GODZILLA: SINGULAR POINT
STATUS
COMPLETE
EPISODES
13
RELEASE
June 17, 2021
LENGTH
24 min
DESCRIPTION
This series features an original story, which depicts the young geniuses Mei Kamino, a female researcher, and Yun Arikawa, a male engineer, as they take on an unprecedented threat with their companions. When danger comes up from the depths, only young geniuses Mei, Yun, and their team can face the threat in Godzilla Singular Point!
(Source: Netflix)
CAST

Gojira

Mei Kamino

Yume Miyamoto

Yun Arikawa

Shouya Ishige

Pelops 2

Misaki Kuno

Gorou Ootaki

Wataru Takagi

Satomi Kanahara

Ayako Takeuchi

Anguirus

Haberu Katou

Tarou Kiuchi

Yung

Rie Kugimiya

Lina Byrne

Runa Onodera

Bearach Byrne

Ryoutarou Okiayu

Yukie Kanoko

Kotori Koiwai

Shunya Satou

Youhei Azakami

Guiying Li

Kaho Kouda

Makita K. Nakagawa

Hiromichi Tezuka

Tsunetomo Yamamoto

Jin Urayama

Michael Stephen

Kenta Miyake

Yoshiyasu Matsubara

Tomoyuki Shimura

Takehiro Kai

Kenichi Suzumura

Tilda Miller

Masako Isobe
EPISODES
Dubbed

Not available on crunchyroll
RELATED TO GODZILLA: SINGULAR POINT
REVIEWS

MermaidDork
75/100Una carta de amor al Bestiario de Toho.Continue on AniListTengo una historia de cariño muy reciente con Godzilla. 
Si bien hoy día he visto casi todo medio habido y por haber que involucre a este icónico personaje (Sí, eso incluye al anime viejito donde Godzilla te enseña a sumar), en realidad esta franquicia no representaba mucha importancia para mí durante la gran mayoría de mi vida.
Seguro, siempre me gustó Godzila, pero lo más que había visto era la película de 1998 y la caricatura de Hanna Barbera.
No fue sino hasta un período de desempleo, en el que gocé de mucho más tiempo libre del que sabía como utilizar, que me dio por ver la película de 1954, y luego la secuela, y la siguiente, y la siguiente...Ahora, dos años después de certificarme como fan (marca registrada) de Godzilla, siento que Singular Point fue hecho exactamente con personas como yo en mente.
Cada capítulo involucra al menos uno o dos kaiju distintos del panteón del rey de los monstruos, desde clásicos como Rodan, hasta los más oscuros como Salunga.
Pero lo que hace especiales estas apariciones, al menos para mí, es que sean en un contexto tan distinto y refrescante al oríginal. Normalmente me opondría a que los Kaiju puedan ser derrotados o destruidos por los humanos, pero en el contexto de esta serie, ayuda muchísimo a que estos se involucren mucho más en la historia, también, la reducción en escala de estos monstruos permite que podamos conectarnos más con ellos (con excepciones como Rodan, que se convierte en el monstruo más común y repetido de la serie).
El reparto humano es bastante sólido, con los dos protagonistas, Jun y Mai centrando los temas y enfoque de la historia, y quizás, demasiados personajes secundarios, que, aunque coloridos, no afectan tanto al desarrollo de la misma.Pero ya que mencionamos a los protagonistas humanos, hay un elemento que siento que no funcionó tan bien como los escritores esperaban, el científico.
Si bien me parece fascinante que se enfoquen en términos teóricos y física especulativa (algo que viene de las raíces de ciencia ficción desde el primer Godzilla), a veces el exceso y embotellamiento de información, teorías y conjeturas termina desorientando al espectador, todo para un final que no necesita complicarse tanto para entenderse o ser explicado.
Entre la discusión sobre el Punto Singular, los viajes en el tiempo, y la imposibilidad de la existencia de los kaijus, por más fascinantes que puedan ser todos esos temas, corren el peligro de perderse para la mayoría de la audiencia.A pesar de ese detalle, técnica, emocional y en entretenimiento, Godzilla: Singular Point cumple lo que se propone.
Me muero de ganas por ver si esta historia podrá continuar, y cómo se desarrollará.
R2R
61/100Don't get misleaded by seeing "GODZILLA" in the title.Continue on AniListhttps://anilist.co/anime/124786/Godzilla-Singular-Point/ As the title says, **Don't get misleaded by "GODZILLA"**
PROS
- The Art Style
The art style is really a major standout for this Anime. Every character design looks unique & vibrant. The monster character designs, Radons, Spiders & of course Godzilla gives the feel of the monster that they are. The series is made by studios "bones" (FMAB & MHA) & "Orange" (Land of the Lustrous & Beastars) and you can tell who's making what, if I've seen their previous works. The human designs looks so vibrant which are hand drawn.

And the monster design look creepy & scary but unique, which is thanks to the CGI. Many have a misconception that CGI is always bad but that's definitely not the case here. The clunky CGI really worked for the creepiness & monstrous look for the giant, other wordly creatures.

Cons
- Bland Characters
During every episode which has a monster attacking a character, I constantly asked myself, "Why should I care for you?". I know that sounds really harsh & edgy, but seriously the characters are just so bland, they feel more like "Plot devices" than actual characters. Their only personality is their design & maybe their high intelligence but nothing else. The series focusses so much on the plot and the sci-fi element, which completely forgets that these are people. Only memorable character are the AIs who shows more personality than people.
Things we can debate on
This is a section where few things may or may not apply to others that I personally found bad. So, these may not be cons or pros.
- Lack of more Godzilla
I mean, c'mon.... You have Godzilla in the title and there are like what! A 20 minute scenes in the whole 13 episodes Anime?? Are you kidding me!? is what many might think after watching this. I haven't watched many Godzilla films (watched only two of them) but I think that shouldn't be considered here. This is Anime with not much to the production, and that's a live-action Hollywood film with more budget. It's kinda unfair to compare both, but that's really understandable if you are someone who expected to see big creatures fight and hated this work. I don't really disliked lack of Godzilla, but it could've been so much better if Godzilla had much screentime
- The Sci-fi Element
Honestly, it is pretty interesting how the series managed to convey it's sci-fi element through boring dialogues. The exposition is completely based on more & more dialogue, which is very fast paced(for sub watchers, Dub seems to be fine).
For Die Hard Sci-fi fans who constantly wants to wrap their head around, this show can be a treat. For me though, I really found it boring even though it's actually interesting. You could actually tell the creators did their research. I mean, HELL. One of the spiritual theories they talk about(The Bagvadgita) is something I'm familiar of. It's really nice to see a homage for my country. But that's kinda it. I really appreciate it, but it didn't impressed me because of the bland execution through boring dialogue.- The Blend between 2D & 3D
In the series(and few Anime in general), you have few scenes where they blend the 2D & 3D together. Now this is a little problem for me. While they are good in their own way, they aren't really good together because the distinction is visible. I personally think it's a little out of the place cause it didn't worked well.
**It isn't terrible by any chance, just a little off.**
This is a very common problem for anything that tries to blend 2D & 3D. You have the infamous CGI crowds that looks so out of the place that it can put you off like in many Anime, but then you also have something like Land of the Lustrous CGI that really uses 3D in a way that many still framed 2D scenes can't try to deliver.
#**Summary** **May not be for GODZILLA fans**, but it can be a good watch for **Die hard Sci-fi fans**. For people who just want to check this out tho, not really worth your time. 
ShibuyaConfidential
70/100A singular point of view for Science fanatics!Continue on AniListGodzilla Singular Point is far from a flawless series, but it has been unfairly dismissed and largely forgotten — perhaps because audiences weren’t quite prepared for the kind of show it set out to be.
Set in a plausible near-future — essentially ten years from now — the series avoids clichés of dystopia or hyper-advanced fantasy. There are no flying cars, no ruined cities, no authoritarian regimes. Instead, the world feels recognisably ours: modestly advanced technology, early-stage artificial intelligence, and everyday society carrying on as usual. This grounded approach makes the sudden appearance of colossal creatures all the more unsettling, and the viewer immediately feels anchored in a world that could easily be our own.
From the moment the first anomalies appear, the narrative shifts into a steady crescendo of scientific mystery, theoretical puzzles, and escalating stakes. The cast reflects this direction: instead of the typical ensemble of teenagers, superheroes, or fan-service-driven archetypes, we follow engineers, researchers, academics, and professionals who treat the unfolding crisis as a real-world scientific and political problem.
This choice is bold. It also likely alienated younger or more action-oriented viewers, who traditionally expect a central hero figure, frequent battles, or familiar genre tropes. The characters here feel too grounded and competent — real adults doing real work — which is precisely what makes them interesting but also harder to market.And then there is Godzilla himself — the literal and figurative giant in the room.
As one of cinema’s most iconic figures, Godzilla carries decades of expectations: spectacular monster fights, large-scale destruction, and adrenaline-heavy set pieces. Singular Point defies that template. Action is sparing and back-loaded; the first major battles arrive only toward the end. For long stretches, the series favours theory over spectacle, analysis over explosions. For some fans, this felt like “too much talking.” For others, it was a refreshing attempt to treat the Godzilla mythos as a scientific anomaly rather than an excuse for a brawl.A huge part of this identity comes from the writing itself. The series was clearly shaped by people with strong scientific backgrounds — physicists, mathematicians, engineers. The jargon, formulas, and theoretical references are not random technobabble; they are rooted in actual research. But this rigor comes with a cost. More than once, I found myself pausing an episode to look up unfamiliar terminology, because the dialogue doesn’t slow down to explain itself.
This is a double-edged sword: it rewards curiosity and patience but risks losing viewers who simply want a straightforward kaiju narrative. I don’t blame anyone who felt overwhelmed — Singular Point asks a lot from its audience.Despite all this, or perhaps because of it, the show feels strangely realistic. Its fantastical elements are always tied back to systems, patterns, and plausible scientific reasoning. In the end, watching it delivers a sense of discovery rather than just entertainment. There’s a quiet satisfaction in piecing together the puzzle the writers constructed.
And on a lighter note: the opening theme is an absolute standout.
Do yourself a favour and listen to it.
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SCORE
- (3.2/5)
TRAILER
MORE INFO
Ended inJune 17, 2021
Main Studio Orange
Favorited by 345 Users
Hashtag #ゴジラSP






