CBR logo

Embarrassing One Punch Man Animation Mistake Is a New Low For The Anime

One-Punch Man Has Officially Become Anime’s Biggest Disgrace - Saitama in Season 3

CBR logo

One-Punch Man Season 3 is Officially the Worst Anime of 2025 & the Ratings Prove It

Trending Now Deadpool and Wolverine fighting against a white background in Deadpool & Wolverine 10 Greatest MCU Rivalries, Ranked Nick Wilde (voice: Jason Bateman), Judy Hopps (voice: Ginnifer Goodwin) looking down with horrified expressions in Zootopia 2 Zootopia 2 Cut A Four-Minute Silence Of The Lambs Homage Jinwoo from Solo Leveling with a surprised expression This Chinese Anime Is the Only Franchise That Can Beat Solo Leveling