Coming Fall 2025
A Bite of Fantasy Every Day
One scroll to watch your favorite stories, animated.
© Ryuu, Inc. | New York City, 2025
Animation in the 2020s has become more than just moving pictures. It is now one of the strongest ways to tell stories across many platforms. People do not only watch animated movies in cinemas anymore. They also enjoy short clips, webcomics with motion, and vertical videos on their phones. This makes animation a daily part of life for audiences everywhere.
Short-form content has especially changed how stories are told. Instead of waiting for long episodes or full seasons, people can now follow characters in small but powerful pieces. Even a few seconds of animation can carry drama, humor, or emotion. Creators have learned how to make every frame count, blending art and storytelling in ways that feel fresh and fast.
Styles from around the world now mix together more than ever. Japanese anime, Western comics, and digital art trends all influence each other. The result is a global style that feels familiar to many but also new at the same time. Stories carry themes of friendship, struggle, and discovery that work across cultures. Another big change is how fans and creators interact. Storytelling is no longer one-sided. Fans give feedback, share ideas, and even shape the way projects grow. Creators listen, adapt, and keep the conversation going. This two-way relationship has made animation one of the most exciting parts of storytelling in the 21st century.
We wake up every day and try to answer this question. What can we do to support the best artists in creating the best stories out there?