Hey, it’s Ayefkay here—back with an emotional gut check, this time courtesy of an anime that straight-up body slammed my soul into the afterlife and then resurrected it just to do it again.
So let me paint the picture: I stumbled across To Your Eternity way later than I should’ve. This show somehow ghosted past my radar when it dropped, and honestly?
That’s on me.
Because after binging the first two seasons like a man possessed, I’m here to tell you this might just be one of the best anime I’ve ever seen.
If you haven’t seen To Your Eternity yet, buckle in. If you have? Grab a box of tissues, a cup of existential dread, and let’s talk about this absolute rollercoaster of an anime.
To Your Eternity starts with a rock.
Literally.
Our main “character” is an immortal orb (yeah, you read that right) dropped onto Earth by a mysterious godlike being called The Beholder.
This orb has one job: observe the world. But things get a bit spicy when it realizes it can take on the shape of things it interacts with—starting with a rock, then moss, then a dying wolf.
Image Source: To Your Eternity | Kodansha
That’s when it meets The Boy—a lone survivor in a frozen, abandoned village, dreaming of escape, adventure, and reunion with his people.
That short-lived encounter changes everything.
The orb takes the boy’s form, gains the name Fushi, and begins a journey across centuries that’s equal parts heartwarming, horrifying, and holy-hell-why-am-I-crying.
From there, Fushi grows—not just in the “can shapeshift into a death bear of destruction now” way, but emotionally, spiritually, and psychologically.
You watch him go from a blank, wordless being to someone who forms bonds, makes choices, and slowly realizes the crushing weight of what it means to be immortal.
This anime doesn’t just tug at the heartstrings—it rips them out and strums a ballad on your soul.
At its core, To Your Eternity is about growth through loss. Every time someone meaningful to Fushi dies, he gains their form—and their pain.
It’s a brutal but beautiful metaphor for how we’re shaped by those we love and lose. This show doesn’t shy away from the ugly parts of life: loneliness, death, war, abandonment, betrayal.
But through all that, there’s this unshakable optimism—a belief that people are worth remembering, even when it hurts.
Image Source: To Your Eternity | Kodansha
It’s also a series about identity, about what it means to be “you” when you’ve lived for hundreds of years and worn a dozen faces.
Fushi constantly questions his purpose—whether he’s just a weapon, a tool, or something more.
Oh, and if you’ve ever watched Steins;Gate and felt that creeping “time makes everything worse” dread?
To Your Eternity delivers that same flavor of existential angst—just with more shapeshifting and fewer microwaved bananas.
I didn’t cry. You cried…just read the characters:
Fushi – The immortal, ever-evolving protagonist. Starts as a rock, becomes a wolf, then a boy, then a tragic sponge for humanity’s trauma. Watching Fushi learn what it means to be alive is both inspiring and soul-crushing. He’s not your typical “save the world” hero—he’s just trying to make sense of it.
March – The precious child who just wanted to be a mom and live in peace. The world said “nah” and handed her one of the most gut-wrenching arcs in anime. Protect her at all costs.
Gugu – My boy. My sweet, broken, muscle-bound goblin badass. Gugu’s story is the To Your Eternity special: tragic, beautiful, and guaranteed to make you question if you’ve ever truly loved anything before.
Image Source: To Your Eternity | Kodansha
Tonari, Hayase, Kahaku, and a handful of other key players come and go across seasons, but they all serve one purpose: to show Fushi the highs and horrifying lows of human connection.
Enter the Nokkers—horrific root-creature things that are basically the “reset button” of the world. These baddies are here to steal Fushi’s forms, erase his memories, and basically undo everything he’s built. They’re abstract, freaky, and a total vibe killer.
And while the Nokkers are the obvious bad guys, there are plenty of human antagonists too—like Hayase, a complex, manipulative freak who’s obsessed with Fushi in a way that’s part admiration, part psychosis, and all kinds of messed up.
Image Source: To Your Eternity | Kodansha
But the real enemy?
Time. Immortality.
The idea that no matter what you do, everyone you love will eventually fade—and you’ll be the only one left to remember.
This season is a relentless tragedy machine. Every arc is its own little heartbreak factory. Fushi starts with nothing and ends the season having lost more than most anime protagonists ever gain.
Every friend, every lesson, every death shapes him—and you’ll feel every one like a personal attack.
Image Source: To Your Eternity | Kodansha
Fushi’s grown, and now the stakes are bigger. He’s not just learning about people anymore—he’s learning about society, leadership, and what it means to fight for others.
There’s more action, deeper political intrigue, and a lot of psychological chess between Fushi and the Nokkers. And somehow, it still manages to hit you in the feelings like a truck.
Image Source: To Your Eternity | Kodansha
Still unfolding (or recently wrapped, depending on when you’re reading this), but let’s just say: it’s pushing the boundaries of Fushi’s powers, and asking even deeper questions about whether immortality is a gift or a curse.
I personally felt like To Your Eternity could have ended beautifully with the close of season 2, but that wouldn’t finish showing Fushi complete his mission. So I get it.
I’m a little disappointed and hope season 3 doesn’t destroy everything, but I get it.
Let’s take a quick pause to praise the art direction and soundtrack, because holy hell—this show looks and sounds amazing.
The animation is clean, the fight scenes are crisp when they need to be, and the emotional scenes are dripping with atmosphere.
Oh, and the OP for Season 1? “PINK BLOOD” by Hikaru Utada? Certified banger. That song slaps so hard it makes you emotional before the episode even starts.
Not sure if it’s gonna hit the Best Anime Songs of All Time List, but maybe I’ll have to remake that eventually anyways.
Image Source: To Your Eternity | Kodansha
One final note on the openings specifically though – they commit the singular taboo that I hold against anime creators: putting spoilers in the intro sequences.
This is one of my biggest pet peeves, especially in a story that revolves around characters heralding Fushi’s growth. I personally don’t want to know which characters are going to play a big part down the road and wish they didn’t decide to do this.
If you’re like me, just watch the intro on the last episode.
In a world flooded with shonen reboots, a billion isekai clones, and anime that feel like they were made by committee, To Your Eternity is a rare gem.
It’s patient. It’s raw. It’s messy and beautiful and full of questions that most shows are too scared to ask.
If you haven’t given this one a shot yet, do yourself a favor and watch it. But be warned: it will emotionally devastate you.
In the best way.
So yeah—To Your Eternity came out of nowhere for me, but now it’s permanently etched into my brainspace. Right next to Steins;Gate, Paranoia Agent, and that one time I tried to explain Evangelion to a normal person.
Tagged as:
Anime To Your Eternity
About the author
Hey there, I’m Ayefkay, the guy behind reportafk.com and a gamer since I could hold a controller. When I’m not busy in a game or binge-watching some anime, I’m here - calling out the gaming industry and giving you the real deal on everything going on. If you’re tired of the same old recycled takes, you’ve found your new home. Stay tuned.
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Chantelle
April 9, 2025
OMG I LOVED THIS SOOOO MUCH
Ayefkay
April 16, 2025
Hey Chantelle! I’m glad you loved it soooo much lol, I’m actually surprised other people know about it, but maybe it was just me that was hiding under a rock?
Dre
April 10, 2025
Haven’t heard of it but I’ll check it out
Ayefkay
April 16, 2025
Hey Dre, yea the title is pretty spot on “probably slept on” was because I didn’t even find it myself until 2 seasons were over, but honestly I really really liked it. Thanks for stopping by!