#Anime

7 items

Video thumbnail — BAKUGAN: BATTLE BRAWLERS COMMERCIALS
Toys 2007–2010

Bakugan

The spring-loaded battle-toy franchise from Spin Master and Sega Toys (Bakugan Battle Brawlers), tied to an anime series that launched in Japan in 2007 and on Cartoon Network in the U.S. in 2008. The toys were marble-like orbs that popped open into fierce little figures when rolled onto magnetic metal battle cards — a successor to the Pokémon and Beyblade collect-and-battle craze.

Video thumbnail — BeyBlade Blizzard Bowl Let em Rip Commerical 15 second (2002) Bey Blade
Toys 2002–2005

Beyblades

These spinning-top battle toys from Takara launched a worldwide mania in the early 2000s. You loaded a Beyblade into a rip-cord launcher, shouted "Let it rip!", and battled rivals in plastic arena bowls called Beystadiums. Customizable parts (attack, defense, stamina types) and the anime tie-in made them trading-post essentials.

Video thumbnail — Daft Punk - One More Time (Official Video)
Music 2001–2003

Daft Punk — Discovery

The album that made dance music unavoidable in mainstream culture—and the only one that came with a full-length anime film. "One More Time" was everywhere, filtered into oblivion but instantly recognizable. Every kid with a burned CD knew this album.

Video thumbnail — Dragon Ball Z - Rock The Dragon (Original Intro | 4K Remaster)
TV 1996–2003

Dragon Ball Z

The after-school anime that taught a generation of American kids the words "Super Saiyan." Adapted from Akira Toriyama's manga and animated by Toei, Dragon Ball Z turned multi-episode power-ups, screaming energy charges, and glowing gold hair into appointment television — most of all on Cartoon Network's Toonami block.

Video thumbnail — Pokémon: Indigo League 📺 | Opening Theme
TV 1998–2002 peak

Pokémon (Animated Series)

Ash Ketchum's journey to be the very best became a national obsession when the 4Kids English dub hit US syndication in 1998 and moved to Kids' WB in 1999. Pokémon wasn't just a show — it was your Saturday morning, your lunch-table trading-card argument, and one organism with the Game Boy games on every playground in America. Team Rocket blasting off again was the ritual you tuned in for, every single week.

Video thumbnail — Toonami - Various 1999/2000 Bumps/Intros
TV 1997–2008

Toonami

Cartoon Network's action block where a generation of American kids met anime. Hosted first by Moltar, then by TOM — the robot captain of the Absolution — it made Dragon Ball Z and Sailor Moon after-school rituals and treated its young audience like the stories mattered.

Video thumbnail — Yu-Gi-Oh "CARDS" EXODIA Commercial (2003)
Tabletop Games 2002–2006

Yu-Gi-Oh! Cards

Konami's trading card game swept US schoolyards in the early 2000s, rivaling Pokémon for card-game dominance. Players dueled with powerful monsters — Blue-Eyes White Dragon, Dark Magician, and the feared five-piece Exodia combo — and the phrase "It's time to duel!" echoed through lunch periods. Teachers confiscated decks, and schools debated bans.