Tokyo Magnitude 8.0
Oshimeter
Synopsis
At 13 years old, Mirai Onozawa is fed up with her family, her summer, and pretty much everything. She's dragged to a robot exhibition in Odaiba with her annoyingly cheerful little brother Yuuki, and in a moment of genuine frustration, she wishes the whole world would just fall apart. Then a magnitude 8.0 earthquake hits Tokyo, and it does. That's the setup for this 11-episode TV series from Bones and Kinema Citrus, and it only gets heavier from there. Mirai and Yuuki team up with Mari, a motorcycle courier they meet in the aftermath, and the three of them try to walk home through a city that barely exists anymore. The show is based on actual disaster research — what would really happen if an 8.0 hit Tokyo — and that grounding makes everything hit harder. Buildings collapse in ways that feel uncomfortably plausible. People react like real people, not anime characters. The emotional core is the relationship between the siblings, and watching Mirai go from resentful teenager to someone who genuinely cares is the kind of slow character work that sticks with you long after the credits roll. If you connected with the emotional gut punches in A Silent Voice or the tension in Erased, this is in that same lane. It's also got that raw, grounded tone similar to Terror in Resonance. Fair warning — the last few episodes will wreck you. Just let it happen.
Episode Guide
Characters
Yuuki Onozawa
8-year-old robot-loving boy, distant with his sister, hides illness; tragically dies in hospital.
Portrayed by Grant Tiffany
Mari Kusakabe
32-year-old biker, mother of four-year-old Hina, shows compassion for others during earthquake.
Portrayed by Calene-Black Shelley
Mirai Onozawa
A rebellious 13-year-old, Mirai is shy but glued to her phone, wishing for chaos before a devastating earthquake strikes.
Portrayed by Christian Luci
Quick Takes
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