Follow TV Tropes

Following

Magical Girl Warrior / Anime & Manga

Go To

Magical Girl Warriors are a staple of Anime & Manga series.


  • Devil Hunter Yohko was the second big Magical Girl Warrior series, with its eponymous heroine just as adept at martial arts as she is with her sword and magic. She isn't afraid to get physical if that's what it takes to get the job done.
  • Fantastic Detective Labyrinth has the Shinano clan concert girls into these called Aya. As a Manchurian Agent, such a girl has extraordinary magical power and fighting abilities but having their personality temporarily rewritten them unable to recall anything they did.
  • Puella Magi Madoka Magica: A darker take. Teenage girls are recruited to combat Eldritch Abominations known as "witches", and use anything from bombs to swords to ribbons to accomplish this. Because of the nature of the contract every magical girl makes and how magic generally works, every magical girl is doomed to ultimately become a witch. If they don't die horribly first. It also deconstructs their general durability in combat; a normal human body simply cannot take that kind of punishment from combat, and one of the awful truths is that they're Liches in all but name.
  • Revolutionary Girl Utena particularly embodies the "growing up as a struggle" metaphor, with the added bonus of Gnostic metaphor thrown in for good measure. This was emphasized way more in the anime than in the manga, however.
  • Pretty much cemented by the enormous popularity of Sailor Moon, which introduced the Sentai elements to the genre.
  • Saint Seiya is a Magical Boy Warrior series in all but genre. Flashy transformations, Frilly Upgrades, and stylish combat are the name of the game. Some of its anime incarnations even had staff members that would go on to do animation and character design work for Pretty Cure, while people who worked on Pretty Cure and other similar works would end up bringing their work back to Saint Seiya, like the above-mentioned Yoshihiko Umakoshi.
  • Sarazanmai is a very unconventional take for boys: the powers help the main trio come of age, their enemies reflect their own insecurities, and they're working with a Mentor Mascot that is the prince of a magic kingdom, but their alternate forms are cartoony kappa.
  • Shamanic Princess: Tiara is what happens when you take a Cute Witch and make her a badass while bypassing the super hero element.
  • Parodied within the Shōjo demographic with Super Pig, which is about a girl who transforms into a super-powered... pig.
  • Sweet Valerian features three girls who transform into superpowered monster-fighting... bunny rabbits.
  • Symphogear goes further and crossbreeds The Power of Rock with Magitek. Net result? Powered armor that runs on singing. Instead of magic wands, primary cast is armed with rocket-powered fists, multitudes of swords, dual-wielded chainguns and more deadly implements as series goes on.
  • Tokyo Mew Mew mixed the idea with Little Bit Beastly and a pro-environmental theme.
  • Towa Kamo Shirenai: Himiko and Kosumo, the latter via organ donation.
  • Umi Monogatari takes this type of show and tweaks it; among other things, the revelation of what the Big Bad really is allows for a conclusion that's more true-to-life than most shows of this genre.
  • Vividred Operation: Technically, the heroines are empowered by technology, rather than magic, but they otherwise fit this trope point for point. It certainly helps that their technology is advanced to the point that it may as well be magic anyway.
  • Wedding Peach and its anime follow the conventions of Sailor Moon.
  • Witchblade is a dark and not quite classical example but fits the bill across the board with the eponymous Witchblade and the Cloneblades. Transforming female characters? Check. Battle costumes? Check. Superpowers? Check. Evil organization spanning evil man-to-machine monsters of the week? Check. Transformation Trinket? Oh boy check.
  • Yuki Yuna is a Hero has four (later five) middle-school girls fighting monsters bent on destroying the local World Tree. It later reveals itself to be much darker than originally suggested.
  • Yurara has elements of this - the titular Yurara is able to transform into a tall darkhaired beauty and battle evil spirits with powerful magic in order to send them to the afterlife.

Top