Which Anime Episode Features Please Take Me Home, Dad As A Key Line?

2025-10-21 14:13:55 143
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8 Answers

Riley
Riley
2025-10-22 04:06:00

I’ll keep this short and candid: that exact English phrasing shows up in fan subs of several tearjerker shows, and the one that most fans point to when they talk about a kid saying something like 'Please take me home, dad' is 'Boku dake ga Inai Machi' (the Kayo arc). In that series the rescue scenes are translated in a few ways, so you might see slight variations in wording between fansubs and official subs.

Another place where translators often produce similar lines is 'Clannad: After Story' during the later episodes with Ushio — depending on the subtitle version you watch, the emotional plea to a parent can be rendered almost exactly the way you quoted. If you’re hunting down a clip, search for those arcs and scan episode highlights: the surrounding visuals (young child, bleak home, tense music) are a good clue. For me, hearing those words always brings back the animation detail and music cue more than the exact wording, which is why multiple shows can feel like the same memory.
Knox
Knox
2025-10-23 17:07:16
I get why that exact sentence would stick with you — it’s the kind of plain request that becomes unforgettable in a tragic scene. If I had to pick the single most likely place people recall that line, it’s from 'Boku dake ga Inai Machi' during the Kayo rescue episodes (around the middle of the series), where a child’s plea to be taken home is translated very similarly in many subtitle versions. That moment pairs a quiet line with a pounding emotional score and it burrows into your memory. Even when different shows use similar wording, the feeling is the same: simple language, huge emotional payoff — and it’s the kind of line I keep thinking about long after the credits roll.
Josie
Josie
2025-10-23 21:06:03
I get a little choked up thinking about this line — it rang a bell for me and the moment I kept coming back to was in 'Clannad: After Story'. There's a scene with Ushio where the emotional weight of a child calling for her father is the central pivot of the episode, and depending on translation it can land as something like 'Please take me home, Dad.' Subtleties in translation and the choice of words in the dub versus the original Japanese make that phrase show up in different ways, but the core feeling — a small child asking her parent to bring her back to safety — matches that heartbreaking arc in episode 18 of 'Clannad: After Story'.

That said, I also found that similar lines appear across other series when people search for this exact phrase: 'Made in Abyss' has a devastating father/daughter moment around Bondrewd and Prushka, and some fans see parallels there. If you're chasing the exact subtitle wording, check both sub and dub versions of 'Clannad: After Story' episode 18 first — that's where the line functions as a key emotional beat for me.
Rhett
Rhett
2025-10-23 22:25:26
This line always tugs at something in me, and I dug into it like a fan trying to track down a favorite scene. I don’t have one airtight source saying there’s a single canonical moment where the exact English subtitle 'Please take me home, dad' is the definitive, iconic line — it’s one of those phrases that translators sometimes render in different ways across series. What I can say from watching a lot of emotional family scenes is that this kind of plea shows up in several shows with abused/abandoned-child arcs or heartbreaking family reunions, and the places that jump to mind most readily are 'Boku dake ga Inai Machi' ('Erased') during the Kayo rescue storyline, and family-focused beats in 'Clannad: After Story' around the Ushio arc. Both of those series contain raw, simple lines directed at caregivers that can read in English subs as 'Please take me home, dad' depending on the translation.

If you’re trying to find the exact episode, my practical route is to search for clips of the scenes I mentioned: look up Kayo clips from 'Boku dake ga Inai Machi' (episodes during the middle arc where Satoru tries to intervene) and Ushio-centered episodes in 'Clannad: After Story' (late teens). Those scenes are very memorable and often uploaded with subtitles, so you can confirm the precise wording. Personally, lines like that punch me in the chest every time — they’re simple but devastating when paired with the right score and animation.
Yasmin
Yasmin
2025-10-25 06:15:04
I tend to think of the line as one of those small phrases that echoes across a few shows, but there’s one place I keep returning to: 'Clannad: After Story', especially around episode 18. The scene where Ushio reaches out to her dad is translated in ways that frequently come across as 'Please take me home, dad' in English, and for a lot of viewers that exact wording becomes a memorable hook tied to the episode’s tragedy.

I also recall 'Made in Abyss' giving off similar vibes in the Bondrewd/Prushka episodes, and that’s why searches sometimes turn up multiple hits. For me, though, the emotional fidelity of the line and how much it changes the character landscape makes the 'Clannad: After Story' moment the clearest match — it’s the one that sticks with me the most.
Abigail
Abigail
2025-10-25 15:49:42
I dug through my memory and cribbed a few reference points before deciding what to say — sometimes specific translated lines like 'Please take me home, dad' float around multiple shows because different fans and translators render the same Japanese lines differently. The strongest candidate I landed on is 'Clannad: After Story' (episode 18), because that episode centers on a gutting parent-child moment where the daughter's plea is pivotal to the emotional structure.

If you're open to alternatives, 'Made in Abyss' (the Bondrewd/Prushka arc) can read similarly in English translation, and some people mention moments in 'Erased' and even 'Neon Genesis Evangelion' where variations of a child asking a parent to take them home are used as intense hooks. Personally, I’d check the subtitles of 'Clannad: After Story' ep 18 first — that’s the version that stuck with me, especially in fan discussions and compilations of tearjerker scenes.
Olivia
Olivia
2025-10-25 19:59:33
I traced this phrase back the way I’d trace a song sample through playlists — looking for the emotional anchor, not just the literal words. The top hit I keep finding is 'Clannad: After Story', episode 18: the daughter's plea to her father is central to the episode’s emotional climax, and depending on the translation you’ll see variations that read as 'Please take me home, dad.' That line matters there because it reframes the father’s choices and the consequences he faces.

A cautionary note from experience: subtitle dumps, fan clips, and dubbed versions sometimes shift pronouns and tone, so if you want the exact phrasing, check both sub and dub transcripts of that episode. Other series — notably 'Made in Abyss' during the Bondrewd/Prushka storyline — often come up in searches for similar lines, but they serve a different narrative function. In any case, that line always nails me emotionally when I rewatch it.
Ian
Ian
2025-10-26 15:34:46
Short and to the point from a fan’s heart: the line that resonates as 'Please take me home, dad' most commonly points people toward 'Clannad: After Story' around episode 18. That episode contains one of the most emotional father-daughter beats in modern anime and translators often render the child’s plea in very similar words. I’ve seen folks compare that moment to parts of 'Made in Abyss' because both are gut-punches, but for me the definitive place to hear that plea is in 'Clannad: After Story', and it always hits hard.
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