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With imaginative storytelling, stunning animation, as well as unforgettable characters, these titles offer something meaningful for everyone. They do not depend on quick hype or trend cycles. Instead, they hold up because they are built on keeping authenticity in mind. They are made to be revisited, talked about, and appreciated again and again. Now, all of these titles are available to stream right now on Hulu. So if you are searching for anime that deliver substance over noise this September, this list is for you.
7) Bullet/Bullet

Bullet/Bullet follows a restless Gear who dreams of escaping his cityโs walls and exploring the wastelands. When a mysterious woman offers him and his friends a shot at the heist of a lifetime, he jumps at the chance. But what begins as a wild adventure quickly turns into something darker.ย
The world is grim but alive with strange beauty, from retro-futuristic machines to sharp city streets. Each episode builds momentum with car chases, betrayal, and emotional complexity. Flashbacks appear like moving oil paintings. While music shifts from gritty rock to haunting quiet moments.ย
6) Dororo

Dororo begins with a child being offered up to demons before he is even given a name. His father, a powerful lord, trades the boyโs body for power and prosperity. Born without skin, eyes, limbs, or a voice, Hyakkimaru is abandoned and expected to die.
But he survives. And when the story picks up years later, he is cutting down demons to reclaim the pieces of himself they stole. As Hyakkimaru moves from one ruined town to the next, recovering his body one part at a time, the story never lets you forget what that recovery costs. He gains humanity, but also gains the ability to feel. And sometimes, feeling hurts more than the wounds ever did.
Alongside him is Dororo, a young thief with her own broken past, who acts as both guide and reminder of what it means to be alive in a world this cruel. The show uses its historical setting not as a backdrop, but as another kind of battlefield with demons and haunted villages. The animation has a raw, textured quality that matches the storyโs tone, while the music stays subtle. If you are looking for a story that deals with survival, sacrifice, and what it means to feel like a person again, Dororo offers more than most shows even try to.
5) Cowboy Bebop

Set in a future where humanity has scattered across the solar system, Cowboy Bebop follows a group of bounty hunters chasing money, running from the past, and often failing at both. Spike Spiegel, the center of it all, lives like someone who knows he has already died once. He cracks jokes, fights like nothing matters, and avoids every question that hits too close. In contrast, Jet is steady, Faye is restless, Ed is wild, and Ein is somehow the smartest one on the ship. Together they form a crew, but never quite a team.
The showโs pace is slow, but that is its strength. It gives you time to notice the details. The music, written by Yoko Kanno, builds entire moods before the first line of dialogue. You could watch this show for the unforgettable fights or surprisingly deep jokes, but what stays is the feeling of something unresolved. Cowboy Bebop is about the people who live just outside its reach. Some shows ask to be binged. This one asks to be felt. And once it ends, it does not let go.ย
4) Afro Samurai

Afro Samurai is a short and powerful story about revenge. When Afro was a child, he saw his father killed in a duel by a man named Justice. That man took the Number One headband, a symbol of power that only the strongest can hold. Years later, Afro becomes the holder of the Number Two headband.
This gives him the right to fight the Number One, but it also makes him a target. Anyone in the world is allowed to challenge the Number Two. To reach Justice and take his revenge, Afro must fight his way through one enemy after another.
The show does not waste time. It has a clear goal and moves straight toward it. The action is fast, the fights are sharp, and the world is a mix of swords, guns, old traditions, and future tech. Afro does not talk much. He just keeps walking forward. Samuel L. Jackson voices him, and the music by RZA gives the story a steady rhythm. The series is about pain, focus, and what it costs to keep going, without any breaks or side stories.











