Highlights

  • Anime in 1994 was limited to VHS tapes for North American fans, unlike today’s easy access on various devices.
  • Blue Seed features a young teen chased by demons, similar to Inuyasha, but set in present day with a demon-humanoid ally.
  • Street Fighter 2: The Animated Movie stands out for its faithfulness to the source material, unlike the live-action adaptation.



1994 was still the era of anime wherein VHS tapes ruled. It was the best possible way for fans in North America to view anime except for a few random cases on some TV channels. It’s not like today where anime is literally within one’s reach whether it’s on the computer, phone, console, or whatever.

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Distribution aside, 1994 was a big year for movies and OVAs along with some outstanding seasons. For example, there was the underrated Studio Ghibli movie, Pom Poko, about a bunch of Tanuki trying to live in peace with humans. There were also movies based on franchises like Doraemon, Dragon Ball Z, and Crayon Shin-chan. Movies aside, let’s moslty look at some old anime seasons.


7 Blue Seed

A Reverse Inuyasha

Promo art featuring characters in Blue Seed


  • Director: Jun Kamiya
  • Release Date: October 5, 1994
  • Studio: Production I.G/Ashi Productions

Blue Seed was a manga first in 1992 before it made its 1994 anime debut. North America would not start getting the series on VHS until 1996 and it was a popular one for tape trading fiends. It’s kind of like Inuyasha in that it features a young teen, Momiji, whom demons are chasing. A demon-infused humanoid, Mamoru, thinks very little of Momiji at first but soon starts to appreciate her and fights alongside the human forces. The biggest difference is that demons are invading the present day in Blue Seed instead of Inuyasha’s setting of feudal Japan.

6 G Gundam

A Tournament Arc With Mechs

Promo art featuring characters in G Gundam


  • Director: Yasuhiro Imagawa
  • Release Date: April 22, 1994
  • Studio: Sunrise

G Gundam is one of the wildest interpretations of the Gundam series ever. The world no longer fights in wars and instead settles disputes through tournaments. Every country in the world sends a Gundam pilot to fight and the country that wins gets to dictate global politics until the next tournament.

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It’s like the Olympics but way more epic and the anime focuses on Japan’s fighter, Domon, and his Burning Gundam. It was released in Japan in 1994 but the West would not have easy access to it until it hit the Toonami block on Cartoon Network in 2002.

5 Lupin The Third: Dragon of Doom

Move Over James Cameron

Lupin in Lupin The Third Dragon of Doom


  • Director: Masaharu Okuwaki
  • Release Date: July 29, 1994
  • Studio: TMS

Lupin the Third: Dragon of Doom is technically a movie but it was not theatrically released in 1994. Instead, it was a TV special, following a long line of Lupin the Third-based TV specials which began airing in 1989 and rarely missed a year. This was, in fact, the sixth one and it featured some of the best action thanks to the talented team at TMS. It revolves around Lupin and his crew diving into THE Titanic to rescue a lost treasure that belongs to Goemon’s clan. North America wouldn’t see it until 2003 and with the dubbed version, they actually refer to the Titanic movie even though Lupin the Third: Dragon of Doom was released before that movie even existed.

4 New Cutie Honey

Full Of Fan Service

Honey in New Cutie Honey


  • Director: Yasuchika Nagaoka
  • Release Date: April 21, 1994
  • Studio: Studio Junio

New Cutie Honey is a retelling of the Cutie Honey story that began in 1973 with a manga. It’s kind of like Sailor Moon if that anime regularly showed the girls without their clothes on. It is an incredibly thirsty anime for the fans and probably by the fans too who grew up reading the manga in Japan. It takes place in a post-apocalyptic society with mutants running rampant and the only hero that can save the world is a reincarnation of the infamous Honey. This was another anime that was released in 1996 via the VHS market in North America past the original debut in Japan in 1994.

3 Sailor Moon S

Uranus And Neptune Appear

Sailor Moon fighting in Sailor Moon S


  • Director: Kunihiko Ikuhara
  • Release Date: March 19, 1994
  • Studio: Toei Animation

Speaking of Sailor Moon, Sailor Moon S was the third season of the anime which began in 1992 after the manga hit in 1991. This third season started in Japan in 1994 and the West would not get it until 2000 as part of the Toonami block. The version of the series overall was heavily censored on Cartoon Network because of a few things. Sexuality is one issue, especially in season three with the introduction of Sailor Uranus and Sailor Neptune. They join Sailor Moon and the others for the first time as they fight against a mad scientist who is trying to get ahold of the Holy Grail through crystallized hearts.

2 Street Fighter 2: The Animated Movie

A Tale Of Two Adaptations

Chun Li Street Fighter 2 The Animated Movie


  • Director: Gisaburo Sugii
  • Release Date: August 6, 1994
  • Studio: Toei Company

Street Fighter 2: The Animated Movie is the only theatrically released movie to get on this because it is important to note for a few reasons. First, it was released in 1994 in Japan and a dub would soon follow in 1995 for North America. Instead of getting this movie in 1994, Western fans were treated to the live-action film starring Jean-Claude Van Damme which has become a cult hit as a bad movie.

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Of the two, the anime was of course more faithful to the Street Fighter source material even though a showering Chun-Li was never in the games. Fan service aside, 1994 saw many fighting games into anime adaptations beyond Street Fighter 2: The Animated Movie including Fatal Fury and Samurai Showdown.


1 You’re Under Arrest

A Low Stakes Police Drama

A scene featuring characters in You're Under Arrest

  • Director: Kazuhiro Furuhashi
  • Release Date: September 24, 1994
  • Studio: Studio Deen

You’re Under Arrest is a pretty chill anime about a wild bunch of police officers just trying to live their lives. There is action in it but it mostly revolves around police chases instead of shootouts. It began as a four-episode OVA but it was popular enough to get adapted into a full series which added 47 more episodes to the roster. North America would not get it until 1999 and at that point, it was being released as the full series and not just the OVA. It’s not the best anime from 1994, but the animation is good and again, it’s a pretty relaxing watch.

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