What Zombie Manga Adaptations Are Coming To TV?

2026-01-31 01:16:38 79

5 Answers

Declan
Declan
2026-02-01 19:15:07
Alright, I'll be blunt — I adore how diverse the zombie manga-to-TV pipeline has become. There’s a steady stream of anime continuations (notably the ongoing presence of 'Zom 100') and anthology-style adaptations of horror manga (Junji Ito’s catalog being the prime example). These anthology shows often air as short-run series on streaming platforms or as late-night TV blocks, giving fans concentrated doses of grotesque, reanimated horror.

Meanwhile, live-action TV projects pop up more slowly but are attractive to studios because they can expand character arcs and add new dramatic beats. That means some manga will get gentler, more emotionally-driven TV takes while others stay visceral and fast on anime. I’m leaning toward the anthology nights for pure scare value, but I’ll happily tune into both — the variety is what keeps the genre exciting.
Dylan
Dylan
2026-02-03 19:54:32
I love talking through the different vibes these adaptations bring. On one end you have high-energy anime like 'Zom 100: Bucket List of the Dead' that translate the manga’s frantic, hopeful-yet-doomed tone into serialized TV episodes with great soundtracks and visual gags. On the other end, there are Junji Ito adaptations — think anthology shows that adapt short manga stories into creepy, stand-alone TV episodes; they don’t always present straight-up zombies, but they capture undead, body-horror, and reanimation themes that scratch the same itch.

Producers are also experimenting with live-action formats, adapting manga with deeper emotional arcs so the TV version can focus on character development over several episodes. That means some manga that felt cramped on the page will breathe on TV, while others benefit from the tight pacing of anime. I’m personally most hyped for the balance — animated seasons that keep the humor and anthology series that deliver the chills — it’s a fun time to be a horror fan.
Zachary
Zachary
2026-02-04 10:29:42
These days I check two things whenever a zombie manga gets attention: is it Becoming another anime season or a live-action show? Right now, the cleanest leads are 'Zom 100: Bucket List of the Dead' continuing its run in animated form, and various Junji Ito manga pieces being adapted into anthology-style episodes across streaming platforms. Both formats give very different vibes — 'Zom 100' leans into dark comedy and energetic pacing, perfect for weekly TV anime, while Junji Ito's shorts work as nightmarish, self-contained TV episodes.

On the live-action front, titles that already had films like 'I Am a Hero' keep resurfacing in conversations about TV-level serializations, and older series such as 'School-Live!' get mentioned when producers look for property with strong fanbases. So, if you prefer serialized character arcs and glossy production, watch for live-action or longer anime seasons. If you want weird, unsettling horror, the anthology-style Junji Ito adaptations on streaming networks are your best bet. Personally, I love how each format stretches the source manga in different directions — more ways to be creeped out, honestly.
Ulysses
Ulysses
2026-02-06 01:13:44
Can't help but get excited talking about this — zombie manga adaptations have been bubbling back into TV and streaming in a few different flavors lately. The one that's definitely on everyone's radar is 'Zom 100: Bucket List of the Dead' — it exploded as an anime and has continued momentum with additional episodes/seasons and spin media on streaming platforms, so expect more TV presence and maybe even crossovers or special episodes that expand the manga's bucket-list vibes.

Junji Ito's grotesque catalogue keeps getting adapted for the screen too. Projects like 'Junji Ito Maniac: Japanese Tales of the Macabre' have brought his short horror manga to episodic formats, and several of his stories that touch on reanimated corpses or parasitic body-horror show up across anthology series and limited TV runs. That means more bite-sized, visually intense zombie-ish segments on TV rather than one long continuous series.

Outside those, older hits like 'School-Live!' and the long-discussed hopes for 'Highschool of the Dead' continue to generate rumors of reboots or live-action attempts, so I keep an eye on casting announcements and studio press releases. Overall, expect a mix: anime seasons continuing, anthology horror series adapting zombie-ish manga shorts, and the occasional live-action experiment. I’m already marking my calendar for new trailers — feels like we’re in a golden age for creepy, character-driven undead stories on screen.
Declan
Declan
2026-02-06 05:55:58
a few clear trends stand out. 'Zom 100' continues to dominate anime-related TV buzz with further episodes and special content following its popular season. Meanwhile, Junji Ito's works keep getting adapted into anthology shows that air like mini horror collections — they're perfect for short, intense zombie or corpse-related tales. Beyond those, expect scattered live-action projects trying to mine popular zombie manga for longer-form TV drama, though those often take longer to announce and produce. For me, the excitement is in comparing how an episode compresses a manga chapter versus how a season stretches it — each has its own weird pleasures.
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