talk about endings in Anime It’s always a delicate subject. Sometimes a series can be amazing from start to finish, until that last episode or arc arrives and everything collapses. Other animes simply did not know how to close the stories they promised so much, leaving fans frustrated and with a bad taste in their mouths. Today we review the 10 worst anime endings of all time, ordered by how much they disappointed the audience.
10. Ranma ½

This classic of Rumiko Takahashi He is legendary for his comedy and endearing characters, but his anime ended without a real conclusion. Nothing is resolved: nor the romance between Ranma and Akane, nor the curses, nor the multiple entanglements. After more than 160 episodes, the minimum that fans expected was a worthy closure, but what we received was a “here we leave” that still generates frustration.
9. Anime: Charlotte

The premise was brutal: teenagers with supernatural powers who only last a while. But his ending compressed too much into a single episode which could have been a whole season. The protagonist travels the world stealing skills at an absurd pace, and everything ends in a hasty, almost as if the study had lost patience. A story that started strong, but declined in closing.
8. Anime: Tokyo Ghoul:Re

If we talk about anime ruined by a bad adaptation, this is an example of a manual. Tokyo Ghoul He was loved for his crudeness and symbolism, but with :re The story was so run over that the ending seemed like a version summed up with scissors and glue. Key characters were wasted, conflicts were resolved suddenly and the outcome left more doubts than answers.
7. Anime: Soul Eater

The anime shone for its unique visual style and iconic characters, but its ending completely moved away from the manga and gave us an improvised outcome. The final battle with Asura was anticlimatic and depended on a poorly executed “power of friendship”. Instead of an epic closure, what we had was a loose conclusion that didn’t do justice to the construction of the series.
6. Akame Ga Kill!

This anime gained fame for its shocking deaths and cruel twists, but the ending took it to the end. Almost all the important characters die, and the feeling it leaves is one of emptiness rather than a well-built tragedy. Instead of being a memorable climax, it was a directionless bloodbath that ended up ruining the emotional impact.
5. Darling in the Franxx

It started as a mecha anime with a strong romantic symbolism, but in the final stretch everything went overboard. Giant aliens, absurd twists and a closure that forced reincarnation as a solution. Many fans consider it one of the biggest potential wastes in the anime’s last decade.
4. The Promised Neverland (Season 2)

The manga is amazing, but the second season adaptation skipped entire arcs. The ending was a kind of “slide presentation” that summed up the story as if the creators wanted to close in a hurry. What could have been one of the best modern shonens became a case study on how not to adapt a manga.
3. Food Wars! (Shokugeki no Soma)

An anime that started fresh, fun and with spectacular culinary battles ended up sinking into its own repetition. The last arc, with the villain SaibA and the forced “shokugekis”, it was a disaster. The spark disappeared, and the ending made it clear that the series no longer had anything else to offer.
2. Wonder Egg Priority

This original anime had all the ingredients to be a classic: spectacular animation, endearing characters and a plot about deep topics such as depression and suicide. But the ending was complete chaos. The last special episode not only left loose threads, but also contradicted his own message.
1. Platinum End

of the creators of Death Note, a brilliant and philosophical outcome was expected. What we got was a disappointing ending, full of forced explanations and a resolution that fell into the absurd. The climax, far from being memorable, felt like a castle of letters collapsed. for many, Platinum End It is the definition of how to ruin a promising premise with an unsatisfactory closure.
These endings remind us that, although an anime can have a great start and a promising development, the most difficult thing will always be to give it a decent closure. And when that fails, the disappointment feels even stronger.