Anime Series That Are Hard To Dub

Highlights

  • Dubbing anime with wordplay and cultural references is a difficult task that can pose challenges for translators.
  • Certain anime series, like Ouran High School Host Club and Yakitate!! Japan, have successfully translated and dubbed these challenging elements.
  • Anime series with extensive wordplay and Japanese cultural references, such as The Tatami Galaxy and Sayonara, Zetsubou Sensei, are unlikely to receive English dubs due to the difficulty of retaining their charm in translation.


Dubbing anime into English is not an easy task. It involves navigating cultural nuances, linguistic intricacies, and preserving the spirit of the original work. Certain series in particular can be a headache for translators if they contain a lot of wordplay and deeply embedded references to Japanese culture.

Related

10 Battle Shonen Anime With The Best English Dubs

Although many fans prefer watching anime with subs, these battle shonen shows have equally good English dubs.

This is one of many reasons some anime never receive English dubs, no matter how popular they are. They pose too much of a formidable task to translate and then dub. On the other hand, skilled translators and voice actors have taken on some of these hard-to-dub series and were more or less successful.


7 Ouran High School Host Club

Puns Galore and Cultural References

The Main Cast of Ouran High School Host Club

Ouran High School Host Club

Release Date
April 5, 2006

Studio
Bones

Creator
Bisco Hatori

Number of Episodes
26

Japanese Title
Ouran Koukou Host Club

Ouran High School Host Club is a parody of shojo manga, so there are bound to be some references that fly over the viewers’ heads. In addition to featuring host clubs (something almost exclusive to Japan), understanding the series’ humor requires some knowledge of the Japanese language.

The English dub for the series was well-received, in part due to how it managed to translate some of the Japan-specific humor. For example, in the first episode, Haruhi’s declaration that she’s going to refer to herself using ‘ore’ (a masculine first-person pronoun) was replaced with her saying she’s going to start calling everyone ‘dude’ and ‘bro’.

6 Yakitate!! Japan

Way Too Many Bread Puns

Yakitate!! Japan anime

Release Date

October 12, 2004

Studio

Sunrise

Creator

Takashi Hashiguchi

No. of Episodes

69

The title of the show itself is a pun. It translates to ‘Freshly Baked!! Japan’ and it’s about a 16-year-old Kazuma Azuma and his goal to create Japan’s national bread, the Ja-pan. What follows is a barrage of puns based on bread, some involving knowledge of kanji. Even some of the characters’ names are puns.

Related

The 17 Most Iconic Anime Foods

Anime isn’t always just about action or adventure. Sometimes, the food proves just as memorable as the story and characters.

The English dub of Yakitate!! Japan only aired in Singapore on Animax, and as expected, a lot of the show’s humor is lost in translation. Even subtitling the show or translating the manga is difficult to do without lots of cultural notes. Many fans think a dub that keeps the essence of the Japanese original just isn’t possible.

5 The Tatami Galaxy

Speedy Dialogue and Wordplay

Akashi and the protagonist of The Tatami Galaxy standing beside each other

The Tatami Galaxy

Release Date
April 23, 2010

Studio
Madhouse

Creator
Tomihiko Morimi

Number of Episodes
10

Japanese Title
Yojouhan Shinwa Taikei

Masaaki Yuasa’s award-winning time travel anime has another quirk to go along with the trippy animation – characters who talk way too fast. The main character in particular speaks at such a rapid pace that even the subtitles are hard to keep up with. Even though The Tatami Galaxy was licensed by Funimation for the English-language market, the series is unlikely to get a dub for this reason alone.

Additionally, the anime also contains a lot of wordplay and Japanese cultural references that might pose a challenge for translators, and there’s a good chance that the series would lose its charm in an English dub.

4 Urusei Yatsura

Puns, Wordplay, and Mythological References

Urusei Yatsura Ataru smiling at Lum

Urusei Yatsura

Release Date
October 14, 1981

Studio
Pierrot, Studio Deen

Creator
Rumiko Takahashi

Number of Episodes
195

Urusei Yatsura is chock-full of puns, as is typical for a Rumiko Takahashi series. Even the title is a complex, hard-to-explain pun. In fact, the first US DVD release by AnimEigo came with liner notes explaining all the wordplay and cultural references used in the anime.

This might partially be the reason why the incomplete dub of the 1981 series was received so poorly, in addition to the voice acting. Fortunately for dub fans, however, the 2022 series reboot did get an English dub.

3 Sayonara, Zetsubou Sensei

Satire On Japanese Society

Sayonara, Zetsubou Sensei

Release Date

July 7, 2007

Studio

Shaft

Creator

Koji Kumeta

No. of Episodes

38

Studio Shaft’s anime series are usually too esoteric for words, and Sayonara, Zetsubou Sensei is no exception. The anime is a darkly comedic take on a lot of aspects of Japanese society, including politics, otaku culture, and the media. A lot of the humor relies on the viewer’s understanding of Japanese culture and paying attention to what’s written on the boards.

As expected, Sayonara, Zetsubou Sensei is also pun- and wordplay-heavy, down to the characters’ names. The fact that the series got an official translation at all is quite admirable, but an English dub is most likely never going to be on the table.

2 FLCL

Lots of Pop Culture References

FLCL Fooly Cooly Haruko Naota

FLCL

$23 $50 Save $27

Release Date
April 26, 2000

Studio
Gainax, Production I.G, Signal.MD, Production GoodBook, Nut, Revoroot, MontBlanc Pictures, Akatsuki

Number of Episodes
24

Streaming Service(s)
Hulu , Max

Despite the original OVA only being six episodes, FLCL has enough Japanese pop culture references to fill a house. Even the series localization director has talked about how hard it was to find American equivalents for the references, an example being changing the discontinued Cherio soda to Crystal Pepsi and the references to Japanese rock bands with American ones.

Related

8 Weirdest Moments In FLCL

The Fooly Cooly anime series has a ton of bizarre scenes, but these weird moments from the show are the most memorable.

The anime’s English dub surprisingly received almost universal acclaim, owing to the localization team’s efforts to translate such an esoteric series. Even the most ardent dub-hater will admit that there was a lot of passion behind FLCL‘s dub.

1 Monogatari

An Avalanche of Puns, Tongue Twisters, and Wordplay

Bakemonogatari promotional art featuring Hitagi Senjogahara

Monogatari

Release Date
July 3, 2009

Studio
Shaft

Creator
Nisio Isin

Number of Episodes
100

If the watch order of the Monogatari series wasn’t confusing enough, wait until viewers get a taste of the series itself. Studio Shaft is steering the wheel, and that can only mean a lot of quirky surrealism that extends to its humor.

The anime’s humor is way too embedded in the Japanese language, a good example being its famous tongue twister and cat girl Black Hanekawa’s kitty-ified version. Even watching the show with subtitles can lead to some of the jokes being lost on the viewer. Interestingly, the anime has been dubbed in French and German, but not English.

MORE: Best Anime About Vampires, Ranked