Which Studio Adapted God Slayer Into An Anime Series?

2025-10-06 09:45:23
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3 Answers

Ending Guesser Chef
What a neat question — it made me go hunting through my own messy anime watchlist! There isn’t a widely known anime that goes strictly by the English title 'God Slayer', which is why searches can come up empty or show different results depending on translations. Sometimes titles get mangled in fan translations or storefront listings, so the studio credit gets lost in the shuffle.

If you meant a show where gods are literally fought or killed, one common pick people refer to is 'Record of Ragnarok' (Japanese: 'Shuumatsu no Walküre'), which was produced by Graphinica for its anime adaptation. Another series people sometimes confuse with god-killing themes is 'The God of High School' — that one was animated by MAPPA. But if you have a screenshot, a manga author name, or even a character name, that would help me pin it down exactly. I often find the end credits or the Blu-ray booklet the fastest way to confirm studio info when streaming metadata is vague.

If you want, drop the exact phrase you saw or where you heard it (a forum, a subtitle, a game tie-in) and I’ll dig deeper. I love these little sleuthing missions — they’re the best excuse to go down rabbit holes on MyAnimeList, Anime News Network, and the credits pages.
2025-10-07 23:21:30
19
Wyatt
Wyatt
Detail Spotter Doctor
I tried looking for an anime literally titled 'God Slayer' and came up empty, so I suspect it’s a translation mix-up or a subtitle name someone used. When I run into this, I check a few places fast: the original Japanese title, MyAnimeList, Anime News Network, and the streaming service credits. Those usually give a clear studio name.

If you meant a series with gods being killed, people often point to 'Record of Ragnarok', adapted by Graphinica, or 'The God of High School', by MAPPA — but those are guesses based on theme, not the exact title you gave. If you can paste a line of dialogue, a character name, or a link where you saw 'God Slayer', I can identify the studio for certain. Otherwise, try searching the Japanese title or the creator’s name; that almost always leads straight to the production studio in the credits.
2025-10-10 02:53:48
17
Piper
Piper
Book Clue Finder Data Analyst
I dug a bit when I saw your question because that title rang a bell in no clear way. There’s no major anime officially titled 'God Slayer' in English that I can find in the usual databases. Titles get translated, shortened, and rebranded all the time, so ‘God Slayer’ might be a fan-translation of something else, or it could be a minor OVA or indie adaptation that didn’t get broad distribution.

A practical approach I use: locate the original Japanese title (if available), then check the anime’s entry on MyAnimeList or Anime News Network — those pages list the animation studio, director, and staff. If the show is on a platform like Crunchyroll, Netflix, or Funimation, the platform’s show page often lists production credits as well. For example, shrugging guesses people mix up with 'God Slayer' are 'Record of Ragnarok' (anime by Graphinica) and 'The God of High School' (by MAPPA), both of which deal with deific battles in different ways. Those are only examples in case the title was loosely translated.

If you’ve got any more context — where you saw the title, an artist, or a plot blurb — tell me and I’ll narrow it down properly. I’m happy to keep digging or show you how to spot the studio from a screenshot of the credits.
2025-10-12 07:09:46
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Who composed the god slayer soundtrack and theme songs?

3 Answers2025-08-23 23:27:10
I get why this question pops up — soundtrack credits can be maddeningly vague online. If you mean the soundtrack and theme songs for something called 'God Slayer', the tricky bit is that multiple projects across games, indie films, and music tracks use that title, so there isn't a single universal composer I can point to without more context. When I hunt down credits I start with the easiest, nerdy tricks: check the official release page (the game or film’s website, the publisher’s press kit, or the album page on Bandcamp/Spotify) because those usually list 'music by' or 'composed by'. If it’s an anime or series, the end credits and the listing on sites like IMDb or the Japanese pages of the distributor often list the composer and performers for opening/ending themes. For songs uploaded to YouTube, the description sometimes names both composer and performer; for OST tracks on streaming platforms, click the track details. If you can tell me which medium or a little context — a year, platform (PC, console, YouTube short), or an artist who performs the theme — I’ll dig through the credits and dig up the composer name fast. I’ve tracked down obscure OST credits before by cross-referencing Bandcamp, Discogs, and the composer’s social pages, so if you drop even a tiny clue I’ll take a crack at it.

Which studios produced the god ragnarök anime adaptation?

3 Answers2025-08-24 23:14:27
I got pulled into this show because I love big, dramatic fights between gods and humans, so when I looked up the credits for 'Record of Ragnarok' (aka 'Shuumatsu no Valkyrie') I was pretty curious who actually animated it. The short, practical bit: the Netflix anime adaptation was animated by Graphinica, with Yumeta Company also credited for production support. Netflix handled the global release and marketing, but the heavy lifting of the animation work is primarily associated with Graphinica while Yumeta Company appears in production credits for parts of the project. If you enjoy poking around credits like I do, you’ll notice modern anime often credits multiple studios because workloads get split — sometimes one studio handles main animation, another does in-between frames or CG, and a third might do post-production. For 'Record of Ragnarok' the name Graphinica shows up prominently in staff listings, and Yumeta Company is listed alongside as a partner. If you want the absolute official line, the Netflix page for the series and the end credits are the places to check, but for most intents and purposes, Graphinica + Yumeta Company (with Netflix distributing) is the production lineup people refer to when talking about this gods-vs-humans anime.
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