The Summer 2026 Anime Preview Guide
Magilumiere Magical Girls Inc. Season 2
How would you rate episode 1 of
Magilumiere Magical Girls Inc. (TV 2) ?
Community score: 4.0
What is this?

Following a meeting on the recent Kaii incidents by the Council of Magical Organizations (CMO), Shigemoto agrees to have Magilumiere tackle the extermination of a new species of the monsters. It's in service of proving the capabilities of their Alice System, as the CMO is reluctant about a wide roll-out otherwise. However, a denser regulatory conspiracy is unfolding behind the scenes, drawing Koshigaya in by way of her father's place on the Council. Koshigaya and Kana have to navigate the nuances of this business and bureaucracy while doing their best to take on the magical monster battle they've been tasked with. It's just another day on the job for Magilumiere: Magical Girls Inc.
Magilumiere Magical Girls Inc. Season 2 is based on the Magilumiere Co. Ltd. manga series by Sekka Iwata and artist Yū Aoki. The anime series is streaming on Amazon Prime on Saturdays.
How was the first episode?

Rating:
For a show that teeters between being New Game!-meets-magical girl and a critique on capitalism, I'm very glad to see this new episode lean towards the latter. And what better way to introduce things than by having a montage that teases you with garish magical girl goodness before transitioning to a shot of Kouji somberly emerging from a darkened subway to his business meeting? It's the episode's brilliant way of foreshadowing how the anime's magical wonder will take a backseat here to focus on seedy business instead. It's an episode that lets its serious tone and dialogue do all the heavy lifting, and it's all the better for it.
Kouji proposes his Alice System at his business meeting, saying that it will make magical girls more efficient at their jobs while being less reliant on magical energy. But such a system has never been tried before, would take massive funding to get off the ground, and with no precedent set indicating the system's success, it is initially shot down by a CMO before Kouji proposes a trial run. And when Kouji does propose it, another businessman recommends that Kouji go along with it so he can get a hard dose of reality once it fails. This makes the episode an obvious metaphor regarding big business's overreliance on fossil fuels. Just replace “oil” with “magic” and you're set. Admittedly, it's a metaphor we've seen enough times (Avatar's unobtanium comes to mind here). Given how Magilumiere is already an anime focused on capitalism's complexities to begin with, such talk, I suppose, is inevitable.
The board room meetings make for something very complex and slow compared to the usual magical girl flash (and especially to Magilumiere's own first episode in season one). That subversion of expectations is what I loved about it though. Big business can often be seedy, shady, and, most of all, dull, and I love how the show attempts to capture that. If the episode decided to intensify the scene with more electrifying dialogue and quick cuts of, say, Kana fighting off some monster-of-the-week, the melodrama here would be too loud for it to have any real edge.
The show doesn't go too overboard with its board room meetings. There are brief moments to showcase some playful banter between Kana, Hitomi, and her coworkers—and Kouji even comes back to put on his comically kawaii magical girl outfit. The fact that it's revealed that Hitomi's father is the very same CMO that Kouji talked to in his meeting comes a bit out of left field here, although it's forgivable thanks to how it sets up the second possible theme of this episode: how the demands of capitalism can destroy a family. Because Kouji's Alice system would continue the strict regulation of magic that Hitomi's father seeks to ease, it means that the Alice system's success would lead to big business failing and thus Hitomi's father being sacked. In other words, Hitomi has to ask herself if the demands of her work are more important to her than her own flesh and blood. It's a theme that's incredibly bold for a show like this to pull off. If it even does. For now, it's only there on display without being too explored. Hitomi ends up siding with Kouji's plans at the end of the episode because a) they're more sound and greener and b) she has not been on speaking terms with her father in years. But this theme is still something I'm hoping I see further developed down the line, and I'm looking forward to seeing how Magilumiere further forms its critique of late stage capitalism—as well as giving us some sleek magical girl fanfare, of course.

Rating:
Although starting with a brand new story arc for the start of a new season is usually a good idea, in this case, Magilumiere Magical Girls Inc. threatens to take too many pages from That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime's book. Almost the entirety of this first episode's first half is a long, dry meeting. Ugh. I get this stuff is important to flesh out the Magilumiere world, but I can't help thinking there must have been some way to liven this up more.
Boss guy Shigemoto turns up to a gathering of influential industry figures to discuss the future of magical regulation. It's about as exciting as Star Wars Episode 1's trade route taxation talks. There is no way around this, though. Shigemoto urges caution and restraint in the use of magic, whereas Kenji Koshigaya, director of the Magical Power Agency (who is also magical girl Hitomi Koshigaya's estranged father), and Kei Koga, president of magical girl megacorp AST, want an unregulated market. When the big companies want something that badly, it's probably not a good thing for the rest of us.
For a magical girl show, there isn't a heck of a lot of actual magical girling this episode. We catch up with Kana and Koshigaya for the back half of the episode. They're always fun together, with Koshigaya taking on a kind of “big sister” role to Kana's wide-eyed junior role. Though, as they're both adults, they can go out drinking late at night together. As much as Koshigaya seems confident and unaffected by her family's estrangement, Kana still notices that she's rattled about something. Even Koshigaya's slightly perturbed by her late-night encounter with a slimy power department goon who wants her to sacrifice her employer's upcoming test battle in order to preserve her father's job.
Magilumiere's first season was a mostly bright and breezy, optimistic and fun show. This season seems likely to delve a bit deeper below the surface of this society that depends on the skill and determination of magical girls to keep it running. Even the most placid lake may hide swirling depths of darkness, danger, and corruption. Hopefully the pace may start to pick up next week, as Kana and her senior find themselves in a strange research facility, ready to test Shigemoto's vaunted “Alice System” against a new breed of Kaii, captured in the floors below.

Rating:
I'm sure there are some people that would balk at a season premiere with a huge chunk taken up by a bureaucratic board meeting. I, however, am a sicko that will always be down for Magilumiere: Magical Girls Inc.'s entire thing of mashing up magical girls with workaday business proceedings. So sitting in on Shigemoto attending a meeting of the Council of Magical Organizations—the Magical Girl SEELE glimpsed at the end of the previous season, is a great way to catch up on what this second season will encompass while reacclimating viewers to its brilliant gimmick of a world.
It works because the meeting minutes are basically played straight as observable by anyone who's paid attention to big business, energy markets, and the contention of regulations thereof. Shigemoto has a system that doesn't rely on overexpending magical energy but it's poo-pooed by the olds on the CMO who think things work fine as-is and don't want to spend the time and money on implementing something new. Never mind that it's later revealed that there's specifically an internal conspiracy within the CMO to kill these energy options and dial down regulations. It's like corporate screwing-over of alternate energy and electric cars—except for Magical Girls. It may be a little too real, but that framing is what makes Magilumiere so unique.
This is, of course, all initial framing for the season's new arc that's just getting started. It's set around the titular company being tasked with taking out a new Kaii species to truly demonstrate their system's implementable usefulness. Kana and Koshigaya don't actually do any monster-fighting as of this episode, so it's a testament to the strength of the show so far that simply showing all the lead-up is as fun as it is. The bureaucracy is a good bit, of course, but it loops into the personal points when it's revealed that Koshigaya's estranged dad is sitting on the CMO and is part of said power management conspiracy. It puts Koshigaya herself in a conflict, but also raises interest from Kana about her partner's personal history she wasn't privy to before.
This allows Magilumiere to once again indulge itself in business culture (but with Magical Girls), and the time-honored tradition of getting drunk and bitching with your co-workers. It's nice enough to get more interiority on Koshigaya and hear how she seemingly doesn't hold any ill-will toward her stringent father for disregarding her employment choices, but framing any instance like this with anime girls (who are also Magical Girls, in this case) drinking big ol' beers is always going to get an applause out of me. There's some nuance indicated, too, in Koshigaya's consternation over potentially costing her father his job if the test goes well. Then there is the flashback showing her father's intense disagreement with her becoming a Magical Girl in the first place. Alongside some of the first season's allusions to unspoken incidents—and the revelation in this premiere that the duties used be performed by actual young girls in the Magical Girl roles—and there's the possibility that some truly unfortunate things might have gone down in the fledgeling days of this job. That's strong in terms of the backstory and worldbuilding that makes Magilumiere's strong concept feel so effectively formed.
Can I just say though, thank God that Koshigaya actually tells Kana about her conflict with the energy conspiracy instead of holding it in?
Anyway, J.C. Staff (absent Studio Moe from the first season) is just bringing their A-game for this second clock-up. Even without any major action this episode, the character animation is extremely active and full of life—particularly with the crew at Magilumiere contrasting with the stodgy stiffs sitting around the CMO meeting. It's really nice to see in an episode coming back like this, and I can hope it bodes well for when things really get going as this season goes on. This is a direct continuation of Magilumiere's story as it finished last season, but the framing and presentation already make it feel like a bit of a step up—bigger, better, and deserving of a bump in pay and benefits.

Rating:
Magilumiere hits different. Sure, we've seen other magical girl series with adult involvement, and even ones that feel like they have a more business-y side to them where magical girl-ing's treated like a job (if not literally a job). But in combining the two, and giving us increasingly large glimpses into the corporate and political side of things, Magilumiere can't help but feel, in many ways, more mature than the rest of its peers. To emphasize: I'm not saying that no other magical girl series have a more mature feel to them, just that Magilumiere's way of going about it feels pretty distinct, and in ways that I enjoy. And this episode was nothing if not a textbook example into why I feel that way.
Inevitably, the fact that about half the episode was spent in a boardroom meeting will put some people to sleep. We've seen this show talking business a few times now, but nothing terribly comparable to what we got this week. But for us freaks who enjoy shows along the lines of Succession (even if Magilumiere is obviously nowhere near as extreme and dark as Succession) that highlight internal politics within business and industry, this episode kicked the season off by already giving the audience plenty to chew on. Especially relative to the important position of Koshigaya's father, and the implications of a new type of Kaii being added to the mix—something the series has no intention of forgetting, and treating like a one-off fluke.
If this first episode is indicative of what the rest of the season is going to be like, then I think we're going to be in for something a lot more, let's say, dialogue-heavy, and dare I guess cerebral than the first. Something a lot more focused on the politics of magical girls as an industry, and the industrialization of magical girls as a whole. Especially in a day and age where we feel so much pressure to monetize every aspect of our lives, and it increasingly feels like every hobby in the world is getting slowly-then-not-so-slowly consumed by the cold, dead hands of private equity or capitalism overall, the relevance of a series that takes on the industrialization of something that we don't traditionally regard as something that should be industrialized, certainly isn't lost on me. It's certainly ambitious, but so was the first season, and it still managed to stick its landing. This series definitely has the chops necessary to pull this off, as long as it doesn't slip on any metaphorical banana peels along the way.
And of course, the cherry on top: I wouldn't put it past this series to make sure it's all served with a heaping helping of family drama for Koshigaya, which we already got a little taste of. Basically, there's no shortage of potential for the story, messaging, and so on. I'm looking forward to seeing where this goes.
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