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Tokyo Revengers Anime Seasons Episodes Official

| Arc | Episodes | Focus | |------|----------|-------| | Christmas Conflict | 1–6 | Taiju Shiba vs. Toman; Hakkai’s family abuse | | Black Dragons (past timeline) | 7–13 | Shinichiro Sano’s legacy; Takemichi’s 10-year-leap failure |

| Arc | Episodes | Key events | |------|----------|-------------| | Introduction & Draken Arc | 1–9 | Takemichi’s first leap; saving Draken from execution | | Moebius Arc | 10–12 | Introduction of Toman’s hierarchy | | Valhalla / Bloody Halloween Arc | 13–24 | Baji’s betrayal, Kazutora’s past, Mikey’s dark impulse |

| Arc | Episodes | Core conflict | |------|----------|----------------| | Tenjiku Arc | 1–12 | Kisaki’s final plan; Izana Kurokawa; Mucho’s betrayal | tokyo revengers anime seasons episodes

Abstract Tokyo Revengers , adapted from Ken Wakui’s manga, became a cultural phenomenon by blending time-leap mechanics, delinquent gang warfare, and emotional trauma. This paper dissects the anime’s episodic structure across its first three seasons (up to late 2025), analyzing narrative arcs, pacing, key episodes, and how episode counts align with manga chapters. It also explores production shifts, filler content, and thematic density per season. 1. Season 1: The Prologue to Bloody Halloween (April–September 2021) Episode count: 24 Manga chapters covered: ~1–73 (first 8 volumes)

The shortest season yet, but with the highest stakes. Episode 5 ( Whip and Arrow ) introduces Izana — his god complex and brotherly obsession with Mikey create the series’ best antagonist. | Arc | Episodes | Focus | |------|----------|-------|

The 13-episode format forced the studio to cut minor fights from the manga, notably some Taiju backstory. 3. Season 3: Tenjiku Arc (October–December 2023) Episode count: 12 (plus 1 recap) Manga chapters covered: ~122–157

Despite fewer episodes, Season 2 is narratively denser. Episode 9 ( The Black Dragon’s Eighth Generation ) introduces a new time-leap rule (only shaking hands with the past leaper works). Episode 12 ( A Bad Feeling ) is a masterclass in dread — the audience knows a tragedy is coming but cannot stop it. It also explores production shifts, filler content, and

Season 1 sets the structure: each episode ends with a cliffhanger or emotional gut-punch. Episode 9 ( Return ) is a standout — the reversed future with Draken alive redefines the show’s stakes. However, pacing suffers slightly in episodes 17–20 due to flashback density.

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