Ranma ½

Ranma ½

らんま½
1989 –1992 Studio Deen Fuji TV 161 episodes Completed
Comedy Martial Arts Romance Supernatural
Details & Synopsis
Ranma Saotome is a martial arts prodigy. He is also, depending on water temperature, a girl. A childhood training accident in the cursed springs of Jusenkyo left him with a condition his father - who turns into a panda - considers a minor inconvenience. Cold water: girl. Hot water: boy. This is presented as a problem. It is actually the greatest comedic premise in the history of anime.

Created by Rumiko Takahashi - the architect of Urusei Yatsura, Maison Ikkoku, and Inuyasha - Ranma ½ began serialization in Weekly Shōnen Sunday in 1987 and ran for seven years. The anime adaptation by Studio Deen aired from 1989 to 1992, producing 161 TV episodes plus a mountain of OVAs and three theatrical films. It is one of the foundational texts of the fansub era - one of the shows that built the underground tape-trading networks that eventually became digital fansub culture in the West.

The cast is enormous and every single member of it is insane. Akane Tendo is the fiancée who would rather hit Ranma than admit she likes him. Shampoo is a Chinese Amazon who becomes a cat when splashed with cold water, which is its own catastrophic problem. Ryoga Hibiki has the worst sense of direction in human history and turns into a small black pig. P-chan is not a pig. Everyone knows P-chan is not a pig except Akane.

The 2024 Netflix remake exists. It is fine. Watch the original.
Alt Title らんま½
Studio Studio Deen
Network Fuji TV
Aired 1989 – 1992
Episodes 161
Genre Comedy, Martial Arts, Romance, Supernatural
Status Completed
Episode List
Introduction Arc (6) Ryoga Arc (4) Shampoo Arc (3) Cat Fu Arc (2) Kuno Arc (1) Cologne Arc (4) Mousse Arc (4) Ice Skating Arc (3) Bakusai Tenketsu Arc (5) Happosai Introduction Arc (1) Happosai Arc (10) Ukyo Arc (10) Soap Cure Arc (8) Principal Kuno Arc (5) Ranma Gets Weak Arc (8) Pantyhose Taro Arc (6) Ryoga Gets Strong Arc (12) Dragon's Whisker Arc (5) Martial Tea Ceremony Arc (8) Picolet Chardin Arc (7) Gosunkugi Arc (13) Ukyo's Secret Sauce Arc (8) Shishi Hokodan Arc (17) Martial Arts Cheerleading Arc (5) Boy Meets Mom Arc (6)
001 Here's Ranma Apr 15, 1989 canon
Soun Tendo announces to his three daughters that their father's old friend Genma Saotome is coming to visit - and that one of them is going to marry his son Ranma. A red-haired girl shows up at the door with a panda. This is not what anyone expected.
002 School Is No Place for Horsing Around Apr 22, 1989 canon
Ranma enrolls at Furinkan High School and immediately runs into Akane's suitors - a mob of boys who challenge her every morning for the right to date her. Ranma defeats all of them without breaking a sweat. Akane is not grateful. Kuno Tatewaki takes this personally.
003 A Sudden Storm of Love Apr 29, 1989 canon
Kuno falls instantly and catastrophically in love with Ranma's female form, completely unaware they are the same person. This is going to be a recurring problem. Ranma discovers that cold water in Nerima is basically unavoidable.
004 Ranma and... Ranma? If It's Not One Thing, It's Another May 6, 1989 canon
A scheme to expose Ranma's secret backfires spectacularly. The Tendo household begins adjusting to the reality of their new houseguest - a boy who is sometimes a girl and lives with a panda. Akane remains the only one treating any of this as abnormal.
005 Love Me to the Fullest May 13, 1989 canon
Ranma and Akane's reluctant engagement becomes public knowledge at Furinkan. The school's reaction is immediate and unhinged. Kuno challenges Ranma to a duel, refuses to accept the result, and declares he is now in love with both the pigtailed girl and Akane simultaneously. The situation is already out of control.
006 Akane's Lost Love... These Things Happen, You Know May 20, 1989 canon
Akane's childhood feelings for Dr. Tofu - the neighbourhood chiropractor who turns into a complete disaster around Akane's older sister Kasumi - are explored. Ranma immediately finds this hilarious. Akane does not.
007 Enter Ryoga! The Eternal "Lost Boy" May 27, 1989 canon
Ryoga Hibiki arrives in Nerima. He has been looking for Ranma for months to settle a grudge from their school days. He has terrible directional sense - catastrophically, cosmically terrible - and arrived four days late to a duel he has spent half a year trying to reach. He is furious. He is also genuinely dangerous.
008 School Is a Battlefield! Ranma vs. Ryoga Jun 3, 1989 canon
Ryoga and Ranma finally fight at Furinkan. Ryoga's bandanas are weapons. His belt is a weapon. His depression is a weapon. Ranma wins but the rivalry is far from settled - Ryoga has a secret that hot water is about to reveal.
009 True Confessions! A Girl's Hair Is Her Life! Jun 10, 1989 canon
Ryoga's Jusenkyo curse is revealed: cold water turns him into a small black pig. He immediately ends up in Akane's arms, named P-chan, and adopted as her beloved pet. P-chan is not a pig. Ranma knows P-chan is not a pig. Ranma cannot tell Akane P-chan is not a pig without explaining how he knows. This is Ryoga's one victory over Ranma and he intends to keep it forever.
010 P-chan, Akane's Cute Little Pig Jun 17, 1989 canon
Ryoga settles into his double life as Akane's adored pet, gathering intelligence on Ranma from the inside. Ranma is losing his mind. The fundamental injustice of the situation is that Ryoga is objectively a terrible person for doing this and it is also objectively hilarious.
011 Ranma Gets Weak Jul 1, 1989 canon
A Chinese Amazon named Shampoo arrives in Nerima hunting Ranma's female form - under Amazon law, a woman who defeats a female outsider must kill her. Shampoo is extremely competent. She is also about to learn about the Jusenkyo situation, which is going to complicate her mission considerably.
012 A Woman's Love Is War! The Martial Arts Rhythmic Gymnastics Challenge! Jul 8, 1989 canon
Shampoo discovers Ranma's male form and Amazon law kicks into an entirely different obligation: a female outsider defeated by a male must marry him. Shampoo's mission changes completely. Ranma now has a fiancée he did not agree to in addition to the one he did not agree to. Akane's opinion of the situation is not printable.
013 A Tear in a Girl-Delinquent's Eye? The End of the Martial Arts Rhythmic Gymnastics Challenge! Jul 15, 1989 canon
The gymnastics rivalry concludes. Shampoo retreats to China - temporarily. Anyone who has seen the opening credits knows she is coming back, and she is coming back with a cat curse and an ice cream cart and absolutely no intention of giving up.
014 Wretched Rice Cakes of Love Jul 22, 1989 canon
Genma's past training decisions continue to haunt Ranma in unexpected ways. The Nekoken - Cat Fist - is introduced, a technique so dangerous and so insane that its training manual literally says do not do this. Genma did it anyway. Ranma is now deathly terrified of cats. This is going to matter.
015 Akane's Lost Love... These Things Happen, You Know Jul 29, 1989 canon
Ranma's cat phobia is explored in full. When cornered by enough cats, something in his brain switches off and he enters the Nekoken - moving on instinct, fighting like an animal, completely feral. It is the most powerful state he can reach. He has zero control over it and no memory afterward. Akane is the only one who can reach him when he is like this. The show makes sure you notice that.
016 Shampoo's Revenge! The Shiatsu Technique That Steals Heart and Soul Aug 5, 1989 canon
Shampoo returns from China with new techniques, a revised mission, and a great-grandmother named Cologne who is approximately one hundred years old, three feet tall, and the most dangerous person in Nerima. The power balance of the show shifts permanently.
017 I Love You, Ranma! Please Don't Say Goodbye Aug 12, 1989 canon
Cologne begins her campaign to secure Ranma as a husband for Shampoo through a combination of ancient techniques, psychological manipulation, and absolutely no regard for anyone else's feelings or autonomy. She is the most effective schemer in the series. She is also frequently correct about things, which makes her worse.
018 I am a Man! Ranma's Strange Journey Aug 19, 1989 canon
Ranma's pride as a martial artist and as a man collides with the increasingly complicated reality of having a female form that other characters respond to completely differently. The show begins interrogating its own premise with more seriousness than its comedy would suggest it intends to.
019 Clash of the Delivery Girls! The Martial Arts Takeout Race Aug 26, 1989 canon
Martial Arts Takeout Racing is exactly what it sounds like and it is completely deranged. Shampoo versus Akane in a delivery race through Nerima with techniques, sabotage, and an ancient Chinese curse at stake. One of the first great examples of Takahashi's invented martial arts disciplines - absurd on the surface, internally consistent, somehow thrilling.
020 Beware of Animals: The Martial Arts Takeout Race, Part 2 Sep 2, 1989 canon
The delivery race concludes. Cologne watches everything with ancient amusement. Ranma wins by being Ranma - creative, adaptable, and constitutionally incapable of losing even when losing would be easier for everyone including himself.
021 Enter Mousse! The Predator of Shampoo Sep 9, 1989 canon
Mousse arrives from China - another Amazon, an old rival of Shampoo's who is obsessively in love with her and furious that she has transferred that obsession to Ranma. He hides weapons in his robes. Vast quantities of weapons. Where they come from is not explained and that is fine. His Jusenkyo curse turns him into a duck. He cannot see without his glasses. He is a disaster.
022 Behold! The Awesome Power of Martial Arts Cheerleading Sep 16, 1989 canon
Martial Arts Cheerleading. Takahashi is not slowing down. A new challenger arrives with pom-poms and a technique set built around cheer routines. The show continues inventing entire martial arts disciplines and treating them with complete sincerity. Somehow this makes them more exciting, not less.
023 This Ol' Gal's the Leader of the Amazon Tribe! Sep 23, 1989 canon
Cologne's full history and authority within the Chinese Amazon tribe is established. She did not get to be three feet tall and one hundred years old by being anything other than terrifying. Her investment in Ranma marrying Shampoo is revealed to be strategic on a level that goes well beyond matchmaking.
024 Ranma Almost Dies! Cologne's Terrible Trap Sep 30, 1989 canon
Cologne deploys the Hiry? Sh?ten Ha - a technique that uses the opponent's battle aura against them - as bait in an elaborate scheme. The combat choreography steps up noticeably. The show has found its rhythm: comedy in the streets, genuine martial arts craft in the fights.
025 The Abduction of Akane Oct 7, 1989 canon
Mousse kidnaps Akane as leverage against Ranma. Ranma's response to Akane being in danger is, as always, immediate and disproportionate - he does not process the feelings, he just moves. The show continues quietly building something underneath all the chaos that it will make you feel much later.
026 Close Call! The Dance of Death… On Ice! Oct 27, 1989 canon
The ice skating rivalry reaches its climax. Ranma and Ryoga compete on the rink in a battle that is technically about skating and actually about Akane. The choreography is legitimately impressive. Nobody involved would admit to enjoying it.
027 P-Chan Explodes! The Icy Fountain of Love! Nov 3, 1989 canon
Ryoga discovers a hot spring that could cure his Jusenkyo curse - which would end the P-Chan situation permanently. The problem is getting there. The bigger problem is what he would have to give up. Ryoga makes a decision that is very in character for him.
028 Ranma Trains on Mount Terror Nov 10, 1989 canon
Cologne reveals the Bakusai Tenketsu - the Breaking Point technique - to Ryoga as part of her ongoing scheme to strengthen him against Ranma. The training is brutal and the technique is devastating: a single touch that shatters solid rock. Cologne is, as always, playing a longer game than anyone else in the room.
029 The Breaking Point!? Ryoga's Great Revenge Nov 17, 1989 canon
Ryoga returns to Nerima with the Bakusai Tenketsu mastered and immediately challenges Ranma. The technique that shatters rock does not work on human flesh the way Ryoga hoped - but the side effect of Ranma's training to counter it is genuinely absurd. One of the better fight episodes of the early run.
030 Danger at the Tendo Dojo! Nov 24, 1989 canon
The fallout from the Breaking Point battle lands at the Tendo household. Cologne watches the results with satisfaction. Ryoga has not beaten Ranma. He has, however, made Ranma significantly harder to beat. This is apparently close enough for now.
031 The Abduction of Akane! Dec 1, 1989 canon
Akane is taken hostage again - this time as leverage in a conflict that has nothing to do with her and everything to do with the rotating cast of people who resent Ranma. The show is aware this keeps happening. Ranma's response time continues to be immediate.
032 Ranma vs. Mousse! To Lose Is To Win Dec 8, 1989 canon
Mousse challenges Ranma to a formal duel with Shampoo as the prize. Mousse is genuinely skilled - his hidden weapons technique is one of the more creative fighting styles in the series. He still loses. The reason he loses is funnier than the fight itself.
033 Enter Happosai, The Lustful Lecher! Dec 15, 1989 canon
Happosai arrives. He is ancient, tiny, impossibly powerful, and the founder of the Anything-Goes Martial Arts school that both Genma and Soun trained under. He also steals women's underwear with the dedication of a man who has made it his life's work. Genma and Soun are terrified of him. This tells you everything you need to know about the power hierarchy of this show.
034 Assault on the Girls' Locker Room Dec 22, 1989 canon
Happosai's particular obsessions bring chaos to Furinkan High School. The show commits fully to the bit. Happosai is simultaneously the most powerful and most ridiculous character introduced to this point - a deliberate joke about martial arts grandmasters that is also genuinely difficult for anyone to stop.
035 Kuno's House of Gadgets! Guests Check In, But They Don't Check Out Jan 5, 1990 filler
Kuno has installed an elaborate trap-filled mansion to capture the pigtailed girl. It goes about as well as every other Kuno scheme. Filler, but the gadget chaos is in keeping with the show's energy.
036 Goodbye Girl-Type Jan 12, 1990 filler
Ranma becomes determined to break the female curse permanently through a scheme that involves more optimism than planning. Filler. The resolution lands exactly where you expect it to.
037 It's A Fine Line Between Pleasure And Pain Jan 19, 1990 canon
Happosai deploys a technique that forces Ranma to feel pain as pleasure - which sounds like comedy and plays as both comedy and a legitimately difficult combat problem. How do you fight someone whose attacks you cannot register as threats? The show actually thinks this through.
038 SOS! The Wrath of Happosai Jan 26, 1990 canon
Happosai's full combat capability is demonstrated against Ranma. The gap between what he looks like - a tiny old man with a pipe - and what he can actually do is enormous. Ranma has met his most absurd opponent yet and it is not going well.
039 Kissing Is Such Sweet Sorrow! The Taking of Akane's Lips Feb 2, 1990 canon
A technique is introduced that transfers the user's battle aura through a kiss - which creates exactly the romantic chaos the premise promises. Multiple parties end up involved. Akane's expression throughout is a master class in suppressed fury.
040 Bathhouse Battle! We're In Some Hot Water Now Feb 9, 1990 filler
A fight breaks out at the public bathhouse. Filler, but bathhouse episodes are a genre staple for a reason - the hot and cold water situation creates natural chaos for Ranma that the show mines efficiently.
051 Les Misérables of the Kuno Estate Jun 29, 1990 filler
Kuno-centric chaos at the family estate. Filler that works better than it should because Tatewaki Kuno's delusion is a renewable energy source - the show can run episodes off it indefinitely.
052 Ghost Story! Ranma and the Magic Sword Jul 6, 1990 filler
A supernatural weapon causes problems in Nerima. The show dips into horror framing without committing. Filler, but the haunted sword premise at least gives the action choreography something different to work with.
053 All It Takes Is One! The Kiss of Love Is the Kiss of Death Jul 13, 1990 canon
A technique is introduced that turns a first kiss into a lethal curse - which means the show gets to be simultaneously romantic and life-threatening, which is exactly its natural habitat. The combat and the emotional stakes are unusually well integrated here. One of the stronger canon episodes of season 3.
041 Ranma Gains Yet Another Suitor Apr 20, 1990 canon
Another fiancée enters the picture. The running joke that Ranma's father traded him for food is revealed to have happened more than once. Ukyo Kuonji - childhood friend, okonomiyaki chef, holder of a legitimate grudge - arrives in Nerima and immediately makes the engagement situation measurably worse.
042 Ryoga & Akane: 2-Gether, 4-Ever Apr 27, 1990 canon
Ryoga makes a serious play for Akane's feelings - not as P-Chan, but as himself. It almost works. Ranma's reaction to it almost working is more telling than anything he has said directly. The show continues building something it refuses to name.
043 Sneeze Me, Squeeze Me, Please Me! Shampoo's Recipe For Disaster May 4, 1990 canon
Shampoo obtains a Chinese herb that causes whoever smells it to fall in love with the next person they touch. The target is Ranma. The execution is Cologne's. The collateral damage is everyone in the immediate vicinity. A solid Shampoo episode with a clean comedic escalation.
044 Rub-A-Dub-Dub! There's A Pervert In The Tub May 11, 1990 canon
Happosai steals a magical accessory that renders him even more difficult to deal with. The Tendo household attempts to recover it. The episode is an efficient delivery system for the show's central joke: that the adults in this world are uniformly worse than the teenagers trying to manage them.
045 I Love You! My Dear, Dear Ukyo May 18, 1990 canon
Ukyo's backstory is fully established. The okonomiyaki cart. The ten-year grudge. The childhood promise Ranma made without understanding what it meant. Ukyo is the fiancée with the most legitimate claim on Ranma's guilt - she was genuinely wronged, she genuinely forgives him anyway, and she moves into Nerima permanently. The love polygon just got a new corner.
046 The Witch Who Loved Me: A Japanese Ghost Story May 25, 1990 filler
A supernatural encounter disrupts the Nerima status quo. Filler. The ghost story framing is atmospheric but goes nowhere the canon episodes couldn't have reached faster.
047 Transform! Akane The Super-Duper Girl Jun 1, 1990 canon
Akane receives a power upgrade through an outside technique and briefly becomes capable of fighting at a level that actually impresses Ranma. His reaction to Akane being strong is complicated in ways he does not examine. The episode is funnier and more touching than it has any right to be.
048 The Killer From Jusenkyo Jun 8, 1990 good-filler
A new Jusenkyo-cursed fighter arrives with a grudge. Filler. The Jusenkyo premise allows the show to introduce one-off characters without explanation and this one does not outstay its welcome.
049 Am I… Pretty? Ranma's Declaration of Womanhood Jun 15, 1990 good-filler
Ranma is forced to present as female for an extended period and has feelings about it that the show wisely does not overanalyze. Filler, but one of the more character-revealing filler episodes in the early run.
050 Final Facedown! Happosai vs. The Invisible Man Jun 22, 1990 filler
Happosai encounters an opponent with an invisibility technique. The chaos is predictable and the resolution is satisfying enough. Filler. The Happosai well runs deep and the show has not hit the bottom of it yet.
054 The Ultimate Team-Up!? The Ryoga / Mousse Alliance Jul 20, 1990 filler
Ryoga and Mousse put aside their respective losses to Ranma and team up. The alliance is exactly as functional as two people who are bad at everything except fighting can make it. Filler, but the dynamic between these two disasters is reliably entertaining.
055 Back to the Happosai! Jul 27, 1990 mixed
Happosai episode with one foot in the manga and one in original territory. Mixed canon - some genuine character work underneath the filler framing. Happosai is most interesting when the show remembers he is genuinely ancient and has reasons for being the way he is.
056 Kodachi the Black Rose! The Beeline to True Love Aug 3, 1990 filler
Kodachi Kuno - the Black Rose, Tatewaki's younger sister, rhythmic gymnastics fighter, and person who is completely unwell - pursues Ranma with her usual total disregard for consent or reality. Filler but Kodachi is a great recurring character whose episodes tend to be more fun than they deserve to be.
057 The Last Days of Happosai…? Aug 10, 1990 filler
Happosai appears to be dying. Nobody is sad about this. The show mines the comedy of people who hate someone being forced to confront that they don't actually want them gone - because Happosai's absence would somehow make everything worse.
058 Two, Too Violent Girls: Ling-Ling & Lung-Lung Aug 17, 1990 filler
Two more Amazon warriors from China arrive hunting Ranma. They are young, aggressive, and entirely committed to Amazon law. Filler, but the Amazon lore is always good for an episode and the double-threat setup creates some decent action.
059 Ranma and the Evil Within Aug 24, 1990 filler
A technique or artifact draws out a darker side of Ranma's personality. The show flirts with a version of Ranma who doesn't hold back - morally or physically. Filler, but the premise reveals things about the character the main storyline is too busy to examine directly.
060 Enter Ken and His Copycat Kerchief Aug 31, 1990 filler
A fighter with a technique that mimics his opponent's abilities shows up to challenge Ranma. The conceptual interest of the ability runs out faster than the episode does. Filler, and one of the weaker ones in this stretch.
061 Ryoga's Miracle Cure! Hand Over That Soap Sep 7, 1990 canon
A soap from China is discovered that can cure Jusenkyo curses permanently. Ryoga wants it desperately - it would end the P-Chan situation, which would free him from his guilt and his advantage over Ranma simultaneously. The episode makes you feel both things at once. One of the best Ryoga episodes in the series.
062 Fight! The Anything-Goes Obstacle Course Race Sep 14, 1990 filler
A martial arts obstacle course competition tears through Furinkan. The school setting gives the show a contained arena for chaos and it uses it efficiently. Filler with enough energy to justify its runtime.
063 Ukyo's Skirt! The Great Girly-Girl Gambit Sep 21, 1990 filler
Ukyo goes undercover in a feminine persona to pursue a goal that Ranma immediately makes more complicated. The episode is as much about Ukyo's character as it is about the scheme - she is the most grounded of the fiancées and episodes that remember that are better for it.
064 Ranma Goes Back to Jusenkyo at Last Sep 28, 1990 filler
A return to the cursed springs - or the promise of one. Filler that uses the cure premise as emotional bait without paying it off. The show knows you want Ranma cured and knows exactly how long it can string that along.
065 The Return of the Hawaiian Headmaster From Hell Oct 5, 1990 canon
Principal Kuno arrives - Tatewaki and Kodachi's father, newly returned from Hawaii with a military haircut obsession and absolute authority over Furinkan High School. He is immediately one of the funniest antagonists the show has produced. The introduction of an authority figure who is both completely unhinged and technically in charge opens up a new category of chaos the show will mine for seasons.
066 Enter Kuno, the Night-Prowling Knight Oct 12, 1990 filler
Tatewaki Kuno takes his delusion into the night hours. Filler, but the Kuno family dynamic - father included now - adds texture the earlier Kuno-focused episodes didn't have.
067 Ranma Gets Weak! (1) Oct 19, 1990 canon
A technique seals away Ranma's strength - not his skill, not his speed, just the raw physical power that every solution he has ever used relies on. The arc that follows is the show at its most interesting: what does Ranma do when the thing he is best at is taken away? The answer involves more thinking and more desperation than usual.
068 Eureka! The Desperate Move of Desperation (2) Oct 26, 1990 canon
Ranma searches for a counter while his opponents circle. The Cologne scenes in this arc are exceptional - she gives nothing away but is clearly invested in whether Ranma finds a solution. Her interest in his development is one of the show's most layered ongoing threads.
069 Showdown! Can Ranma Make a Comeback? (3) Nov 2, 1990 canon
The resolution of the weakness arc. Ranma's solution is exactly as creative and as physically reckless as everything he does. The payoff fight earns the three-episode setup and the status quo returns - slightly altered, as it always is after the show puts Ranma through something that should have changed him more.
070 Here Comes Ranma's Mom! Nov 9, 1990 filler
Nodoka Saotome - Ranma's mother, who hasn't seen her son in years and carries a sword for reasons the family agreement makes very clear - gets close to discovering the truth. The panic this creates in Genma and Ranma is genuinely funny and the Nodoka character is more poignant than a filler episode really earns.
071 From Ryoga with Love Nov 16, 1990 filler
Ryoga makes another sincere attempt to be honest with Akane. It goes poorly in the way that all of Ryoga's sincere attempts go poorly - not through cruelty but through his own inability to say the true thing at the right moment. Good-natured filler that understands the character.
072 My Fiancé, the Cat Nov 23, 1990 canon
Shampoo's cat curse and Ranma's cat phobia collide in a plot where Shampoo uses her transformed state as a deliberate tactical advantage. The Nekoken is always the show at its most unguarded - something about Ranma in that state, and Akane being the only one who can reach him, carries weight the comedy framing can't quite cover.
073 Blow, Wind! To Be Young Is to Be Honest Nov 30, 1990 filler
A wind-based fighter or technique causes trouble in Nerima. Filler. The martial arts invention machine keeps running and this one doesn't land as well as some - the premise doesn't generate enough comic escalation to fill the runtime.
074 Ryoga Inherits the Saotome School!? Dec 7, 1990 filler
Genma's questionable past catches up with the household in unexpected ways. Filler that uses Ryoga and Genma together - a combination the show doesn't deploy often enough given how much they have in common as characters.
075 Taro Arrives in a Fury! The Ox-Tiger-Dragon-Crane Monster! Dec 14, 1990 canon
Pantyhose Taro arrives - a young man with the most unfortunate name in the series, given to him by Happosai, who is the only person with the authority to rename him. Taro's Jusenkyo curse transforms him into a massive chimeric monster. His entire motivation is getting Happosai to change his name. It is petty and completely valid and the show loves him for it.
121 The Demon from Jusenkyo! (Part 1) Dec 6, 1991 canon
Pantyhose Taro returns - older, angrier, and with a refined version of his chimeric monster form. His goal has not changed: he wants Happosai to rename him. Happosai, who gave him the name Pantyhose Taro as an infant during a naming ceremony, refuses. Taro kidnaps Akane as leverage. The arc is classic Ranma at its most committed - a villain whose grievance is completely legitimate, whose methods are unacceptable, and whose curse is genuinely one of the most spectacular in the series. Part one.
122 The Demon from Jusenkyo! (Part 2) Dec 13, 1991 canon
The confrontation between Pantyhose Taro, Ranma, and Happosai reaches its conclusion. Happosai - who could end this with a single word - refuses on principle. The principle is that Happosai does whatever he wants and always has. Taro's monster form fights beautifully and the resolution manages to be funny and genuinely satisfying without giving Taro what he came for. He will be back. He has no choice. The name remains.
123 A Xmas Without Ranma Dec 20, 1991 filler
Ranma vanishes during Christmas shopping and Akane is left waiting. The Christmas setting strips the usual comedy scaffolding away - no rivals, no techniques, no martial arts - and replaces it with a girl standing in the cold wondering where someone is. Filler. One of the year's better emotional gut-punches disguised as a holiday episode.
124 A Cold Day in Furinkan Jan 10, 1992 filler
A mysterious snow girl carrying a flute is found and brought back to the Tendo dojo. She doesn't speak. She doesn't eat. She plays. The episode has a fairy-tale register that the show visits occasionally - quieter, stranger, more interested in atmosphere than gags. Filler, but the snow girl design is memorable and the episode earns its melancholy ending.
125 Curse of the Scribbled Panda Jan 17, 1992 canon
Ranma and Genma fight over takoyaki - this is the natural state of their relationship - and accidentally release three ancient panda spirits sealed inside a painting. The spirits are powerful, chaotic, and have opinions. The premise sounds like filler and is not: the panda spirits arc is adapted from the manga and delivers genuine stakes underneath the comedy. The resolution requires Genma to actually be useful for once, which the show makes feel earned.
076 Ryoga's "Tendo Dojo Houseguest" Diary Jan 11, 1991 mixed
Ryoga decides the most logical solution to being in love with Akane is to enroll at her school. Getting to Furinkan is a four-episode journey from the front door. Once he arrives, living in the same building as Ranma presents its own category of problems. Mixed canon - the Ryoga character work is real even when the plot isn't.
077 Happosai's Happy Heart! Jan 18, 1991 filler
Happosai falls head over heels in love with a preschool teacher named Midori. He is a better suitor than you would expect, which is somehow more disturbing than if he were terrible at it. Filler, but the show has always been more interesting when it lets Happosai be something other than a punchline.
078 Extra, Extra! Kuno & Nabiki: Read All About It! Jan 25, 1991 filler
A fortune-teller correctly predicts disasters involving Kuno and Nabiki, which turns out to be a self-fulfilling prophecy once Nabiki gets involved. The Nabiki and Kuno pairing is reliably funny - one person with zero shame and one person with zero self-awareness is a good comic engine.
079 Ryoga the Strong... Too Strong Feb 1, 1991 canon
Ryoga shares his food with an old hermit on the road and the hermit repays him with a power that makes him preternaturally strong. Catastrophically strong. Cannot-touch-anything-without-destroying-it strong. The arc asks a genuine question: what does strength mean when you can't control it? Ryoga's answer is moving. One of the better two-part setups in the series.
080 Close Call! P-chan's Secret Feb 8, 1991 canon
Ryoga is convinced Akane has finally figured out that P-chan is him. She hasn't. The gap between what Ryoga fears and what is actually happening is the whole of his character - a man so consumed by guilt and longing that he creates disasters that don't exist yet. The resolution is funny and quietly devastating in equal measure.
081 The Egg-Catcher Man Feb 15, 1991 filler
Kasumi Tendo - the eldest sister, serene to the point of seeming untouchable - has a chance encounter with a strange man that leaves her unusually cheerful. The show has always underused Kasumi and this episode is a reminder of that. Filler, but the rare Kasumi-centered episode is worth watching on principle.
082 Ranma and Kuno's... First Kiss Feb 22, 1991 canon
Kuno obtains a magic sword that grants three wishes and immediately uses it to try to make Ranma smell like the pigtailed girl. It works. The resulting situation is exactly as absurd as it sounds and the show commits to every beat of it. Canon, and one of the funnier Kuno episodes in the entire run - the premise is tight and the escalation doesn't waste a minute.
083 Shampoo's Red Thread of Dread! Mar 1, 1991 filler
Shampoo ties Ranma to herself with a Chinese red thread of fate - supposedly binding them as a couple. The execution is pure Cologne-approved scheming with Shampoo as the front. Filler, but the show's Shampoo episodes tend to be more emotionally honest than they let on - she actually wants this, and that makes her harder to dismiss.
084 Mousse Goes Home to the Country! Mar 8, 1991 filler
Mousse loses a final challenge to Ranma and is forced to return to China. He goes. He comes back. He always comes back. The episode is a meditation on how thoroughly Shampoo has ruined this man's life and how completely he has accepted that. Filler, but Mousse episodes always have that undercurrent of tragedy the comedy is barely covering.
085 The Dumbest Bet in History! Mar 15, 1991 canon
A gambling debt Ranma made ten years ago in a game of Old Maid comes due. The opponent: a girl named Kaori Daikoku, whose father has arranged things so that winning the debt means winning Ranma as a husband for his daughter. Another fiancée. Another person Genma sold his son to in exchange for something embarrassing. Canon, and a clean example of how the show generates emotional stakes from its single most reliable source: Genma's past decisions.
086 Kuno Becomes a Marianne! Mar 22, 1991 filler
Azusa Shiratori takes home a tanuki statue that contains a hidden Kuno. She names him Marianne and refuses to give him back. Kuno's dignity - what remains of it - takes a thorough beating. Filler. The Azusa and Kuno pairing is funny specifically because neither of them has any idea what is actually happening.
087 Ranma, You Are Such A Jerk! Mar 29, 1991 filler
Ranma ruins Akane's anniversary dinner and she runs away. The entire household mobilizes to find her. This is one of those filler episodes that exists entirely to test what the show can do with genuine emotion stripped of the comedy armor. The answer is: more than you expected. Akane's frustration is real. So is Ranma's inability to say the thing that would fix it.
088 Gimme That Pigtail Apr 5, 1991 canon
Four men arrive from China to reclaim a Dragon's Whisker - a powerful artifact wrapped around Ranma's pigtail that has been keeping his hair from growing out of control since childhood. They take it. Part one of one of the cleanest two-episode canon arcs in the series: a tight setup, a clear problem, and a visual punchline that is also genuinely embarrassing for Ranma.
089 When a Guy's Pride and Joy is Gone Apr 12, 1991 canon
Without the Dragon's Whisker, Ranma's hair grows at a rate that rapidly becomes a tactical liability - not a joke, an actual combat problem that requires an actual solution. The arc resolution involves Ranma doing something specifically humiliating that he would never do under any other circumstances. The show earns the moment. Good two-part arc.
090 Ling-Ling & Lung-Lung Strike Back! Apr 19, 1991 filler
The twin Amazon cousins return to Japan, still determined to ensure Shampoo marries Ranma before they themselves can. Their loyalty to Amazon law is absolute. Their tactical execution is enthusiastic and mostly incorrect. Filler, but the Amazon lore is internally consistent enough that even its filler episodes feel like they're building something.
091 Ryoga's Proposal Apr 26, 1991 filler
A ghost cat decides Ryoga Hibiki is its ideal husband after he saves it from a pack of wolves. Ryoga's reaction to being romantically pursued by a supernatural feline is deeply sympathetic given his own cat-adjacent situation. Filler with good Ryoga energy - the show always gets something out of putting him in absurd situations that somehow parallel his real feelings.
092 Genma Takes a Walk May 3, 1991 filler
A shogi dispute between Soun and Genma escalates until Genma storms out of the Tendo household. The resulting domestic chaos is a reminder that as terrible a father as Genma is, the whole structure of the show depends on him being present. Filler, but low-key funny in the way only Genma-centric episodes can be - the man is a disaster and everyone knows it including him.
093 The Gentle Art of Martial Tea Ceremony May 10, 1991 mixed
Ranma in female form is kidnapped by Sentaro Daimonji, a practitioner of the Daimonji School of Martial Arts Tea Ceremony. Yes. Tea ceremony as a combat discipline. Ranma is needed to help Sentaro against his school's rival. Mixed canon - the Martial Arts Tea Ceremony exists in the manga and the show makes good use of the contrast between the serenity of the form and the chaos of actually fighting in it.
094 And the Challenger Is... A Girl?! May 17, 1991 filler
A girl named Temari Kaminarimon arrives challenging the dojo - her fighting style is built entirely around traditional Japanese toys. Kendama. Temari balls. Spinning tops deployed as weapons. The show's martial arts invention machine produces another absurd discipline and commits to it completely. Filler, but the action choreography around toy-based fighting is more creative than it has any right to be.
095 Hot Springs Battle Royale! May 24, 1991 canon
A hot springs resort holds an obstacle course race as a publicity event. Multiple parties enter for multiple reasons. The course itself is deliberately brutal and the episode uses the obstacle race format - a reliable Ranma structure - to deliver both comedy and a clean canon resolution. The hot springs setting means Ranma's situation is under constant threat, which is exactly the pressure the show runs best on.
096 Me Is Kuno's Daddy, Me Is May 31, 1991 canon
Principal Kuno's obsession with his long-lost son sends him on a search that involves Sasuke Sarugakure - the Kuno family's hapless ninja retainer - in escalating complications. A rare episode that makes Principal Kuno sympathetic without losing the comedy. Canon, and unexpectedly touching for a show that usually treats the Kuno family as pure comic relief.
097 The Matriarch Takes a Stand Jun 7, 1991 filler
Sentaro is back, needing Ranma's help against his grandmother - the Daimonji family matriarch, who has been running the school for decades and is not interested in Sentaro's modernizations. The grandmother is a better fighter than Sentaro has ever admitted and the episode's best moment is Ranma realizing this about thirty seconds too late.
098 A Leotard Is a Girl's Burden Jun 14, 1991 filler
A group of male gymnasts has defeated St. Hebereke's rhythmic gymnastics team and Kodachi needs backup. This brings Ranma into rhythmic gymnastics territory again - always a good decision. The leotard situation adds the expected complications. Filler but well-structured, using an established rivalry and established characters rather than introducing new ones.
099 The Mixed-Bath Horror! Jun 21, 1991 filler
The Tendos and Saotomes are invited to a run-down hot springs resort that turns out to be haunted, booby-trapped, or both. The horror framing is light - this is comedy with a ghost story set dressing - but the mixed bathing situation creates the expected chaos for Ranma's curse, which is the actual point of the episode.
100 The Frogman's Curse! Jun 28, 1991 filler
A strange old man arrives in Nerima with a small army of pet frogs and a grudge. The frog motif gives the episode its visual identity - there are a lot of frogs - and the curse of the title is creative enough to justify the premise. Filler, but episode 100 of anything deserves some acknowledgment. One hundred episodes of this glorious chaos.
101 Revenge! Raging Okonomiyaki...! Jul 5, 1991 filler
A crepe chef sets up shop near Furinkan and starts stealing Ukyo's customers. She spirals. Ukyo questioning herself is genuinely unsettling - she has built her entire identity around that griddle - and the episode understands that. The resolution is satisfying. Filler that actually uses its character well rather than using her as a prop.
102 Ranma the Lady-Killer Jul 12, 1991 filler
A magic love-potion bandage causes Ranma to flirt relentlessly with every person he encounters. The chaos this creates - Akane's reaction in particular - is the point. The episode is less interested in the premise than in what jealousy looks like when neither party admits they have it. Filler. Not subtle about what it's doing.
103 Shogi Showdown Jul 19, 1991 filler
A master of Battle Shogi arrives seeking Genma - another person from Genma's past with a legitimate grievance. The martial art of competitive shogi is exactly as absurd as it sounds and exactly as committed-to as everything else this show invents. Filler. The Genma-owes-someone-something formula is reliable even when the specifics are slight.
104 Sasuke's "Mission: Improbable" Jul 26, 1991 filler
Tatewaki Kuno fires Sasuke Sarugakure - the Kuno family's tiny, incompetent ninja - for unsatisfactory performance. Sasuke attempts to prove his worth through increasingly ambitious operations. He fails at all of them. Sasuke episodes exist in their own comedy register: the show lets him try genuinely hard and fail genuinely completely, which is more dignified than it sounds.
105 Bonjour, Furinkan! Aug 2, 1991 canon
A French nobleman named Picolet Chardin arrives at the Tendo dojo to collect on a debt: Genma's written agreement to give him Ranma as a bride. Because Genma. The La Belle France school of Martial Arts Dining is introduced - an entire combat discipline built around formal table manners, wielded through a technique called "La Belle France" that controls food with cutlery at impossible speed. The wedding date is set. Part one of one of the strangest and most committed three-episode arcs in the series.
106 Dinner at Ringside! Aug 9, 1991 canon
Ranma's only way out of the wedding is to master La Belle France before the ceremony - learning to eat with formal cutlery so precisely it becomes a fighting technique. The training montage is both hilarious and genuinely instructive about how the show handles these arcs: the skill is real, the application is absurd, and Ranma's frustration at having to become good at something this embarrassing is the emotional engine. Part two.
107 Swimming with Psychos Aug 16, 1991 canon
Akane is chosen as class representative for Furinkan's swim meet - despite the fact that she cannot swim. The arc resolution lands here: Ranma teaches Akane to swim. It is not played for laughs. It is one of the more quietly sincere moments of the series - Ranma doing something for Akane with no audience, no comedy armor, no deflection. The Picolet arc closes. This is what follows. The contrast is the point.
108 Ryoga, Run Into the Sunset Aug 23, 1991 filler
While wandering - always wandering - Ryoga is taken in by an elderly farmer and his granddaughter. He helps them. He feels useful. He feels at home. And then his directional sense reasserts itself and he is gone. Filler, but the episode is a quiet meditation on what Ryoga's life actually looks like between fights - which is lonelier than the comedy admits.
109 Into the Darkness Aug 30, 1991 filler
Something in the air causes every member of the Tendo household to fall asleep and dream. Each dream is a window into what that character actually wants and fears. The anthology structure gives the show room to be strange. Filler, but the dream episode format reveals things about the cast that the plot-driven episodes are too busy to examine. Akane's dream in particular.
110 Nabiki, Ranma's New Fiancée! Sep 6, 1991 canon
In a moment of fury, Akane tells Nabiki to marry Ranma herself. Nabiki - mercenary, brilliant, completely without sentiment - agrees immediately and starts treating the arrangement as a business opportunity. She monetizes Ranma. She schedules him. She charges people for access. Ranma is confused and quietly devastated. Akane realizes almost immediately what she has done and cannot take it back. One of the best canon episodes in the entire run. The show forces both leads to feel exactly what they have been refusing to name, using Nabiki's complete transactionality as the instrument. No filler episode would have the nerve.
111 Case of the Missing Takoyaki! Sep 13, 1991 filler
A whodunit. Someone ate the takoyaki. Every member of the Tendo household is a suspect. The episode plays it straight - testimony, investigation, competing alibis - until the reveal, which is exactly who you suspected from the moment the mystery was established. Filler. The comedy of extremely serious people treating an eaten snack as a criminal matter is a reliable formula and this episode runs it cleanly.
112 Ranma vs. Shadow Ranma! Sep 20, 1991 filler
Ranma purchases a magic incense that creates a shadow duplicate of himself to train against. The shadow is Ranma without restraint - no hesitation, no emotional complication, just technique. The fight is the show asking what Ranma actually is when you remove everything except the martial arts. Filler, but the premise is more interesting than most of what surrounds it and the action choreography delivers.
113 Dear Daddy... Love, Kodachi! Sep 27, 1991 filler
Kodachi discovers that Principal Kuno - the unhinged Hawaiian-obsessed headmaster - is her father. She does not take this well. The Kuno family dysfunction has always run deeper than comedy and this episode makes it explicit: three people (Tatewaki, Kodachi, Principal) who are each catastrophically broken in their own way, sharing a bloodline and almost no genuine connection. Funnier and sadder than it should be.
114 Enter Gosunkugi, The New Rival!? Oct 4, 1991 mixed
Hikaru Gosunkugi arrives - a quiet, perpetually unlucky boy with a voodoo doll obsession and a hopeless crush on Akane. He is the anti-Ranma: no power, no confidence, no chance. The show introduces him as a rival and immediately makes clear he is not one. Mixed canon - some manga DNA, some original material. Gosunkugi's defining trait is that he tries genuinely hard and the universe is simply indifferent to his effort. He will lose every battle he enters. The show likes him anyway.
115 Ranma's Calligraphy Challenge Oct 11, 1991 filler
A master of Martial Arts Calligraphy has been recognized as undefeated and challenges Ranma. The brushwork is a weapon. The ink is a battlefield. The show commits completely to the absurdity of competitive calligraphy as a combat discipline and by episode end you have accepted the premise entirely. Filler, and a good example of the show's best filler mode: invent something ridiculous, treat it seriously, stick the landing.
116 The Secret Don of Furinkan High Oct 18, 1991 filler
Ranma discovers a shadow student organization operating within Furinkan's walls - a second power structure running beneath the school's official one. The episode plays it as a thriller and the comedy comes from the gap between how seriously everyone takes the shadow school and how completely pointless its goals are. Filler. The Furinkan setting still has room in it after 116 episodes, which is a testament to how well it was built.
117 Back to the Way We Were... Please! Oct 25, 1991 filler
A merchant sells Ranma, Ryoga, and Mousse three bags of magic powder - one of which can permanently cure a Jusenkyo curse. Nobody knows which one. The chaos of three people who desperately want the cure making terrible decisions about which bag to use is the episode. Filler, but the Jusenkyo cure premise hits different every time the show deploys it - the audience wants it too, which makes even the fake-out episodes sting slightly.
118 Ryoga Inherits the Saotome School!? Nov 1, 1991 filler
Genma, furious at Ranma over a stolen snack, impulsively makes Ryoga his new disciple and heir to the Saotome School. Ranma's reaction to this is less about jealousy and more about disbelief that his father has done something this stupid over takoyaki. The answer is: he absolutely has. Filler with a reliable engine: Genma making an impulsive decision and everyone else managing the consequences.
119 Tendo Family Goes to the Amusement Park! Nov 15, 1991 filler
Dr. Tofu invites Kasumi to the amusement park with a free pass. Kasumi brings the entire family. Dr. Tofu's ability to function correctly falls apart the moment Kasumi is nearby, as always, which means a day that should be peaceful becomes immediately chaotic. Filler, but Kasumi episodes are rare and Dr. Tofu's hopeless situation has always been the show's most quietly tragic running gag.
120 The Case of the Furinkan Stalker! Nov 29, 1991 filler
A masked figure with a black pigtail is terrorizing female students near Furinkan. The obvious suspect is Ranma. The actual culprit is less obvious. The episode uses the mystery structure to let various characters accuse and defend Ranma based entirely on their existing feelings about him - which tells you more about the cast than it does about the case. Filler with a clean mystery structure and a satisfying reveal.
126 The Date-Monster of Watermelon Island Jan 24, 1992 canon
Kuno washes ashore with a watermelon on his head and no memory of who he is. Freed temporarily from his delusions, he is - against all odds - a reasonably functional human being. The episode is funnier for knowing this. Canon, and one of the stranger Kuno episodes precisely because it asks what he would be without the obsession and gives you an answer that is almost sympathetic.
127 Legend of the Lucky Panda! Jan 31, 1992 filler
Genma hits his head and forgets he is human, going full panda - not in body but in mind. The household manages. Filler, but the dynamic of Genma-as-actual-animal rather than Genma-as-panda-who-is-still-Genma creates some character moments that the regular formula doesn't allow. Soun is lost without him in a way that says a great deal about their friendship.
128 Ukyo's Secret Sauce (Part 1) Feb 7, 1992 canon
Ukyo has been fermenting a secret sauce since childhood - a decade of patience, aging in a cask, the culinary equivalent of a long game. When she finally tastes it, the flavour unlocks a childhood memory of Ranma and she falls for him all over again, harder than before. The premise is absurd and the emotional execution is not. Ukyo is the most grounded of the fiancées and the show knows it. Part one of the best Ukyo arc in the series.
129 Ukyo's Secret Sauce (Part 2) Feb 14, 1992 canon
The sauce arc resolves - and the resolution is characteristically Ranma: not a declaration, not a moment of clarity, but a return to the complicated status quo that everyone in this show has chosen to live inside. Ukyo's feelings are real. They are acknowledged. Nothing changes. The show is honest about what that means for her, and that honesty is what separates her from the other fiancée arcs. Part two. One of the series' best.
130 The Missing Matriarch of Martial Arts Tea! Feb 21, 1992 mixed
Sentaro Daimonji returns - the Martial Arts Tea Ceremony practitioner has a new crisis involving his grandmother's disappearance. Mixed canon, and the tea ceremony setting continues to be the show at its most committed to an absurd premise. The grandmother, when found, is more formidable than Sentaro has ever admitted. She always was.
131 Akane Goes to the Hospital! Feb 28, 1992 filler
Akane fractures a bone - distracted during a scuffle between Ranma and Gosunkugi, which is exactly the kind of thing that shouldn't happen and does. The hospital setting briefly changes the show's register. Ranma's reaction to Akane being hurt is immediate and completely unexamined by either of them. Filler, but the small moment of Ranma actually sitting still because he doesn't know what else to do is worth the runtime.
132 Mystery of the Marauding Octopus Pot! Mar 6, 1992 canon
Ranma, Genma, and Soun are hired to handle a supernatural octopus pot terrorizing a seaside resort. The creature is real. The martial arts application of cookware combat is the show inventing a new discipline and refusing to blink. Canon, adapted from the manga, and the seaside setting gives the action choreography room to breathe. The resolution requires Ranma to do something that is specifically humiliating in the specific way that only seaside episodes can produce.
133 Gosunkugi's Paper Dolls of Love Mar 13, 1992 canon
Hikaru Gosunkugi obtains a set of magic paper dolls that compel whoever they are applied to obey the holder's commands. He uses them on Ranma - not to harm him, but to make Ranma help him pursue Akane. The arc is canon manga content and it is the best Gosunkugi episode in the series: a character who never wins doing something genuinely clever, nearly succeeding, and losing anyway. The rules of the universe apply to Gosunkugi. They always have.
134 Akane's Unfathomable Heart Mar 20, 1992 filler
Satori, a young male telepath, arrives at the Tendo dojo and discovers he can read everyone's mind except Akane's. Akane's inner emotional state is opaque - genuinely unreadable by someone whose power is reading minds. The episode is filler and also one of the show's most self-aware moments: it names the thing that has been true about Akane all along. Nobody fully knows what she feels. Not Ranma. Not the audience. Not even a psychic.
135 A Teenage Ghost Story Mar 27, 1992 filler
Akane reads aloud from a haunted notebook and releases the spirit bound inside it. The ghost has unfinished business, as they always do, and the Tendo household becomes the venue for resolving it. Filler with a fairy-tale register - quieter than the action episodes, more interested in atmosphere. The show occasionally does this in the final season: pulls back the comedy and lets something melancholy breathe.
136 Master and Student... Forever!? Apr 3, 1992 canon
Happosai uses an ancient technique that bonds him physically to Ranma - they cannot separate. Two women offer Ranma a Nanichuan-style potion that makes him "more manly," which Happosai uses as leverage. The arc is the show's last major Happosai canon episode and it delivers: the dynamic between Ranma's resentment and Happosai's total lack of shame is one of the series' great recurring engines, and this episode runs it at full speed for the final time.
137 Tatewaki Kuno, Substitute Principal Apr 10, 1992 filler
Principal Kuno designates Tatewaki as substitute principal to test his leadership potential. Tatewaki Kuno in a position of institutional authority over people he is already delusional about is exactly as chaotic as it sounds. Filler, and a good late-season reminder of how much mileage the Kuno family dynamic still has left even at episode 137.
138 Ranma's Greatest Challenge!? Apr 17, 1992 filler
Ranma prepares for the Ogre Festival of the Dark - a nocturnal tournament that operates by rules different from anything he has trained for. The episode is setup without payoff, a filler structure the show uses occasionally: introduce a high-stakes premise and resolve it before it becomes an arc. The action is good. The stakes don't quite land because the tournament isn't real enough yet.
139 Nihao! Jusenkyo Guide Apr 24, 1992 filler
The Jusenkyo Guide - the Chinese man who warned Ranma and Genma about the springs in episode one and was completely ignored - travels to Japan to perform a ceremony involving those he is responsible for. His arrival is a reminder that the curse has a custodian and that custodian has been tracking all of this from a distance. Filler, but the Jusenkyo Guide is always a welcome reframe: someone who treats the curse as serious and the people afflicted by it as his responsibility.
140 Pick-a-Peck o' Happosai May 1, 1992 filler
Kasumi is given occult tarot cards by Kuno. When Happosai interacts with them, the result is multiple Happosais - several instances of the same disaster, each as unrestrained as the original. The horror of this is not played for horror. Filler, and the premise escalates with the show's usual commitment to its own internal logic. Multiple Happosais behave exactly like one Happosai would. That is the problem.
141 From the Depths of Despair (Part 1) May 8, 1992 canon
Ryoga Hibiki demonstrates the Shishi Hokodan - the Lion's Roar Blast - on Ranma. It is a ki technique powered by depression. Pure, concentrated hopelessness weaponized into a projectile. It hits harder than anything Ryoga has ever used and Ranma cannot counter it because counterattacking requires understanding the emotional state that generates it. Ranma has never felt that kind of hopelessness. The arc asks whether that is a strength or a blindspot. One of the finest setups of the entire 161-episode run.
142 From the Depths of Despair (Part 2) May 15, 1992 canon
Ranma's answer to Ryoga's depression technique is characteristically his own: he finds a counter not by matching Ryoga's despair but by locating an emotional state he actually has access to and weaponizing that instead. The resolution is both a satisfying fight conclusion and a genuinely insightful character moment - Ranma wins, but the victory reveals something true about him. The best two-episode arc of the final season. A case for the show at its most emotionally intelligent.
143 Shampoo's Cursed Kiss May 22, 1992 canon
Shampoo is sent to a temple where a ghost cat lives - the same entity connected to her curse. The episode has a ghost story register and uses it to examine Shampoo's feelings about her curse and her mission in a way the comedy-forward episodes don't allow. Canon, and one of the more thoughtful Shampoo episodes in the series. The ghost cat doesn't just threaten - it clarifies.
144 Run Away With Me, Ranma! May 29, 1992 canon
Ranma is haunted by a recurring nightmare about an old man named Harumaki - someone from his past he cannot place. The dream logic gives the episode a strange, drifting quality unlike most of what surrounds it. Canon, and the premise uses Ranma's fractured childhood as material: a kid who trained constantly and traveled constantly, who may have people in his past he has genuinely forgotten. The resolution is both funny and quietly sad.
145 Let's Go to the Mushroom Temple Jun 5, 1992 filler
The cast visits a temple known for its fungal training regimen - mushrooms as a martial arts discipline, the show's invention machine running in its final season. Filler. The premise is thinner than the better filler episodes and the episode knows it, leaning on character dynamics rather than the mushroom gimmick to generate its comedy.
146 The Cradle from Hell Jun 12, 1992 canon
Genma challenges Ranma to a formal match after identifying a gap in his training. The Cradle from Hell technique - a wrestling-derived hold that Genma has been carrying since Ranma was an infant - is deployed. Canon, and one of the final season's better father-son episodes: beneath the comedy of Genma being a terrible parent, there is always the fact that he made Ranma the fighter he is. The show acknowledges both things simultaneously.
147 Madame St. Paul's Cry for Help Jun 19, 1992 filler
Picolet Chardin returns - and a forbidden blue wine is affecting him in ways that make the La Belle France technique dangerously unstable. Madame St. Paul's school sends for help. Filler, but the return to the La Belle France world is welcome and the blue wine premise creates a different kind of chaos than the original arc. The show remembers its characters.
148 Meet You in the Milky Way Jun 26, 1992 filler
Tanabata - the Japanese star festival of Orihime and Hikoboshi, separated lovers allowed one night together per year - gives the episode its emotional register. The show uses the festival as a framework to examine what the cast actually wants, dressed up in starlight and tradition. Filler. The Tanabata setting is one of the more melancholy things the show puts on screen in its final run, mostly because everyone understands what the story means and nobody says so.
149 Wretched Rice Cakes of Love Jul 3, 1992 canon
Akane is given a recipe for sakuramochi - rice cakes said to cause the person who eats them to fall in love with whoever made them. She tests the theory. The canon status comes from the manga source material and the episode earns it: watching Akane try to cook something with emotional stakes rather than explosions is a small, real moment. The Ranma and Akane dynamic in this episode is quieter than usual. That quiet is doing work.
150 The Horrible Happo Mold-Burst Jul 10, 1992 filler
Happosai's Happo Daikarin explosion technique has been failing in the summer heat - the compound is too unstable. He develops a replacement. The Happo Mold-Burst is, as the name suggests, a fungal weapon. Happosai in the final season is a man still inventing new ways to be Happosai, which is the most Happosai thing possible. Filler. Twenty-four episodes from the end and he's still here, still terrible, still indispensable.
151 The Kuno Sibling Scandal Jul 17, 1992 canon
Tatewaki and Kodachi Kuno find themselves in direct competition for their respective obsessions - Ranma and Ranma's female form - in ways that put the family's dysfunction on full public display. Canon, and one of the last episodes to use the Kuno family as genuine character material rather than pure comic relief. The sibling dynamic has always been the show's most efficient delivery system for aristocratic delusion and this episode lets both of them be fully, completely wrong at the same time.
152 Battle for the Golden Tea Set Jul 24, 1992 filler
Sentaro Daimonji makes his final appearance - the Martial Arts Tea Ceremony storyline closes here with a golden tea set as the prize and the Daimonji school's future at stake. Filler, but a satisfying bookend to one of the show's more committed recurring premises. Sentaro has never once handled a crisis competently. He doesn't start now. The resolution happens around him rather than because of him.
153 Gosunkugi's Summer Affair Jul 31, 1992 filler
Hikaru Gosunkugi meets a girl named Kogane Musashi and falls instantly in love. For once, the feeling is mutual - Kogane responds to him. This is the most successful romantic moment Gosunkugi has in the entire series and the show gives it to him sincerely, without the punchline. Filler, and a quiet, gentle episode that treats the show's least powerful character with more dignity than the plot usually manages. A small grace note in the final season.
154 Bring It On! Love as a Cheerleader (Part 1) Aug 7, 1992 canon
Mariko Konjo arrives - captain of Seishun High's cheerleading squad, practitioner of Martial Arts Cheerleading, and one of the series' most committed antagonists. Her discipline is built around crowd manipulation and momentum: she doesn't just fight, she performs, and the performance is the weapon. Ranma has never faced an opponent who uses the crowd itself as a technique. Canon manga arc, and one of the final season's most kinetically interesting setups. Part one.
155 Bring It On! Love as a Cheerleader (Part 2) Aug 14, 1992 canon
The cheerleading arc reaches its conclusion. Mariko Konjo fights with total commitment to her style and the episode commits equally to letting her be genuinely threatening rather than reducing her to a punchline. The resolution requires Ranma to understand something about performance that is not in his training. Canon, and the last multi-episode action arc the series produces. It earns its place in the final run.
156 Battle for Miss Beachside Aug 21, 1992 filler
Akane, Shampoo, and Ukyo compete in a beachside cooking tournament. The cooking competition format puts the three fiancees in direct rivalry on neutral ground - not over Ranma but over skill - and the episode is more interested in that dynamic than the result. Filler. The beach setting is the show's last major summer episode and it uses the geography well. The ending is a draw in every sense.
157 The Musical Instruments of Destruction Aug 28, 1992 filler
Tatewaki Kuno and Kodachi each discover ancient instruments - a tsuzumi drum and a biwa lute respectively - that resonate at frequencies capable of causing structural damage. The Kuno siblings wielding supernatural musical weapons is the show using its late-season remaining cast to generate one last round of chaos before the finale. Filler. The instruments are genuinely destructive. The Kunos have no idea. Per usual.
158 A Ninja's Dog is Black and White Sep 4, 1992 mixed
Ryoga encounters Shirokuro - a black and white ninja dog who has run away from its master and takes a liking to him. Mixed canon, with some manga DNA running beneath the anime-original framing. The episode is quieter than its neighbors - Ryoga and a dog, wandering, as they do. The ninja dog premise is less important than what the episode actually does: give Ryoga a companion who asks nothing of him and a moment of uncomplicated peace.
159 The Tendo Dragon Legend Sep 11, 1992 filler
Ranma and Akane discover a seahorse buried in the ground near the dojo - connected, according to local legend, to a dragon deity that once protected the Tendo family. The supernatural premise gives the episode a mythological register unusual for the series this late in the run. Filler, but the Tendo family history as a framing device works: it grounds the show in something older than the comedy that has surrounded it for 159 episodes.
160 Boy Meets Mom (Part 1) Sep 18, 1992 canon
Nodoka Saotome - Ranma's mother, the woman Genma has been hiding from since the series began - is coming to the Tendo dojo. The agreement Genma made before Ranma's birth: raise him to be a man among men, or they both perform seppuku. She carries a katana. She means it. Ranma has never met his mother as himself. He has only ever met her as Ranko, his supposed female cousin, while Genma hides in panda form. The show has been building to this confrontation for 160 episodes. Part one of the series finale and the emotional weight lands accordingly - not with an explosion but with a quiet, mounting dread that Takahashi's story deserved to resolve and the anime cancellation wouldn't allow.
161 Boy Meets Mom (Part 2) Sep 25, 1992 canon
The series ends here. Not with a resolution - the manga was still running, the curse is not cured, Ranma and Akane are not married, nothing is settled - but with Nodoka Saotome almost understanding who her son is. Almost. The finale is a show about almost. It has always been a show about almost: almost honest, almost confessed, almost fixed. The ending is consistent with everything that came before it and that consistency is its own kind of integrity. Ranma ½ ran for 161 episodes across three years. It built a world, populated it with people who were impossible and human simultaneously, and stopped before it finished. The OVAs continue it. The manga resolves it. The 2024 remake revisits it. But this - this chaos, this cast, this particular brand of comedy that kept breaking into genuine feeling - this is where the original run ends. The pigtail is still there. The springs are still cursed. Akane is still angry. See you in the OVAs.
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