Tokyo Ghoul:re 2nd Season

Studio Pierrot
Crime / Bio-Horror / Tragedy12 EP/9 Oct 2018

Oshimeter

7.4
4 Fans
18 Want to Watch
60 Watched

Synopsis

Haise Sasaki is unraveling — slowly, irreversibly — and he knows it. After resigning from the Quinx Squad following a brutal operation, he throws himself into CCG missions like someone who doesn't care whether he comes back. The thing is, buried under that blank expression, Ken Kaneki's memories are clawing their way to the surface — and Haise isn't sure which identity he wants to win. This 12-episode TV series picks up right where Tokyo Ghoul:re left off, and the tension between who Haise was and who Kaneki is becomes the engine that drives everything forward. Meanwhile, his old squad is falling apart without him, dealing with their own grief and the growing realization that the line between human and ghoul might not exist the way the CCG says it does. The whole season leans hard into questions about identity and morality — not in a preachy way, but through characters making choices they can't take back. Studio Pierrot keeps the atmosphere dark and the action visceral, which fits the seinen tone. If you liked the body horror and existential dread of Parasyte -the maxim- or the way Ajin: Demi-Human handles its morally gray conflicts, this sits in similar territory. Fans of Deadman Wonderland's grim institutional horror will find familiar ground too. It's not a light watch, but if you've come this far with Tokyo Ghoul, this is where the story's threads start converging.

Episode Guide

Oshimeter0-5960-7980-100
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Characters

Haise Sasaki
Haise Sasaki
Clark Leah
Saiko Yonebayashi
Saiko Yonebayashi
Wiedenheft Sarah
Kuki Urie
Kuki Urie
Gibbs Adam
Tooru Mutsuki
Tooru Mutsuki
Krantz Mikaela

MANGA BRIDGE

This season covers Chapters 58-179 of the manga. Continue reading from Chapter 125.

Manga cover

Quick Takes

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Really chaotic episode, I found it a little hard to follow, but it did really help convey the chaos and how panicked the characters were.

Takizawa's backstory was body horror at its best. His lack of consent and all that happened to him perfectly explained his mental state and conflicted idealization.

Woahh Kurona's "class reunion" with Suzuya was insane, from his entrance to hers. I found it pretty cruel when Suzuya killed her twin previously, but seeing the violence she's turned to makes me conflicted.

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