Fruits Basket -2019- Review

If you’ve ever scrolled through anime recommendations, you’ve probably seen Fruits Basket . You might have even seen the 2001 version. But the 2019 reboot—officially titled Fruits Basket -2019- —is a completely different beast. It’s not a sequel. It’s a full, faithful adaptation of Natsuki Takagi’s entire 23-volume manga.

Tohru ends with Kyo, which feels earned after three seasons of them slowly healing each other’s wounds. Absolutely. Fruits Basket -2019- is not just a "shoujo anime." It’s a generational trauma drama disguised as a magical slice-of-life. It will make you laugh, sob, and think about what family really means. Fruits Basket -2019-

Viewers who dislike melodrama, slow-burn pacing (Season 1 is very slow), or stories about forgiveness of abusers. It’s not a sequel

Some viewers find it rushed. Others see it as realistic: abusers are often products of abuse themselves. The show doesn’t say "forgive and forget." It says "you can choose to stop the cycle." Tohru doesn’t forgive Akito for the Zodiacs—she pities her as a fellow lonely soul. That nuance is rare in anime. Early on, it looks like Tohru must choose between Yuki and Kyo. But Yuki himself reveals: He never loved Tohru romantically . He saw her as a mother figure—the first person who showed him kindness without expectation. This is a brilliant subversion. Yuki’s arc is about learning to stand on his own, not winning a girl. Absolutely

And it will absolutely wreck you (in the best way).

Crunchyroll, Funimation, Hulu (US). Have you watched the 2019 version? What moment broke you the most? (For me, it was Momiji’s backstory in Season 2.) Let me know in the comments!