Anime

10 Best Brainrot Anime That Are Weapons-Grade Weird, Ranked

Are you a sussy baka who needs a bussin’ anime binge to take your brainrotted mind off doomscrolling and gooning to that zesty anime waifu gyatt? These skibidi series are definitely goated — no cap! These picks are a tasty little fanum tax from your assumptive regular anime smorgasbord. So whether you’re looking for a show with goofy ahh ohio cringe vibes or you’re delulu enough for a good binge for fandom-maxxing while mewing, yeet on over down this rizz list.

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Or, in layman’s terms: Are you a silly goose who just wants to binge a cool anime to divert your attention away from active mental decay, compulsive internet browsing, and perusing pointless, crude content? These comedic series are definitely the best! These picks are like a tasty little side dish to any anime fan’s regularly scheduled buffet of anime media. So whether you’re looking for a show that’s just silly to the point of possible secondhand embarrassment or you’d just like to learn about more anime media while performing other tasks, you should definitely give this fun list a look!

10) Sgt. Frog

image courtesy of Sunrise

When the frog-like alien race, the Keronians, invade Earth, siblings Fuyuki and Natsumi Hinata have one invader in their very home: Sergeant Keroro, leader of a preliminary squad. But just when Keroro thinks he has the upper hand after subduing the two human children, his invasion device, the Kero Ball, busts, and headquarters abandons his unit’s retrieval when something forces the rest of the Keronians to flee Pekopon, their word for Earth. Although Keroro and his platoon, including Giroro, Tamama, Kururu, and Dororo, are forced to remain on Earth plotting planetary domination, they come to enjoy getting into wacky antics at the Hinata residence with its tenants. With Earth and the Hinata kids once their target, they’ve since become their home and friends.

Comprising over 300 episodes, Sgt. Frog, also called Keroro Gunsou, is a great pick for those wanting an endless stream of a cute, comedic, absurd brainrot just following the wacky daily lives of aliens’ futile shenanigans to conquer Earth.

Sgt. Frog can be streamed on Crunchyroll.

9) Life Lessons with Uramichi Oniisan

image courtesy of Studio Blanc.

“Together with Mama” is your typical kids’ TV program full of bright colors, fun songs, and cheerful smiles, right? Well… Behind the scenes (or even oftentimes on full display while the cameras are still rolling), depressed big brother Uramichi Omota, nervous heckler rabbit mascot Tobikichi Usahara, indifferent bear mascot Mitsuo Kumatani, pipe dreamer singer big sister Utano Tadano, and crass singer big brother Iketeru Daga are really a crew of absolutely miserable adults. The ragtag team may usually put on amicable smiles and cheerful exteriors for the innocent preschoolers, but sometimes Uramichi even disillusions the kids by revealing nihilistic realities and harsh life lessons.

Sadly hilarious and pathetically relatable, Uramichi is just a dude who’s absolutely dead inside but still manages to put on a smile to continue earning a paycheck working with children on a kids’ TV program.

Life Lessons with Uramichi Oniisan can be streamed on Crunchyroll.

8) Watamote

image courtesy of SILVER LINK.

Tomoko Kuroki may feel like she’s prepared to tackle high school life, but she quickly learns that playing high school dating sim video games isn’t exactly a 1-to-1 experience. While she dreams of living out her high school life as a pretty, popular girl, Tomoko is actually pretty introverted and awkward, though she herself doesn’t realize it. Even though Tomoko is generally a socially awkward, relatively friendless, and actually pretty inwardly critical otaku, with the support of her brother Tomoki and the help of her new best friend Yuu Naruse, Tomoko gains the courage to overcome her own personal struggles and tackle her new high school life head-on.

WataMote: No Matter How I Look At It, It’s You Guys’ Fault I’m Not Popular!, or simply WataMote, is, to put it bluntly, cringy. But in a really comedic and somewhat relatable way (which can either be in an oddly relieving or self-deprecating depending on Tomoko’s shenanigans).

WataMote can be streamed on HIDIVE where available.

7) Asobi Asobase

image courtesy of Lerche

When Olivia, who looks like a foreign transfer student, plays “look-the-other-way” with her airhead friend Hanako Honda, begins to get on the nerves of fellow classmate Kasumi Nomura, Kasumi becomes annoyed to the point of being challenged into playing, too. When Kasumi wins the round, she demands Olivia tutor her in English and, in return, will teach Olivia different Japanese pastimes. Unbeknownst to Kasumi, Olivia isn’t actually a foreigner — she’s a blonde-haired, blue-eyed native who doesn’t know any English. With a trio making up the Pastime Club, daily hijinks and hilarious antics ensue.

In the realm of turning the mundane into absolute brainrot absurdism, you could say Asobi Asobase can be dumbed down to just being about cute, dumb girls being, well, dumb together.

Asobi Asobase can be streamed on Crunchyroll.

6) KonoSuba: God’s Blessing on This Wonderful World!

image courtesy of Studio Deen

After dying a hilariously pathetic death out of sheer stress rather than being hit by what he thought was an oncoming truck, high schooler Kazuma Satou finds himself in an afterlife audience with the beautiful, obnoxious goddess, Aqua. Given two options — to either go to Heaven or be sent to a fantasy world — the shut-in NEET, of course, chooses the latter. He is also allowed to choose one thing to take with him, so he chooses Aqua, the goddess herself. Although being sent to another world as the future hero to defeat the Demon King seems like it would be full of adventure and wonder, Kazuma and the useless goddess actually end up spending much of their time working manual labor jobs and sleeping in a stable to just get by. Even so, their misadventure is only beginning!

Constantly subverting expectations, Kazuma being a character who truly could not care to follow typical tropes, and plenty of hysterical mishaps and escapades, KonoSuba: God’s Blessing on This Wonderful World!, or simply KonoSuba, is a comedic isekai that will constantly surprise you with the characters’ own brain-rotted mindsets.

KonoSuba: God’s Blessing on This Wonderful World! can be streamed on Crunchyroll.

5) My Deer Friend Nokotan

image courtesy of Wit Studio

Torako Koshi has worked hard to build a reputation as the smart and beautiful student council president, shedding her secret middle school past as a delinquent. But when she crosses paths with the strange deer girl Noko Shikanoko, Torako finds her secret always on the verge of being uncovered. In order to keep Shikanoko from spilling the beans on her hoodlum past, Torako is even willing to put up with Shikanoko’s weird antics, establishing and becoming the president of the Deer Club.

Deer. Lots and lots of deer. At school, in the park, as a hoard to parade Shikanoko around like a revered deer goddess. You cannot stop the deer. They will find you.

My Deer Friend Nokotan can be streamed on Tubi, Prime, and Crunchyroll.

4) Nichijou

image courtesy of Kyoto Animation

While the daily lives of high school students Mio Naganohara, Yuuko Aioi, and Mai Minakami may often include their own odd antics, when young genius Hakase Shinonome, Nano, her robot caretaker, and talking cat Sakamoto come into the picture, all bets are off. Try as they might to go about their mundane routines, absurd situations and downright insane antics seem to crop up around every corner. Whether they’re simply trying to walk down the street or go about their lives at school, not everything goes as smoothly as would otherwise seem when the principal suplexes a deer or your fellow classmate insists on trekking to class on a goat.

Nichijou is a classic anime that is renowned throughout the wider anime community and is regarded with respect for its absolute absurdity. Definitely a fantastic show to put on passively and then constantly realize that something crazy is actually going down.

Nichijou can be streamed on Crunchyroll.

3) Gintama

image courtesy of Sunrise

Edo, a city once home to the feudal shogunate of Japan, is now a puppet government after being invaded by an alien race, the Amanto. With the ban on swords in public, samurai have become a legend of the past. That is, except for one. Gintoki Sakata, brandishing a wooden sword, claims to be a samurai for hire despite the ban. But he isn’t alone; In his endeavor to help others, Gintoki stumbles upon Shinpachi Shimura, who becomes his apprentice wanting to learn the way of the samurai, and Kagura, an alien girl who assists with her superhuman strength.

As the trio takes on freelance odd jobs at Yorozuya, there’s definitely emphasis on the capital ‘O’ Odd. From fighting aliens to toilet humor, Gintama doesn’t have a longstanding high ranking as one of the best anime ever for nothing.

Gintama can be streamed on Crunchyroll or Hulu where available.

2) Ghost Stories

image courtesy of Pierrot

Having to chase their pet cat Kaya after moving to their late mother’s hometown, Satsuki Miyanoshita and her crybaby brother Keiichirou wind up in the local old schoolhouse. Not believing the rumors of the schoolhouse being haunted, they’re attacked by the demon Amanojaku. Upon finding a diary written by their late mother, Kayako, Satsuki attempts to banish the demon, but only manages to trap it within their pet cat. Although the ghosts of the schoolhouse had once been banished years ago, it’s up to Satsuki and her friends, the pretentious Hajime Aoyama, the religious Momoko Koigakubo, and the pansy Leo Kakinoki to keep them from creeping back.

While the sub versus dub argument within the anime community is a tale as old as time, the English dub is actually the main appeal of this series. When American producer Ste7en Foster got his hands on it, he chose to turn it into a comedy including adult humor, profanity, sexual references, and other offensive material.

Ghost Stories can be streamed on Crunchyroll.

1) Bobobo-bo Bo-bobo

Toei Animation

In the year 300X, the world has been taken over and is ruled by the Chrome Dome Empire. The tyrannical rulers’ henchmen, the Hair Hunt Troop, mercilessly hunt the hair of all, leaving heads bald and cities in ruin. But there is one hero willing to stand up to the bald bad guys: Bobobo-bo Bo-bobo. Using his special follicle-fighting style, Fist of the Nose Hair, Bo-bobo rebels against their depilated despotism. Along the way, he’s joined by friends Beauty, Gasser (Heppokomaru), and Don Patch to fight for hair justice.

With humor based in “wigging out” — “the art and philosophy of doing bizarre or unexpected things” — Bobobo-bo Bo-bobo thrives off absolutely wacky, random absurdity, perfect for a passive brainrot binge.


What bussin’ brainrot anime do you simp for? Yeet it into the comments!