Chainsaw Man Anime Adaptation Will Feature 12 Different End-Credit Songs
Crunchyroll‘s upcoming horror-action anime Chainsaw Man is less than a month away with its recent October release date reveal. Since Crunchyroll acquired the rights to the popular manga series of the same name which is written and illustrated by Tatsuki Fujimoto, fans have been eagerly awaiting to see the popular manga series come to life on the small screen.
The official Chainsaw Man website revealed the opening theme song and 12 ending theme songs! The opening theme song will be Kick Back by Kenshi Yonezu which is previewed in its latest trailer. The 12 ending theme songs (one for each of the 12 listed episodes so far) will include:
Hawatari 2 – Oku Centi (200 Million Centimeter Blades) by Maximum The Hormone
Chu, Tayosei (A Variety of Kisses) by Ano
Fight Song By Eve
Deep Down by Aimer
Dainoteki na Rendezvouz (Cerebral Rendezvous) by Kanaria
In the Back Room by Syudou
Violence by Queen Bee
Zanki (Remaining Lives) by Zutomayo
First Death by TK from Ling Tosite Sigure
Jozai (Pill) by Tooboe
Chainsaw Blood by Vaundy
Dogland by People 1
There will also be an Insert song by Maximum The Hormone.
Chainsaw Man is directed by Ryū Nakayama from a screenplay written by Hiroshi Seko and character designs by Kiyotaka Oshiyama, art direction by Yusuke Takeda, and music composed by Kensuke Ushio.
Check out Chainsaw Man’s official synopsis below:
“Denji is a teenage boy living with a Chainsaw Devil named Pochita. Due to the debt his father left behind, he has been living a rock-bottom life while repaying his debt by harvesting devil corpses with Pochita. One day, Denji is betrayed and killed. As his consciousness fades, he makes a contract with Pochita and gets revived as “Chainsaw Man”–a man with a devil’s heart.”
Chainsaw Man will release on October11th, 2022 and is set to adapt the manga’s Public Safety Arc which makes up Part 1 of the manga series. Part 2 of the manga series is still currently ongoing. When the anime is released, it will offer dubs in English, Latin American Spanish, Brazilian Portuguese, French, and German.