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TV Shows & Movies
15 Best Weak-to-Strong Anime Series, Ranked
1-15
Nazarii Verbitskiy
TV Shows & Movies
-
June 3rd 2026, 17:00 GMT+2
15. Kaiju No. 8 (2024-)
Kaiju No. 8
takes the tired premise of a middle-aged janitor cleaning up monster guts and somehow makes it feel fresh by letting him accidentally become the thing he's been mopping up for decades. Kafka Hibino goes from literally scraping kaiju remains off sidewalks to transforming into one of the creatures that terrorized him, which creates this weird tension where his dream job in the Defense Force suddenly means hunting himself. The show works because it doesn't rush past the absurdity of a guy who spent years as monster cleanup crew now having to hide his new monster powers from his kaiju-hunting coworkers. That setup turns every training scene into a comedy of errors where Kafka has to pretend he's naturally getting stronger instead of just learning to control his new alien biology. | © Crunchyroll
14. Ragna Crimson (2023-)
Ragna Crimson
takes the familiar revenge-against-dragons setup and immediately breaks it by giving the weakest dragon hunter in the world a mysterious ally who knows exactly how every future battle will end. The twist comes when Ragna discovers his benefactor is actually his own older self from a timeline where he failed. Instead of gradual training montages, the show delivers instant power transfers that come with the psychological weight of knowing every mistake you're about to make. The time loop element turns typical power progression into something more like inherited trauma. | © Crunchyroll
13. The Rising of the Shield Hero (2019-)
The Rising of the Shield Hero
starts with one of anime's nastiest gut punches: a hero summoned to save the world gets immediately framed for rape and becomes a social pariah. Naofumi can only use a shield while everyone else gets swords and spears, which sounds like a joke setup until the show reveals how creative you can get with pure defense and spite. The series works because it earns every power gain through genuine character growth rather than random power-ups. Watching someone rebuild their life from absolute rock bottom hits harder than most anime power fantasies. | © Crunchyroll
12. Re:Zero − Starting Life in Another World (2016-)
Re:Zero
turns the power fantasy inside out by making every death a lesson in humiliation. Subaru gets transported to a fantasy world with one ability that sounds useful until you realize it means watching everyone you care about die over and over while you stay weak and helpless. The show commits to psychological horror disguised as escapist anime, forcing its protagonist to confront how little heroic posturing matters when you lack the strength to back it up. What starts as annoying confidence becomes genuine growth earned through the worst kind of repetition. | © Crunchyroll
11. Black Clover (2017-2021)
Black Clover
takes the loudest, most obnoxious protagonist in recent anime history and somehow makes his constant screaming work. Asta has no magic in a world where everyone else does, but he refuses to shut up about becoming the Wizard King anyway. The show leans into every shounen cliche you can imagine, then executes them with such relentless energy that the familiar beats start hitting harder than they should. What could have been just another power-fantasy anime becomes something more sincere because it never pretends to be anything other than exactly what it is. | © Crunchyroll
10. Solo Leveling (2024-)
Solo Leveling
takes the video game logic that most anime only flirt with and makes it literally real. Sung Jin-Woo starts as the weakest hunter alive, then gets a mysterious system that turns every monster kill into actual stat points and level-ups. The power progression feels satisfying because it follows RPG rules that viewers already understand, complete with quest notifications and skill trees floating in the air. What could have been silly instead becomes addictive because watching someone methodically grind their way from zero to overpowered hits the same dopamine buttons as playing the game yourself. | © Crunchyroll
9. That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime (2018-)
That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime
turns the usual power fantasy on its head by making the overpowered protagonist genuinely likable. Rimuru starts as a literal blob but quickly becomes the kind of leader who builds schools and trade agreements instead of just collecting bigger swords. The show works because it treats nation-building and diplomacy as exciting as any boss fight. Most isekai anime rush toward the next power-up, but this one actually cares about what happens after you become unstoppable. | © Crunchyroll
8. Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba (2019-)
Demon Slayer
takes the simple story of a boy whose family gets murdered by demons and turns it into something that hits different because of how much Tanjiro actually cares about everyone around him. Most shonen heroes get stronger through rage or rivalry, but Tanjiro's power comes from empathy, even extending compassion to the monsters he has to kill. The animation during fight scenes moves like water and fire made visible, especially when Tanjiro's breathing techniques kick in. What started as another revenge story became proof that kindness can be just as compelling as anger when the stakes get high enough. | © Crunchyroll
7. Bleach (2004-2012)
Bleach
starts with Ichigo Kurosaki as a regular high schooler who can see ghosts, then hands him the power of a Soul Reaper and watches him stumble through increasingly ridiculous battles. The show's strength comes from how it escalates everything without apology. Every enemy is stronger than the last, every power-up is more absurd, and Ichigo keeps finding new ways to get stronger just when it seems impossible. What makes it work is how the series commits completely to its own escalating madness, turning a simple premise into hundreds of episodes of pure power fantasy. | © Crunchyroll
6. Attack on Titan (2013-2023)
Attack on Titan
starts with humanity cowering behind walls, reduced to cattle waiting for slaughter by mindless giants. Eren Yeager begins as a furious but powerless kid watching his mother get eaten, then spends four seasons transforming into something far more dangerous than any titan. The show's real trick is making you root for Eren's growing power until you realize he might be the actual monster. What begins as a simple revenge story becomes a meditation on how victims can become perpetrators when they get strong enough to choose violence. | © Crunchyroll
5. Gurren Lagann (2007)
Gurren Lagann
starts with a kid digging tunnels underground and ends with him throwing galaxies like shuriken in a battle that spans multiple dimensions. The series takes the concept of escalation and pushes it so far past reasonable limits that it becomes genuinely thrilling rather than ridiculous. Simon goes from cowering behind his big brother to piloting mechs the size of universes, and somehow the emotional core never gets lost in all that cosmic absurdity. It proves that sometimes the best way to tell a story about believing in yourself is to make the stakes so impossibly huge that quiet character moments feel just as epic as the robot fights. | © Funimation
4. My Hero Academia (2016-)
My Hero Academia
starts with the cruelest possible setup for a superhero story: a kid who desperately wants to save people in a world where almost everyone has powers except him. Deku's early episodes are brutal to watch because his powerlessness feels so absolute, and then the series has to somehow make his sudden acquisition of the world's strongest quirk feel earned rather than convenient. The show pulls it off by focusing on how Deku's years of analyzing heroes from the sidelines actually prepared him to use power better than the naturally gifted kids around him. What could have been a simple wish-fulfilment story becomes something more interesting about how the right mindset matters more than raw talent. | © Crunchyroll
3. One Piece (1999-)
One Piece
turns the idea of getting stronger into a 25-year marathon where Luffy's rubber powers somehow keep finding new ways to surprise you. The series refuses to rush anything, spending entire arcs on single islands while Luffy learns that real strength comes from protecting the people who matter to him. What started as a simple pirate adventure has grown into something massive and sprawling, where emotional weight matters more than power scaling. Luffy's journey from a kid who can barely throw a punch to someone who can split the sky feels earned because you've watched every single fight that got him there. | © Crunchyroll
2. Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood (2009-2010)
Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood
refuses to let its protagonists take shortcuts to power, even when magic could solve everything instantly. Edward and Alphonse Elric start as talented but reckless kids who lose their bodies to forbidden alchemy, then spend 64 episodes earning back their strength through actual consequences and moral growth. The series makes every power upgrade feel like it costs something real, whether that's blood, years of training, or pieces of their humanity. What separates it from other shounen anime is how it treats equivalent exchange as more than just a magic system rule. | © Crunchyroll
1. Naruto (2002-2017)
Naruto turns the weakest kid in ninja school into the most powerful shinobi alive, but the real transformation happens in how the show handles that journey across 700 episodes. What starts as a scrappy underdog story becomes something much bigger once you realize the "talentless" hero was actually carrying a demon fox that could level mountains. The series commits fully to every friendship speech and training montage, even when the power scaling gets completely ridiculous. Fifteen years later, watching Naruto go from dead last to literally saving the world still hits because the show never stops believing in its own earnestness. | © Crunchyroll
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