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The Summer 2026 Anime Preview Guide
Mebius Dust
How would you rate episode 1 of
Mebius Dust ?
Community score: 2.4
What is this?

Araki, Stella, and Olga are ordinary high-schoolers living in a city shaped by the mysterious Mebius Dust. Between gaming, bathhouse trips, and quiet walks home, their days pass peacefully—yet strange technology and rising unrest begin to quietly distort their everyday lives.
Mebius Dust is an original anime project based on the award-winning story by Hajime Shinagawa. The anime series is streaming on Crunchyroll on Thursdays.
How was the first episode?

Rating:
Is your name Charles Dickens or Lady Murasaki? No? Then you are not allowed to have so many named characters in the introduction to your story. Cruel of me to say, I know, but it's just basic creative writing advice; giving a character a name indicates to the reader/viewer that they're important and that we're supposed to remember them. And boy, does Mebius Dust throw a bunch of names at us right off the bat – Ainojou, Araki, Stella, Olga, Suzaku, Gengo, Renji, Yuichi, Haruto, Kyouko, Katsuki, Yuda, February Roar, LAMPs, Polis Hopper…I probably even got some of those names wrong because there were just so many. In all fairness, we're probably only supposed to remember the Polis Hopper kids and the suspicious scientist, but it's still not what I'd call putting your best narrative foot forward.
That goes double because there are some interesting aspects of this story's world. Apparently, after a meteor strike ten years ago, some children developed powers, known as “lams.” These Lamscuria are now forced to remain in their home cities and not use their powers above a certain level – and given that most of them now appear to be teenagers, this is clearly not something they'll just accept. They blow off steam by playing what looks like the most dangerous game of capture the flag every night, but they never get to unleash their full potential. You can feel how frustrating this is for them, and easily understand why they'd opt to trust the obviously untrustworthy scientist when he offers them a chance to escape the cycle. It's a decent hook.
So how, then, does this episode about superpowered kids playing dangerous games with the help of shady scientists end up being so incredibly boring? Part of the problem is the aforementioned bloated cast; we can only care about so many characters in the space of twenty-four minutes. Another factor is that of all of their super-duper powers, only the girl with the hair is at all interesting. The only scenes I actively liked involved her using her tentacular hair to do things. I suppose the post-credits scene with Araki revealing that he has “low dust levels” because he's…doing…something with his power that maybe helps the others is moderately interesting, but it's definitely too little, too late.
If the second episode can winnow the cast, giving us a core group of people to follow and actual personalities, it may redeem itself. As of this episode, however, there's precious little to recommend Mebius Dust, prehensile hair notwithstanding.

Rating:
I feel like the old “What would happen if my buddies and I all got superpowers?” daydream is a universally beloved childhood experience. Who the heck wouldn't want to be the X-Men with all their best pals over summer break, solving mysteries and beating up bad guys? Well, Mebius Dust is here to deliver its own bold take on this time-honored premise. What would happen if a magical mystery meteor suddenly gave a bunch of kids wild superpowers? Well, life would basically be pretty normal and boring, actually, except the kids might all use their powers to play parkour games in the middle of the night.
Absolutely riveting stuff.
Mebius Dust makes an attempt, sort of, to justify its premise within the larger context of its universe, with Araki and all of his friends all getting recruited to use their dust powers in more meaningful experiments that will hopefully allow them to leave the quarantine they've all been stuck in, but good Lord does Mebius Dust struggle to present any of this information in a manner that is interesting. I get that the kids' aimless boredom is meant to be an intentional element of this episode's tone to a certain degree, but absolutely nothing about Mebius Dust gets off the ground or hooks its audience in this first episode. The environments are dark and as dull as dishwater. The animation fails to capture any of the inherent excitement that ought to come with watching a band of superpowered hoodlums frolick around. The dialogue is a meaningless soup of proper nouns and pointless lore that fails to inject any creative spark into the proceedings whatsoever.
As the minutes crept by and this endless premiere refused to end, I was convinced that something would happen to liven things up. Maybe an alien invasion would break out in the middle of the excruciatingly pointless race that takes up the back half of the episode. Maybe government agents would swoop in and start taking kids out, and the crews would have to band together and fight for their lives. Hell, I would have settled for a good old-fashioned sports-anime rivalry between some cartoonishly bizarre teams with a bunch of crazy costumes and character quirks. Alas, we're simply stuck watching a dozen interchangeable doofuses run around and use their lame powers to play Anime Calvinball for a dozen minutes.
Mebius Dust can't even use the excuse of being obviously aimed at preteens, because if I'd been forced to sit through this crap as a teenager, I would have started chucking tomatoes at the screen before the episode was halfway done. Mebius Dust is for kids in the same way that the cheap pieces of junk that McDonald's packs in with its Happy Meals. It's completely a disposable and superfluous distraction that won't keep anyone entertained for much longer than it takes to scarf down a small cheeseburger and a handful of French fries.

Rating:
Mebius Dust — originally titled Möbius Dust which is better because Möbius is at least a real word and, as far as I can tell, this anime has no connection to the Ultraman Mebius series — is one of those works where the story behind it is more interesting than the final product. Originally made public in 2019, this anime's screenplay won the Kids/Game category of a “turn your story into an anime” competition hosted by DeNA, Sotsu, and Nippon Cultural Broadcasting. However, this project immediately stalled out and, seven years later, the end result feels more like an advertisement for a game or toy franchise that doesn't exist than a piece of narrative media.
Set in a world where kids have begun to develop superpowers after a meteorite crashes into the planet, these children use their powers to play over-the-top games of capture the flag. If they use their powers too much, though, the cops will catch on and bust up their fun; that is, until a mad scientist type shows up and gives them devices that let them hide their power output, allowing them to express their powers more fully. While I do appreciate that this anime doesn't over-explain every character's powers and instead lets a viewer intuit what everyone can do from the events on screen, this episode still drops at least a dozen named characters in twenty minutes, making it really hard to care about any of them individually.
The powers the characters display are also kind of weird and inconsistent with the lore established in the episode's opening. These abilities are supposed to be mutations in the bodies of these young people caused by exposure to particles from the meteorite. This makes sense in some abilities, like the lead (maybe it's hard to tell) having future vision or one character being able to grow and manipulate her hair like prehensile limbs. However, some characters have what appear to be fully robotic legs and can summon suits of armor, which I think merit more explanation. I know I should probably suspend my disbelief more for what's clearly a children's show, but if the X-Men franchise has been good at making mutant powers feel believable for more than sixty years, Mebius Dust can at least offer a better justification for some of these powers.
While competitions with editor oversight have historically been an effective way to elevate new talent in manga, animation requires far more cooks in the kitchen, all of whom need to share the same vision for a project. Mebius Dust is half-baked in both concept and execution. There's way better stuff that you could be watching this season instead.
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