Category Archives: Manga Anime

Ghost in the Shell (2026) Is Coming to Prime Video — 7 July

Science SARU has unveiled the fourth promotional video for its upcoming Ghost in the Shell anime series — and alongside it comes the reveal of the ending theme, a three-year cross-border music collaboration that is arguably as exciting as the show itself. Premiere date: 7 July 2026, streaming on Amazon Prime Video worldwide — which means Singapore fans are in from day one.

Ghost in the Shell Promotional Video #4 | 7 July 2026 — via Ghost in the Shell Official Channel on YouTube

Science SARU Takes On the Original Manga

This is not a sequel, prequel, or alternate-universe retelling. The Ghost in the Shell is a direct adaptation of Masamune Shirow’s original manga — the 1989 cyberpunk classic that seeded every version of the franchise since. Science SARU, the studio behind Dan Da Dan, Devilman Crybaby, and the Golden Globe-nominated Inu-oh, is leading animation production in collaboration with Bandai Namco Filmworks, Production I.G., and Kodansha.

Direction is handled by Mokochan — assistant director on Dan Da Dan and making her solo directorial debut here. Character design and chief animation direction falls to Shuhei Handa, whose character sheets draw closely from Shirow’s linework. Series composition and scripts are by novelist and critic Toh EnJoe, with music by Taisei Iwasaki, Ryo Konishi, and YUKI KANESAKA.

Ghost in the Shell 2026 key visual
Image courtesy of Ghost in the Shell

The Ending Theme Is Blue by MILLENNIUM PARADE

PV4 debuted the ending theme: Blue, performed by MILLENNIUM PARADE featuring Saya Gray and Daniel Caesar. The track has been quietly in production for around three years — MILLENNIUM PARADE founder Daiki Tsuneta (also of King Gnu) began working on it with Canadian-Japanese artist Saya Gray before Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter Daniel Caesar joined the project to complete what the team describes as a cross-border collaboration.

It marks MILLENNIUM PARADE’s second contribution to a Ghost in the Shell production, following their work on SAC_2045. In the context of PV4, Blue accompanies footage the creative team describes as an emotional piece focused on the inner lives of characters surrounding protagonist Motoko Kusanagi — suggesting the series has a human-drama register alongside the cyberpunk action the franchise is known for.

Where and When to Watch in Singapore

The Ghost in the Shell premieres in Japan on 7 July 2026, in the Ka-Anival!! block on Fuji TV and Kansai TV. On the streaming side, Amazon Prime Video holds worldwide rights excluding Russia and China, with Japan receiving an early exclusive window. That means Singapore Prime Video subscribers get access from launch day.

Bandai Namco Filmworks will also screen episodes 1 and 2 at Anime Expo 2026 in Los Angeles (2–5 July), with director Mokochan and character designer Shuhei Handa attending for a panel and autograph session. A separate premiere screening is scheduled at the Annecy International Animation Film Festival (21–27 June in France).

Last words

The last full Ghost in the Shell TV anime was Ghost in the Shell: Arise in 2015 — making this return more than a decade in the making. Science SARU’s track record with emotionally charged source material makes this one of the most anticipated anime of this summer season. If you have a Prime Video subscription, 7 July is a date worth marking.

ONE PIECE: Grand Gourmet — Run Sanji’s Floating Restaurant This October

Kairosoft — the studio behind beloved management sims like Game Dev Story and Mega Mall Story — is setting sail for the Grand Line. ONE PIECE: Grand Gourmet, a pixel art restaurant management sim co-developed with Bandai Namco, was announced during the June 9 Nintendo Direct and launches 23 October 2026 across Switch 2, Switch, PC, iOS, and Android.

ONE PIECE: Grand Gourmet | Announcement Trailer — via Bandai Namco Entertainment America on YouTube

Welcome to Baratie Number Two

The premise is perfectly on-brand: you’ve just signed on as a rookie staff member helping Sanji and the Straw Hats open a second floating restaurant — a sequel to the legendary Baratie from the East Blue arc. Design the dining room, craft the menu, keep the customers fed, and manage the chaos of an ocean-going eatery where the clientele includes pirates, Marines, and Luffy, who will absolutely try to eat everything before it reaches the table.

ONE PIECE: Grand Gourmet restaurant management gameplay screenshot
Image courtesy of Bandai Namco

What’s on the Menu

The gameplay follows Kairosoft’s signature build-upgrade-optimise loop. You’ll develop recipes inspired by One Piece lore — dishes like Water-Water Meat BBQ feature on the menu — and even channel Devil Fruit abilities to push your cooking to the next level. Unlock exclusive character events as your restaurant’s reputation grows, and dress the place up with over 200 furniture and decorative items.

The biggest draw for fans is the roster: over 400 One Piece characters appear as staff and customers in pixel art, covering characters from across the whole series timeline. Expect plenty of fan-service cameos when series favourites — and villains — walk through your doors.

ONE PIECE: Grand Gourmet pixel art character roster
Image courtesy of Bandai Namco

Platforms and Singapore Availability

ONE PIECE: Grand Gourmet launches on 23 October 2026 on Nintendo Switch 2, Nintendo Switch, PC (Steam), iOS, and Android. The multi-platform release — particularly mobile — makes this accessible to Singapore One Piece fans regardless of whether they’ve picked up a Switch 2 yet.

ONE PIECE: Grand Gourmet Sanji cooking scene
Image courtesy of Bandai Namco

SGD pricing and Asia-region eShop availability are to be confirmed by Bandai Namco. Kairosoft management titles have historically been affordably priced, though the Bandai Namco co-publishing arrangement may affect the final number. We’ll update once regional pricing drops.

More game news on GameTrader.SG

Last words

Singapore has a massive One Piece fanbase, and Kairosoft’s cosy loop — the kind of game that pulls you in for “just one more day” — is a perfect fit for the franchise. Whether you’re playing on Switch 2 or on your phone during the MRT commute, Grand Gourmet looks like a genuinely fun way to spend time in the world of the Straw Hats. Mark 23 October, and start brainstorming a restaurant name.

Tokyo Revengers Season 4 Premieres October 2 on Disney+

The time-leaping is nearly over. Tokyo Revengers: War of the Three Titans Arc — the fourth and final season of the beloved delinquent-gang anime — has confirmed October 2, 2026 as its worldwide premiere date, streaming exclusively on Disney+. A newly released third trailer gives us the clearest look yet at the three-way war for Kanto.

Tokyo Revengers Season 4 — War of the Three Titans Arc key visual
Image courtesy of LIDENFILMS

What Is the War of the Three Titans Arc?

Season 4 picks up after the events of the Tenjiku Arc, with Takemichi leaping back to 2008 to find himself in high school and the power balance in Kanto completely redrawn. Three dominant gangs now stand at the centre of everything:

  • Tokyo Manji Gang — led by the enigmatic Mikey
  • Rokuhara Tandai — led by the fearsome South Terano
  • Brahman — led by a newcomer to the anime, Senju Kawaragi

The third trailer opens with the disbandment of Toman and immediately sets the stage for a collision course between all three factions, as Takemichi once again tries to change a future where everyone he loves ends up dead. This arc is adapted from the manga’s final chapters — which means Season 4 is where it all ends.

New Director, Familiar Studio

LIDENFILMS returns to animate the final arc, but with a change at the top: Maki Kodaira takes over as series director, replacing Koichi Hatsumi who helmed Seasons 1 through 3. Music is again handled by Hiroaki Tsutsumi. The core Japanese voice cast is intact — Yuki Shin returns as Takemichi, Yuu Hayashi as Mikey, and Masaya Fukunishi as Draken — alongside 30-plus characters confirmed for the season.

Voice actors Yuki Shin, Yuu Hayashi, and Masaya Fukunishi will appear at Anime Expo 2026 in Los Angeles on July 4 for a special Tokyo Revengers cast panel — if you happen to be attending, that’s one not to miss.

Where to Watch in Singapore

Disney+ is available in Singapore, so local fans can catch Season 4 from October 2 on the same day as the global premiere — no waiting for a delayed regional rollout. The series streams exclusively on Disney+, so there is no free simulcast option this time. If you are not already subscribed and plan to follow the final arc, now is a good time to get set up.

Not caught up yet? Seasons 1 to 3 — covering the Valhalla, Moebius Elimination, Black Dragon, Tenjiku, and Three Deities arcs — are already on Disney+ SG. The manga’s final arc is one of the most action-dense in the series, so we’d recommend going in fresh rather than jumping straight to Season 4.

Last Words

Tokyo Revengers has been a consistent crowd favourite at anime events here — we still remember the cosplay turnout at AFA Singapore a couple of years back. The third trailer landing with a locked premiere date is the signal that LIDENFILMS is confident in what they’ve put together for this final chapter. Mark October 2 on your calendar, and keep an eye on our anime coverage for more updates as the season gets closer.

BAKI-DOU: Invincible Samurai Part 2 Drops on Netflix June 18

Singapore fans of the Baki franchise, this Thursday is your day — BAKI-DOU: The Invincible Samurai Part 2 drops on Netflix on 18 June 2026, with all 12 new episodes releasing simultaneously worldwide, including Singapore.

What Part 2 Brings to the BAKI-DOU Netflix Anime

BAKI-DOU: The Invincible Samurai Part 2 promotional visual
Image courtesy of Netflix

Part 2 picks up from Episode 14 and runs through Episode 25, continuing the arc of the resurrected Miyamoto Musashi — Japan’s legendary swordsman brought back to life in the modern world — as he cuts through the strongest fighters alive. The trailer teases clashes with Pickle (the ancient frozen warrior), Izo Motobe, and Kaoru Hanayama, before Baki Hanma himself steps up for the defining showdown.

TMS Entertainment produces the series. The new arc comes with a full soundtrack refresh: the opening theme is “MUSASHI” by Chevon, and J SOUL BROTHERS III — one of Japan’s biggest acts — deliver the ending theme “KATANA.”

Watch the Official BAKI-DOU Part 2 Trailer

BAKI-DOU: The Invincible Samurai Part 2 | Official Trailer — via Netflix Philippines on YouTube

How BAKI-DOU Part 1 Set the Stage

BAKI-DOU: The Invincible Samurai Part 2 key visual with Musashi, Baki, Pickle, Hanayama and Motobe
Image courtesy of Netflix

When Part 1’s 13 episodes landed on Netflix on 26 February 2026, they racked up 3.4 million views in their first week. The series opens with a deceptively simple premise: the world’s greatest fighters are bored, having exhausted every worthy opponent — until a shadowy project resurrects the one man who can end that boredom for good. Part 1 built Musashi’s fearsome reputation fight by fight; Part 2 is where he finally meets his true reckoning.

Singapore Netflix Streaming Details

  • Platform: Netflix Singapore
  • Part 2 drop date: Thursday, 18 June 2026
  • Episodes: 14–25 (12 episodes, all releasing at once)
  • Age rating: M18

If you haven’t started Part 1 yet, all 13 episodes are on Netflix Singapore right now — you have a few days to catch up before the new batch lands.

Last Words

BAKI-DOU Part 2 is shaping up to be one of the bigger anime events on Netflix this month — the Musashi arc has been building for half a season and the payoff arrives in less than 72 hours. For more anime news and releases hitting Singapore, check out our anime and manga coverage.

KyoAni’s Sparks of Tomorrow Drops New Trailer — Netflix July 5

Kyoto Animation has released a brand-new pre-broadcast trailer for Sparks of Tomorrow, accompanied by a third key visual and five newly confirmed supporting cast members. The studio’s first wholly original TV anime in years premieres on Netflix on 5 July 2026 — just three weeks from now.

Sparks of Tomorrow | Official Trailer | Netflix — via Netflix Anime on YouTube

What is Sparks of Tomorrow?

Sparks of Tomorrow is adapted from a light novel by Hiro Yūki, published under Kyoto Animation‘s own KA Esuma Bunko imprint in August 2018. The novel earned an honorable mention at the 8th Kyoto Animation Award in 2017 — so this is a genuinely homegrown KyoAni story, developed in-house from novel to animated screen.

The setting is alternate-history Meiji-era Kyoto, a city permanently blanketed in smoke from the steam engines that power civilization. In this world, electricity was never discovered — it remains little more than a fantasy. Two young people cross paths while chasing a mysterious artifact known as the 20th Century Electrical Catalog, said to hold the blueprint for an electrified future neither of them dared believe possible: Kihachi Sakamoto, a boy hardened by the loss of his brother, and Inako Momokawa, a girl quietly protecting hidden regrets.

Sparks of Tomorrow third key visual — Kyoto Animation anime 2026
Image courtesy of Kyoto Animation / Netflix

New Trailer and Five More Cast Members

Announced on 14 June 2026 alongside the pre-broadcast promo video, the third key visual leans into the show’s signature aesthetic: the warm amber glow of furnace light cutting through curtains of steam, and the kind of carefully composed character framing that KyoAni has made its calling card. The five new supporting cast members revealed by Anime News Network are:

  • Hiroshi Yanaka as Jinemon Momokawa
  • Mayumi Asano as Naeko Momokawa
  • Daichi Endo as Bunshichi Yagura
  • Ayahi Takagaki in the dual roles of Tome and Inari

Full Cast and Production

The leads are Yuma Uchida as Kihachi Sakamoto and Sora Amamiya as Inako Momokawa — both among the most in-demand voice actors working in anime today. Joining them are Koki Uchiyama as Yosuke Mizoe and Daisuke Ono as Seiroku Sakamoto.

Director Minoru Ōta helms the project, with series composition by Tatsuhiko Urahata, character design by Kohei Okamura, and the score composed by Hitomi Koto. The opening theme, “Eureka Evrika” by Luna Goami, was previewed in earlier trailers and has already drawn attention for its sweeping, bittersweet sound.

When and Where to Watch in Singapore

Sparks of Tomorrow streams exclusively on Netflix from 5 July 2026, releasing globally on the same day as its Japanese TV broadcast on Tokyo MX, BS11, ABC TV, and TV Aichi. Singapore fans get it day-and-date with Japan — no regional delay has been announced. Expect weekly episode drops throughout the summer season.

For more anime streaming picks coming this summer, check out our Manga Anime coverage.

Last words

KyoAni originals do not come around often, and when they do, Singapore anime fans tend to make time for them. Sparks of Tomorrow arrives with a thoughtful premise, an award-winning source novel, and a production team that has consistently delivered some of the most visually meticulous anime of the past decade. Three weeks to 5 July — mark it on your Netflix queue now.

Rascal Does Not Dream of a Dear Friend main trailer visual

Rascal Does Not Dream of a Dear Friend: The Final Chapter Gets Its Main Trailer

The final chapter of the Rascal Does Not Dream saga now has a full main trailer — and if you’ve been following Sakuta and Mai since Bunny Girl Senpai, you are going to want to watch it right now.

Main Trailer — Rascal Does Not Dream of a Dear Friend — via アニプレックス チャンネル on YouTube

What is Rascal Does Not Dream of a Dear Friend?

Rascal Does Not Dream of a Dear Friend (青春ブタ野郎はディアフレンドの夢を見ない) is the fourth and final theatrical anime film based on Hajime Kamoshida’s light novel series. It adapts the 15th and conclusive volume of the franchise, bringing the long-running story of Adolescence Syndrome to a close.

If you need a quick refresher: the Seishun Buta Yarou (Bunny Girl Senpai) universe follows university student Sakuta Azusagawa and his girlfriend, actress Mai Sakurajima, as they encounter a series of supernatural phenomena tied to adolescent emotions — known as Adolescence Syndrome. The TV series aired in 2018, followed by the theatrical film Rascal Does Not Dream of a Dreaming Girl in 2019, and more recently Rascal Does Not Dream of Santa Claus in September 2025.

Rascal Does Not Dream of a Dear Friend official visual
Image courtesy of Aniplex

What does the main trailer reveal?

The main trailer, released today through the official Rascal Does Not Dream of a Dear Friend website, signals that this film will ramp up the emotional and supernatural stakes considerably. The story begins when the identity of popular internet singer “Kirishima Touko” is somehow linked to actress Sakurajima Mai — and in the wake of this revelation, dreams start bleeding into reality around Sakuta. He receives a chilling message from an alternate version of himself: “Stop Kirishima Touko — before reality is rewritten.”

Director Soichi Masui returns to helm the project at CloverWorks, alongside series composer Masahiro Yokotani and character designer Satomi Tamura. The beloved fox capture plan is back on music duties. The full cast — including Kaito Ishikawa as Sakuta Azusagawa, Asami Seto as Mai Sakurajima, Reina Ueda, and Nao Toyama — reprises their roles.

Rascal Does Not Dream of a Dear Friend main trailer still
Image courtesy of Aniplex

October 16 Japan release — what about Singapore?

Rascal Does Not Dream of a Dear Friend premieres in Japanese cinemas on 16 October 2026. Limited advance tickets with an exclusive A5 clear card bonus go on sale in Japan from 19 June 2026.

No Singapore theatrical or Asia streaming date has been announced yet. That said, the TV series and previous films in the franchise have been available to Singapore fans via Crunchyroll — so a streaming window post-Japan theatrical run is the most likely path to watch it here. We will update as soon as any Asia release details are confirmed. In the meantime, check out our latest anime coverage for what’s streaming this season.

Last words

This is the one Singapore fans of the franchise have been waiting for — the true ending to a series that has run since 2018 and built one of the most devoted anime fanbases around. Whether you’ve been watching since the original Bunny Girl Senpai or came in through the movies, the main trailer makes a strong case that CloverWorks and Masui are saving their best work for last. October 16 cannot come soon enough.

Black Clover Season 2 key visual

Black Clover Season 2 Officially Sets October 2026 Premiere — Coming to Crunchyroll in Singapore

After a five-year wait, Black Clover Season 2 is officially happening — and we finally have a premiere window. The new season is confirmed for October 2026, with Crunchyroll streaming it exclusively outside Japan, which means Singapore fans will be watching weekly alongside the rest of the world.

Black Clover Second Season | Official Trailer 2 — via Crunchyroll on YouTube

The Official Confirmation — Published Today in Weekly Shōnen Jump

The announcement landed in Weekly Shōnen Jump issue 29 (dated June 15, 2026) and was confirmed simultaneously via the official Black Clover X account (@bclover_PR). The release window is October 2026, placing it squarely in the Fall 2026 anime season. A specific premiere date has not yet been announced, but the October window means we are roughly three and a half months away from new episodes.

Black Clover Season 2 key art
Image courtesy of Studio Pierrot / Black Clover

Director Ayataka Tanemura and the Core Team Are Back

Studio Pierrot is returning as the animation studio — the same house behind Naruto, BLEACH, and the original 170-episode Black Clover run. Director Ayataka Tanemura, who helmed the final stretch of Season 1 (episodes 153–170) and directed the beloved 2023 film Black Clover: Sword of the Wizard King, is back in the chair. The core production team is also reassembled, with Keiichiro Ochi returning for series composition and Itsuko Takeda handling character design.

As covered by Anime Corner from the official announcement, director Tanemura said: “Once again, I’ll be serving as director! Will Asta and the others finally return after such a long time? We’re pushing ourselves beyond our limits in production so that we can show you an even more powerful story!”

Black Clover Season 2 promotional artwork
Image courtesy of Studio Pierrot / Black Clover

Anime Expo 2026 — World Premiere of Episode 1 on July 4

If you happen to be in Los Angeles for Anime Expo 2026, there’s a very good reason to clear your July 4 schedule: a special panel will screen the world premiere of Black Clover Season 2’s first episode, with Asta’s Japanese voice actor Gakuto Kajiwara and director Tanemura appearing live on stage. For everyone else, the weekly broadcast begins in October — Crunchyroll has confirmed exclusive international streaming rights.

If you want to catch up before it drops, check out the other anime we’ve been covering for the Fall 2026 season.

Last Words

Black Clover has always punched above its weight in Singapore. The original run had consistent viewership here, and the 2023 film performed well across Southeast Asia — so a full Season 2 is genuinely big news for local fans. Crunchyroll’s international simulcast means Singapore viewers get new episodes at the same time as Japan, no waiting for localised releases. October is roughly when the school holidays kick in too, which means the timing could not be much better for a long-running shonen marathon. Set a reminder, and keep an eye on the official Black Clover X account for the specific premiere date once it drops.

Though I Am an Inept Villainess Arrives on Netflix Singapore on 12 July

Good news for Singapore Netflix subscribers who love palace intrigue. Though I Am an Inept Villainess (ふつつかな悪女ではございますが ~雛宮蝶鼠とりかえ伝~) is landing on Netflix Singapore on 12 July 2026, with Toho Entertainment Asia today confirming the series as part of their Asian streaming lineup. It is a body-swap palace drama from Doga Kobo that has quietly become one of the Summer 2026 anime season’s most-anticipated titles.

Though I Am an Inept Villainess | Main Trailer [ENG SUB] | Premieres July 12, 2026 — via TOHO animation on YouTube

The Story: Two Court Rivals, One Body Swap

Based on Satsuki Nakamura’s light novel — a series that has sold over 3 million copies and won the grand prize in the light novel category at NTT Solmare’s 2023 competition — the story is set in a royal training institution steeped in court politics and rivalry. Kou Reirin is the court butterfly: beautiful, kind, and adored by all. Her counterpart Shu Keigetsu is the envious court rat who uses magic to swap their bodies. What unfolds is a story of crossed identities, unexpected empathy, and palace scheming told from two very different points of view.

Though I Am an Inept Villainess anime key visual featuring Kou Reirin and Shu Keigetsu
Image courtesy of Toho Entertainment

Production: Doga Kobo, a Veteran Director, and milet on the Theme

The anime is directed by Mitsue Yamazaki at Doga Kobo — the studio known for delivering polished character-driven productions — with character design by Ai Kikuchi. The voice cast features Manaka Iwami as Kou Reirin, Natsumi Kawaida as Shu Keigetsu, and Makoto Furukawa as Ei Gyomei.

One extra pull for Singapore fans: the opening theme, Sunny, is performed by milet — the Japanese singer-songwriter whose work on Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba built a devoted following across Southeast Asia. It is the kind of casting that signals the production is aiming for mainstream reach beyond the usual light-novel fanbase.

Where Singapore Fans Can Watch

The series premieres on Netflix Singapore on 12 July 2026 as part of Toho Entertainment Asia’s regional release. Viewers in North America, Europe, and most other Western markets will find the series on Crunchyroll instead. The anime was originally slated for April 2026 before a production delay pushed it to its current summer slot.

Last Words

With Doga Kobo behind the production, a 3-million-copy light novel as source material, and milet on the opening credits, Though I Am an Inept Villainess looks like a well-packaged summer pick for Singapore Netflix subscribers who enjoy fantasy romance with a political edge. Block out 12 July, and check our anime coverage for more Summer 2026 season roundups.

Jujutsu Kaisen Rumble: Survivaton — The Vampire Survivors Dev’s Culling Game

The studio behind Vampire Survivors has partnered with Shueisha Games to bring Jujutsu Kaisen into the survivors genre — and thrown a battle royale twist on top. Jujutsu Kaisen Rumble: Survivaton was announced at the Nintendo Direct on 9 June 2026, and it looks unlike any JJK game before it.

JUJUTSU KAISEN RUMBLE: SURVIVATON – Nintendo Direct 6.9.2026 — via Nintendo of America on YouTube

What Is Jujutsu Kaisen Rumble: Survivaton?

Developed by poncle — the UK studio whose auto-attack game Vampire Survivors kept a generation of players up past midnight — and published by Shueisha Games, Survivaton takes the survivors formula and adds a competitive edge. Up to eight players compete simultaneously on a shared map, mowing down cursed spirits to rack up points. When you hit 100 points, you earn the right to add a new rule to the match. Rules can disable rival players’ attacks, reverse their controls, or steal their accumulated points outright.

It is a direct nod to the Culling Game arc in Gege Akutami’s manga: participants there could rewrite the rules of the game itself to gain the upper hand. The twist is that reaching 100 points is not a win condition — it is a power move. The actual fight for survival continues, now shaped by whatever chaos the leading player has introduced.

Jujutsu Kaisen Rumble: Survivaton gameplay screenshot
Image courtesy of Shueisha Games

Characters and Techniques

The game launches with over 20 playable characters from across the Jujutsu Kaisen roster. Names confirmed from the announcement trailer include Yuji Itadori, Megumi Fushiguro, Nobara Kugisaki, and Satoru Gojo — whose voice rings out in the opening cutscene. Each character brings their own skill set, and additional fighters can be unlocked through in-game conditions as you play.

Controls are deliberately stripped back: you move, your character attacks automatically. The depth comes from levelling up mid-match and choosing from randomised skill options, plus filling a gauge to unleash signature techniques — Domain Expansion and Black Flash among them. Boss encounters spawn on the map to keep things unpredictable, and when the dust settles, the top two survivors face off in a direct duel for the win.

Jujutsu Kaisen Rumble: Survivaton characters and domain expansion
Image courtesy of Shueisha Games

Platforms, Modes, and Release Window

Jujutsu Kaisen Rumble: Survivaton is coming to Nintendo Switch 2, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, and Steam in 2026 — no specific release date has been confirmed yet. The game supports up to 8-player online multiplayer alongside a solo mode, and the confirmed language list includes English, Japanese, Simplified and Traditional Chinese, Korean, French, Italian, German, Portuguese, and Spanish. Southeast Asian players, Singapore included, are covered on all fronts.

As reported by Anime News Network at the time of the announcement, this is poncle’s first collaboration with a major anime IP. The studio’s previous title — Vampire Survivors — shipped to enormous commercial and critical success across platforms, which makes this crossover a serious proposition rather than a branded cash-in. Pricing has not been announced.

Last words

For Singapore JJK fans who felt the Culling Game arc hit differently — a game where you can literally change the rules mid-fight to crush your rivals is built for you. Keep an eye on the official Survivaton site for the release date and pricing as we get closer to launch. For more anime game news, visit our news section.