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15 Long Anime That Actually Aren’t Worth the Time to Watch

1-15

Not worth the binge.

Nazarii Verbitskiy Nazarii Verbitskiy
TV Shows & Movies - February 17th 2026, 23:59 GMT+1
Yu Yu Hakusho

15. Yu Yu Hakusho (1992–1995)

Yu Yu Hakusho isn’t bloated with filler, but its early-90s pacing can feel slow if you’re used to modern shonen. Scenes unfold at a calmer rhythm, and it takes time before the story really kicks into high gear. Longtime fans still swear by it, yet many newer viewers find the 112-episode run tougher to justify without that layer of nostalgia. | © Funimation

Diane from The Seven Deadly Sins

14. The Seven Deadly Sins (2014–2021)

The Seven Deadly Sins starts off strong, with early seasons delivering the fast-paced fantasy energy many viewers hoped for. As the series goes on, pacing slows, animation quality dips, and later arcs struggle to match the impact of what came before. Finishing the entire run becomes a tougher sell once the momentum fades, especially with so many episodes and extras still left to get through. | © Netflix

Black Clover Season 2

13. Black Clover (2017–2021)

Black Clover isn’t absurdly long on paper, but the weekly format makes its 170 episodes feel heavier than they should. Pacing swings back and forth, with some arcs dragging while others rush past, and the familiar shonen tropes rarely add much surprise. If you’ve already seen a lot of magic-powered underdog stories, committing to the full run can feel like a lot of time for very little new ground. | © Funimation

Inuyasha

12. Inuyasha (2000–2004)

Inuyasha stretches its story across a long, wandering journey that often feels slower than it needs to be. Episodic detours, frequent recaps, and an early-2000s rhythm can make progress feel minimal even after dozens of episodes. Nostalgia carries it for longtime fans, but for new viewers, the time investment rarely matches the payoff. | © Viz Media

One Piece

11. One Piece (1999-)

One Piece isn’t short on great ideas: its worldbuilding and character arcs are the reason it’s legendary in the first place. The issue is how painfully slow the anime moves, often stretching a handful of manga pages into full episodes padded with repeated shots and stalled action. The story shines far brighter in the manga, and for many newcomers, even the live-action version is a more manageable way in than committing to the full anime marathon. | © Funimation

Sailor Chibi Moon from Sailor Moon

10. Sailor Moon (1992–1997)

Sailor Moon can feel surprisingly slow if you try to binge it all at once. A lot of episodes follow a monster-of-the-week rhythm that builds charm and character, but barely nudges the larger story forward. For viewers used to tighter modern pacing, the early stretches especially can feel much longer than the payoff justifies. | © Viz Media

Boruto Naruto Next Generations

9. Boruto: Naruto Next Generations (2017-2023)

Boruto: Naruto Next Generations struggles less with episode count and more with how little urgency the story carries from arc to arc. Long stretches of filler and “anime canon” slow things down, often sidestepping the main plot in favor of low-stakes side stories. Fans expecting the drive and focus of Naruto often walk away feeling like Boruto never quite decides what story it wants to tell. | © Viz Media

Bleach

8. Bleach (2004-2012)

Bleach has strong lore, memorable characters, and a world that clearly deserved its popularity. The problem lies in the original anime’s execution, where endless filler arcs, sluggish pacing, and dated visuals stretch the story far past its breaking point. Reading the manga delivers the experience far more cleanly, while the anime only really becomes worth the time again during the much tighter Thousand-Year Blood War arc. | © Viz Media

Robotech

7. Robotech (1985)

Robotech often feels longer than it really is because it isn’t one clean story, but three separate anime stitched together into a single narrative. The shifts in tone, pacing, and character focus can be jarring, slowing momentum and making stretches of the show feel uneven or padded. For modern viewers curious about mecha, the original Japanese series tend to offer a tighter, more coherent experience than sitting through Robotech’s patchwork run. | © Harmony Gold USA

Naruto Shippuden

6. Naruto Shippuden (2007–2017)

Naruto Shippuden has plenty of emotional highs and iconic fights, but getting there takes a lot of patience. Hundreds of episodes are padded with filler and stretched-out scenes, turning simple moments into multi-episode slogs that test even dedicated fans. There’s a great story in here, but the sheer length and uneven pacing make watching it straight through feel more like a commitment than a pleasure. | © Viz Media

Vegeta and Bulma from Dragon Ball Z

5. Dragon Ball Z (1989-1996)

Dragon Ball Z is a cornerstone of anime history, and longtime fans can happily sink dozens of hours into reliving it. For newcomers, though, the commitment is rough, thanks to famously slow pacing, drawn-out battles, and animation that clearly shows its age, especially during arcs like Namek. It’s worth respecting what it built, but most viewers short on time will get more enjoyment from faster, tighter shows that learned from Dragon Ball Z rather than copying it beat for beat. | © Funimation

Detective Conan

4. Detective Conan (1996-)

Detective Conan asks for an enormous time commitment while giving surprisingly little movement on its central mystery. Hundreds of episodes circle familiar case-of-the-week formulas, and the larger plot about the Black Organisation barely inches forward. The individual mysteries can be fun, but watching the whole series start to finish often feels like investing hundreds of hours for minimal payoff. | © Viz Media

Fairy Tail

3. Fairy Tail (2009–2019)

Fairy Tail has flashes of what it wants to be: a big, emotional shonen epic with lovable characters and flashy magic. The trouble is how thin those highs are stretched across hundreds of episodes, padded with filler, recycled conflicts, and arcs that feel familiar even the first time through. There’s fun to be found if you cherry-pick moments, but committing to the full run is a lot of time for surprisingly little payoff. | © Funimation

Pokemon

2. Pokemon (1997-)

Pokémon absolutely earned its place as a pop-culture giant, especially through the games, cards, and collectibles that generations keep passing down. The anime, though, leans hard on repetition: familiar journeys, familiar battles, and a reset button that gets hit every new region. Picking one era can be fun, but watching the entire series start to finish feels like seeing the same adventure play out again with different Pokémon. | © TXN

Yu Gi Oh

1. Yu-Gi-Oh! (2000–2004)

Yu-Gi-Oh! starts strong, especially if you love card games and that early-era magic of Yugi, rival duels, and iconic monsters like Blue-Eyes White Dragon. The problem is scale: stretch the formula across hundreds of episodes and spin-offs, and the show slips into a loop of familiar stakes, recycled strategies, and slow-burn arcs that blur together. Sampling a season or two is fun, but watching the entire franchise straight through is a grind most viewers are better off skipping. | © 4Kids Entertainment

1-15

Some anime earn their long runtimes. Others… really don’t. These shows have iconic moments, loyal fans, and big reputations, but sitting through every episode often feels like far more effort than the payoff is worth.

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Some anime earn their long runtimes. Others… really don’t. These shows have iconic moments, loyal fans, and big reputations, but sitting through every episode often feels like far more effort than the payoff is worth.

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