
Cat God
Oshimeter
Synopsis
Those adorable whiskers might be disarming, but Chinese history and mythology get a feline makeover in this retelling seen entirely through the eyes of cats. That's the core of Mao Xing Dongfang, a 10-episode ONA that takes Chinese history and mythology, filters it through feline perspectives, and wraps the whole thing in some genuinely striking visual experimentation. We're talking ink painting sequences flowing into 3D animation, then cutting to stop motion — each episode feels like unrolling a different artistic scroll. The cats aren't just mascots either. They witness battlefields, experience family bonds, and drift through surreal visions that blur the line between historical drama and mystical fantasy. Early episodes establish this dreamlike tone where you're never quite sure what's literal and what's metaphorical, and that ambiguity is part of the draw. The Eastern aesthetic choices here are deliberate and gorgeous — if you've appreciated the visual identity of Mo Dao Zu Shi or the mythological layering in Fox Spirit Matchmaker, this hits a similar cultural nerve but from a completely different angle. It also shares that sense of reverent world-building you find in Love Between Fairy and Devil, just condensed into shorter, more experimental episodes. The shifting animation styles might not click for everyone, but if you're open to something that treats each episode like its own art piece rather than following a strict narrative formula, this is a quietly fascinating watch. It's short, it's weird in the best way, and it looks unlike almost anything else out there right now.
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