Welcome back to the 4th annual r/anime Awards and the last of the decade. Following the end of 2019, it is time to reflect back on all the best anime of this year. And what better way to do that than through nominating your favourite shows for the r/anime Awards 2019?
Just like last year, we'll be using a website to handle nomination voting. Unlike last year, however, the Genre Awards have been pre-allocated by the Hosts, and all you have to do is simply vote for your favourite show in a given category. As always, you can see the current allocation sheet here. Note that a show is only eligible for a single genre. Likewise, for the Main Awards, shows are allocated into Shorts, Movie, or AOTY.
For the Character Awards, a single character can only be nominated for either Main Dramatic, Main Comedic, Supporting Dramatic, or Supporting comedic. The main and supporting character distinctions are now mainly decided by Anilist standards, which we defer to when we decide whether a character counts as main or supporting, barring exceptions. In addition, a character can also be nominated for Antagonist. For the Cast award, you nominate an entire show and not any single character.
As usual, the top 4 most voted for shows/characters in each category will comprise the public nominations for said category, which will then be combined with the jury nominations. Note that Anime of the Year and OP/ED will use the top 5 instead. This year we have the addition of the three Test Categories: Sports, Script, and Sound Design. These nominations will be split from the jury, but there is no practical difference when voting.
Following the nominations we publish the results and then you will begin ranking the nominated shows throughout the ensuing weeks.
Please follow this link (or the one up top) to vote.
if you have any further questions or concerns, do not hesitate to leave a comment or message one of the Hosts:
Have you ever thought of an anime related question that sounded really, really stupid? Did you ignore it and move on because getting the answer wouldn't be worth asking it? Well, this thread is here for you!
First of all, go take a look at the /r/anime FAQ section of the wiki since it's entirely possible you might find your question answered there. Failing that, you can take a look at any of the past threads since someone might've asked the same question there already.
Remember! There are no stupid questions here! Just slightly less intelligent ones.
Thought of a question a bit too late? No worries! The thread will be at the top of r/anime throughout the week-end and will get posted again next week!
Darwin's Game, episode 1
Reminder: Please do not discuss plot points not yet seen or skipped in the show. Encourage others to read the source material rather than confirming or denying theories. Failing to follow the rules may result in a ban.
Streams
Show information
1.3m
competitive karuta fans
8.5k
studying the Hyakunin Isshu
Jan 25, 2008
Cake Day
| Guest | Occupation | Date |
|---|---|---|
| Shinichiro Watanabe | Director | 2019/10/26 |
| CloverWorks | Anime Studio | 2019/10/27 |
*Hosted on another subreddit.
| Event | Location | Start |
|---|
*Indicates an official reddit meet-up is taking place at this event.
All spoilers must be tagged. The code to make a spoiler in a comment or text post body is:
[Spoiler source](/s "Spoiler goes here")
This shows up as:
On the Reddit redesign, spoilers show up as a link; hover over the link to read the spoiler.