Ranma - Ova

Ranma - Ova

Just remember to keep a kettle of hot water nearby.

With longer production schedules and bigger budgets, the fight scenes become fluid. The character designs—especially for Ranma, Akane, and the calamitous Happosai—snap into perfect focus. The color palettes are richer, the water splashes are more dramatic, and the expressions are hilariously exaggerated. Episode 2, "The One to Carry On" (featuring a rival dojo heir who wants to marry Akane), contains some of the best hand-to-hand combat animation of the entire 90s decade. Here’s a fun fact: Most of the OVA episodes adapt specific, fan-favorite story arcs from the manga that the TV show either skipped or rushed through. In many cases, these are the chapters Rumiko Takahashi herself seemed most proud of. ranma ova

Released directly to video in the early 90s (and later compiled for Western audiences in the Hard Battle and TV Danger collections), these 11 to 12 episodes (depending on how you count the DoCo Music Video special) represent the sharpest, funniest, and most beautifully animated version of Rumiko Takahashi’s legendary gender-bending martial arts world. Just remember to keep a kettle of hot water nearby