Netflix didn’t just “add animation” like it’s a side salad. It built an entire buffet: prestige fantasy, chaotic adult comedies,
anime exclusives, heartfelt family adventures, and anthologies that feel like your brain got invited to a very stylish haunted house.
And because fans are the loudest (said with love), their rankings tend to reveal something critics can’t always measure:
what people actually rewatch, quote, meme, and beg their friends to start “just one episode” at 11:47 p.m.
Below is a fan-first ranking that highlights the titles that consistently rise to the top in viewer voting, buzz, and repeat-loveplus
a long, scroll-worthy list of 100+ animated series that fans keep circling back to. Availability can shift over time, but the fan affection?
That stuff sticks like popcorn butter to your hoodie.
How Fans Usually Rank Animated Series
Fan rankings rarely reward “most technically correct.” They reward feelings. That’s why a show with a wild art style,
a messy-but-beloved protagonist, and a soundtrack that makes you stare at the ceiling for a full minute can outrank something
that’s objectively gorgeous but emotionally distant.
What fans tend to vote for
- Rewatchability: If people can loop it like a comfort playlist, it climbs.
- Character obsession: The moment fans start arguing about “best arc,” the show is doing numbers.
- Visual identity: The more instantly recognizable the animation style, the stronger the fandom glue.
- High-stakes storytelling: Fans love comedy, but they also love when animation goes for the throat (politely).
- Conversation power: If it sparks theories, memes, and “waitdid you catch that line?” texts, it rises fast.
In other words: fans rank shows the way they recommend restaurantsless like a spreadsheet, more like
“I still think about that meal sometimes.”
The Fan-Ranked Top Tier (With Quick Reasons)
You could argue about the exact order until Netflix asks if you’re “still watching” out of concern for your well-being.
But these titles consistently land near the top because they combine craft, heart, and that irresistible “next episode” pull.
-
Arcane A game adaptation that doesn’t feel like homework. It’s visually stunning, emotionally sharp, and
somehow makes political intrigue and found-family drama feel like a roller coaster. -
Blue Eye Samurai Prestige animation with cinematic action and a protagonist you’ll root for even when
your jaw is on the floor from the violence (respectfully). -
BoJack Horseman A comedy that sneaks up and turns into an honest (sometimes brutal) look at identity,
addiction, fame, and the weird ways we try to outrun ourselves. - Castlevania Gothic action, sharp dialogue, and battles that feel like a heavy-metal album cover came to life.
-
Love, Death & Robots A grab bag of sci-fi nightmares and visual experimentation where your favorite episode
says more about you than your résumé does. - Cyberpunk: Edgerunners Stylish, loud, tragic, and unforgettable. Fans don’t just like itthey mourn it.
-
Inside Job Workplace comedy, but the workplace is every conspiracy theory at once. Fans love its pace,
cynicism, and surprisingly sincere character beats. -
Big Mouth Loud, awkward, and oddly therapeutic. It turns puberty into a monster moviebecause, honestly,
that’s fair. -
Devilman Crybaby Bold, polarizing, and emotionally devastating. Fans who love it really love it
(and tend to warn you first). - The Dragon Prince Fantasy adventure with big heart, complex politics, and a fandom that treats lore like a sport.
-
She-Ra and the Princesses of Power Character-driven, funny, and deeply earnest. It’s the kind of show
fans rewatch for comfort and catharsis. - Aggretsuko Cute on the outside, screaming on the insidelike many adults, actually.
- Hilda Cozy, magical, and quietly profound. A comfort show that still lands emotional punches.
- Kipo and the Age of Wonderbeasts Bright, musical, and full of optimism without being naïve.
- The Midnight Gospel A psychedelic philosophy road trip that’s equal parts silly and soul-searching.
-
Disenchantment A fantasy comedy that blends jokes, cynicism, and long-story arcs in a way fans either adore
or passionately debate (often both). - Scissor Seven Offbeat comedy with surprising action and emotion. It sneaks up on viewersthen wins them over.
-
Scott Pilgrim Takes Off A remix that respects the vibe but isn’t afraid to swerve. Fans love it when a reboot
has a backbone. - Castlevania: Nocturne More vampiric drama, more stylish action, more reasons to whisper “just one more episode.”
- Beastars A moody, character-focused drama that uses its animal world to explore real human tension and desire.
- DOTA: Dragon’s Blood Fantasy action that surprised viewers with its scope and character stakes.
- Blood of Zeus Mythology, monsters, and heroic melodramafans show up for the vibes and stay for the fights.
- Voltron: Legendary Defender A long-running fan favorite for team dynamics, big arcs, and a passionate community.
-
Transformers: War for Cybertron Trilogy Mech drama with heavier tone than many fans expectedand that’s
exactly why it found its people. - Masters of the Universe: Revelation Nostalgia with sharper edges, big swings, and plenty for fans to debate.
If you only have time for five, start with: Arcane, Blue Eye Samurai,
BoJack Horseman, Castlevania, and Love, Death & Robots.
That lineup covers prestige, emotion, action, and “what did I just watch (in a good way)?”
Why Netflix Animation Hits Different
1) Animation isn’t stuck in one “lane” anymore
Netflix treats animation like a format, not a genre. That means you can go from a cozy forest adventure to a blood-soaked
revenge epic to a coming-of-age comedy where the hormones have speaking roles and poor manners.
2) Fans reward bold creative identity
The most fan-loved titles usually have a clear voice: a distinct look, a specific rhythm of humor, and characters who feel real
even when they’re… a talking horse, a vampire hunter, or a stressed office worker who scream-sings metal karaoke.
3) The “global library” effect keeps discovery alive
Anime exclusives, international co-productions, and experimental anthologies sit next to Western adult animation and family series.
Fans love that the next obsession might come from anywhereand still feel right at home on the same platform.
Full Fan-Ranked List: 100+ Netflix Animation Series
This extended list is designed for discovery. Some are Netflix Originals, some are exclusives, and some have rotated in and out
over time. If you’re browsing in the U.S., titles can shiftso treat this as a “fan-favorite map,” not a legally binding contract
with your TV.
- Arcane
- Blue Eye Samurai
- BoJack Horseman
- Castlevania
- Love, Death & Robots
- Cyberpunk: Edgerunners
- Inside Job
- Big Mouth
- Devilman Crybaby
- The Dragon Prince
- She-Ra and the Princesses of Power
- Aggretsuko
- Hilda
- Kipo and the Age of Wonderbeasts
- The Midnight Gospel
- Disenchantment
- Scissor Seven
- Scott Pilgrim Takes Off
- Castlevania: Nocturne
- Beastars
- DOTA: Dragon’s Blood
- Blood of Zeus
- Voltron: Legendary Defender
- Transformers: War for Cybertron Trilogy
- Masters of the Universe: Revelation
- Masters of the Universe: Revolution
- F Is for Family
- Paradise PD
- Farzar
- Human Resources
- Hoops
- Chicago Party Aunt
- Q-Force
- Captain Fall
- Mulligan
- Exploding Kittens
- Tuca & Bertie
- The Cuphead Show!
- Sonic Prime
- Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous
- Jurassic World: Chaos Theory
- Skull Island
- Tomb Raider: The Legend of Lara Croft
- Dragon Age: Absolution
- Pacific Rim: The Black
- Trese
- Seis Manos
- Super Crooks
- Yasuke
- Spriggan
- Onimusha
- Pluto
- Great Pretender
- Japan Sinks: 2020
- Eden
- Ghost in the Shell: SAC_2045
- Ultraman
- BNA: Brand New Animal
- Little Witch Academia
- Carole & Tuesday
- Violet Evergarden
- Kotaro Lives Alone
- Romantic Killer
- The Way of the Househusband
- Uncle from Another World
- Blue Period
- Komi Can’t Communicate
- Delicious in Dungeon
- My Happy Marriage
- Kakegurui
- Kakegurui Twin
- Record of Ragnarok
- Kengan Ashura
- Baki
- Baki Hanma
- Levius
- Knights of Sidonia
- Ajin: Demi-Human
- Dorohedoro
- High-Rise Invasion
- AICO -Incarnation-
- B: The Beginning
- Hero Mask
- Cannon Busters
- Godzilla Singular Point
- Gamera: Rebirth
- Terminator Zero
- Tekken: Bloodline
- Rilakkuma and Kaoru
- Rilakkuma’s Theme Park Adventure
- Pokémon Concierge
- Bee and PuppyCat
- Centaurworld
- Maya and the Three
- Green Eggs and Ham
- Kid Cosmic
- Glitch Techs
- The Hollow
- Trollhunters: Tales of Arcadia
- 3Below: Tales of Arcadia
- Wizards: Tales of Arcadia
- Fast & Furious Spy Racers
- The Epic Tales of Captain Underpants
- The Boss Baby: Back in Business
- The Boss Baby: Back in the Crib
- Kung Fu Panda: The Dragon Knight
- Dragons: Race to the Edge
- All Hail King Julien
- Dawn of the Croods
- Spirit Riding Free
- Carmen Sandiego
- Avatar: The Last Airbender (Animated)
- The Legend of Korra
Pro tip: if you’re new to this world, pick one “heavy” show (like Blue Eye Samurai or BoJack Horseman),
one “comfort” show (like Hilda or Kipo), and one “chaos goblin” show (like Big Mouth or Love, Death & Robots).
Balance. Harmony. Emotional stability. Sort of.
Fan Experiences: The Real-World Joy of Netflix Animation (Extra )
Watching fan-ranked animation on Netflix has a very specific rhythmalmost like a ritual. You start with good intentions.
You tell yourself you’ll sample the top of the list, maybe one episode, purely for “research.” Then the show does the thing
great animation always does: it earns your attention so fast you don’t notice you’ve stopped scrolling, stopped multitasking,
and started feeling. You’re suddenly sitting upright like the couch just promoted you to Captain of Emotions.
The funniest part is how animation rewires expectations. You hit play on something that looks bright and harmless, and ten minutes
later you’re dealing with themes like grief, identity, forgiveness, or the gentle horror of realizing you’ve become your own worst
roommate. Fans talk about this all the time: animation makes it easier to walk into difficult ideas because the surface is inviting.
A show like Hilda can feel like a warm mug of cocoa… until it quietly reminds you what courage looks like in everyday life.
Meanwhile, BoJack Horseman can make you laugh at a throwaway gag and then hit you with a line that sticks in your brain for
the rest of the week. Fans don’t just binge these showsthey process them.
There’s also the “group chat factor.” Fan-ranked series become social currency. Someone posts a screenshot of a beautifully framed
scene from Arcane, and suddenly three people who haven’t spoken since college are debating whether the show should count as
“art” (it does) or whether they’re allowed to rewatch the bridge scene without yelling “I’M FINE.” Another friend starts
Castlevania and messages you at 1:03 a.m. like, “So… I accidentally finished a season.” That’s the charm: animation fandoms
form quickly, bond hard, and communicate primarily in quotes, reaction images, and urgent recommendations.
Fans also describe a specific kind of discovery joy unique to Netflix: you come for the headline titles and stay for the deep cuts.
Maybe you clicked Love, Death & Robots because everyone on the internet yelled about one episode, but then you find a
completely different short that becomes your favoriteyour personal “how is nobody talking about this?” gem. Or you think
you’re “not really into anime,” and then Cyberpunk: Edgerunners turns you into a person who suddenly knows what a studio
credit sequence looks like and has opinions about it. The fan experience is a constant ladder: watch one show, unlock three more.
Finally, there’s the quiet comfort factor. Fans often return to animated series the way they return to certain songs:
not because they forgot what happens, but because they remember exactly how it makes them feel. A ranked list can point you toward
a “best,” but the best part is what happens after you press playwhen a series becomes your go-to after a long day, your weekend
binge with snacks, or the thing you put on “for background” and then accidentally watch with full attention like it’s your job.
That’s the real fan ranking: the shows you keep close.
