The Summer Hikaru Died

The Summer Hikaru Died(2025)

TV-14
2 seasons
24m/episode
Animation, Mystery, Drama, Sci-Fi & Fantasy
8.5

Overview

Six months ago, Hikaru vanished for a week. Now, as his best friend Yoshiki senses something amiss and confronts him, the harrowing truth emerges.

Where to Watch

Stream

Netflix
Netflix Standard with Ads

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Media

Official Trailer 2 [Subtitled]

Official Trailer 2 [Subtitled]

Trailer

Official Trailer 1 [Subtitled]

Official Trailer 1 [Subtitled]

Trailer

Episode 7 ED | Shadow of Our Days (Hikaru and Yoshiki ver.) [Subtitled]

Episode 7 ED | Shadow of Our Days (Hikaru and Yoshiki ver.) [Subtitled]

Featurette

“Making-of” (Part 3) : Hikaru and Yoshiki [Subtitled]

“Making-of” (Part 3) : Hikaru and Yoshiki [Subtitled]

Featurette

“Making-of” Part 2 : The Voice-Over [Subtitled]

“Making-of” Part 2 : The Voice-Over [Subtitled]

Featurette

“Making-of” Part 1 [Subtitled]

“Making-of” Part 1 [Subtitled]

Featurette

Limited comments from Chiaki Kobayashi and Shuichiro Umeda [ENG SUB]

Limited comments from Chiaki Kobayashi and Shuichiro Umeda [ENG SUB]

Featurette

Official Teaser [Subtitled]

Official Teaser [Subtitled]

Teaser

Social

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A review by Nick
9.0

Written on October 3, 2025

the queer undertones go crazy, but i’m here for all of it! what really struck me about this show is how confidently it leans into the tension between personal intimacy and supernatural horror. the relationship dynamics never feel like window dressing—they’re baked into the unsettling atmosphere and make the eerie parts hit harder.

that said, the pacing can be a double-edged sword. season one takes its time, sometimes too much time, leaving a lot of questions unanswered. instead of clarifying the lore, the show piles on mysteries, which is intriguing but also a little frustrating when you want more direct payoff. still, the way the narrative lingers actually makes the horror sequences stand out more—they feel like ruptures in an otherwise slow summer haze.

the horror aspect itself is fantastic. i especially wish they’d shown more of the impurities, because every glimpse was visually striking and gave the story a heavier, more visceral weight. what’s also impressive is how grounded the series feels despite the supernatural premise. the use of real-world backdrops and small, everyday details adds an almost documentary quality that makes the eerie moments land with extra force. that attention to realism blends seamlessly with the strangeness and helps carve out a unique identity for the anime.

score: 9 (4.5) – great, but not perfect.