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Anime with the Best Plot Twists Ever

Anime with the Best Plot Twists Ever

Anime has always been known for its rich storytelling, emotional depth, and jaw dropping action. But one of the most thrilling aspects of watching anime is experiencing unexpected plot twists that flip the entire narrative upside down. These shocking turns keep fans on the edge of their seats, replaying scenes, rethinking characters, and sparking endless fan theories.
Whether it's a hidden villain, a secret identity, or a reality defying revelation and get all anime in Tmohentai, some anime have truly mastered the art of the twist. In this article, we highlight anime with the best plot twists ever the ones that made us gasp, cry, or simply sit in stunned silence.
Death Note is synonymous with psychological warfare and masterful twists. When Light Yagami gains the power to kill anyone by writing their name in the Death Note, he becomes the anti hero Kira. But it's the cat and mouse game between Light and detective L that delivers constant, unpredictable turns.
Plot Twist Highlight: The shocking death of L halfway through the series changes everything.
Light's identity as Kira and how he manipulates everyone around him keeps the suspense alive until the very end.
What begins as a brutal survival story about humanity vs. Titans transforms into a political thriller filled with lies, conspiracies, and revelations that reframe the entire plot. Attack on Titan doesn't just throw one twist it drops bombshell after bombshell.
Plot Twist Highlight: The revelation of who the Titans really are.
Eren's transformation from hero to what many consider the true antagonist.
With political intrigue, rebellion, and superpowers, Code Geass delivers twist after twist, but none as powerful as the one at its conclusion. Lelouch, who begins as a freedom fighter, manipulates global events in a way that shocks the entire anime world.
Plot Twist Highlight: The final episode reveals Lelouch's ultimate sacrifice in the 'Zero Requiem' plan, leaving viewers both heartbroken and amazed.
Time-travel anime can get confusing, but Steins;Gate manages to keep things coherent while also blowing viewers' minds. What starts as a quirky story about a group of friends experimenting with time soon becomes a tense, emotional thriller.
Plot Twist Highlight: The tragic fate of Mayuri and Kurisu forces Okabe into a loop of time travel that results in shocking consequences and reveals.
What appears to be a wholesome story about kids in an orphanage quickly becomes a psychological horror. The first episode alone features one of anime's most disturbing and well executed twists.
Plot Twist Highlight: Discovering the orphanage is actually a farm for raising children as food for demons changes everything about the story's tone and direction.
Madoka Magica fools many with its colorful animation and innocent characters, but it hides a dark, existential twist behind the magical girl façade. The series deconstructs the entire genre in shocking fashion.
Plot Twist Highlight: The revelation of Kyubey's true intentions and the cycle of despair magical girls are trapped in is one of anime's greatest twists.
Monster is a slow-burning psychological thriller that builds tension over dozens of episodes. It follows Dr. Kenzo Tenma as he tries to stop the man he once saved Johan Liebert, a sociopathic genius with chilling motives.
Plot Twist Highlight: The identity and backstory of Johan, as well as the layers of manipulation surrounding him, create a haunting narrative full of surprises.
Parasyte features alien creatures that take over human bodies, but the emotional core of the story lies in Shinichi's transformation both physically and morally. The twists lie in who he becomes and how he chooses to protect humanity.
Plot Twist Highlight: The moral ambiguity of the Parasytes, especially Migi, challenges viewers' perceptions of good and evil.
While Naruto is known more for its action and friendship themes, it also includes one of the most unexpected plot twists in anime history the truth about Itachi Uchiha.
Plot Twist Highlight: After years of believing Itachi was a traitor, we learn he sacrificed everything to protect his brother and maintain peace.
Don't let the cute art style fool you Made in Abyss is a brutal, emotional rollercoaster. As the characters descend deeper into the Abyss, the horrors they face are both shocking and heartbreaking.
Plot Twist Highlight: The true nature of the Abyss and what lies in its depths will leave you stunned and emotionally wrecked.
From mind-bending mysteries to gut-wrenching betrayals, these anime are masters of storytelling that thrive on the unexpected. They don't just rely on shocking moments they build narratives that make the twists feel earned and meaningful. Whether you're a seasoned anime fan or a newcomer, these titles are guaranteed to keep you guessing until the very end.
So, if you're in the mood for stories that will blow your mind, challenge your emotions, and make you hit rewind just to make sure you saw what you think you did these are the anime you can't miss.
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JACKPOT PARTY and Carnival Cruise Line Announce Daily Cruise Giveaway Partnership
JACKPOT PARTY and Carnival Cruise Line Announce Daily Cruise Giveaway Partnership

Business Wire

time4 days ago

  • Business Wire

JACKPOT PARTY and Carnival Cruise Line Announce Daily Cruise Giveaway Partnership

LAS VEGAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- SciPlay, the social games division of Light & Wonder (NASDAQ and ASX: LNW), and Carnival Cruise Line today announced a collaboration to launch the "Daily Cruise Giveaway" sweepstakes. From July 21 through August 4, 2025, the social casino game owned and operated by SciPlay entitled JACKPOT PARTY ™ is giving players the chance to win a Carnival Cruise Line voucher (valid for two guests) every single day. JACKPOT PARTY and Carnival Cruise Line Team Up for Daily Cruise Giveaway Partnership Share This partnership unites two established entertainment brands, blending the popular and wildly fun gaming experience of JACKPOT PARTY with the real-world vacation experiences offered by Carnival Cruise Line. Players 21 and older can enter the sweepstakes by downloading the JACKPOT PARTY mobile app and registering through the in-game sweepstakes portal. No purchase is necessary to enter or win. JACKPOT PARTY delivers authentic casino-floor excitement through its wildly popular free-to-play mobile game. With over 100 million global downloads, it consistently ranks among the top-grossing mobile apps, offering thrilling virtual slots experiences. Key features include JACKPOT PARTY'S collection of authentic slot machines, prominently featuring fan favorites like HUFF N' EVEN MORE PUFF™, DANCING DRUMS LINK TREASURE™, and INVADERS ATTACK FROM THE PLANET MOOLAH™. All in-game coins are virtual, and the game does not offer real money gambling and is for entertainment only, with in-app purchases. "This sweepstakes is a way for us to offer additional value to our players and connect their in-game enjoyment with tangible real-world experiences," said Noga Halperin, Chief Revenue Officer of SciPlay. "Collaborating with a brand like Carnival Cruise Line, known for delivering memorable vacations, allows us to extend the fun beyond the screen and onto a cruise ship." JACKPOT PARTY is available for play in the U.S. on both the Apple App Store and Google Play. While the game offers in-app purchases, it's important to note that Jackpot Party does not involve real-money gambling or offer real-world prizes, and game results do not reflect outcomes in actual gambling. Players have the chance to enter the Daily Cruise Giveaway. This sweepstakes is open to U.S. residents aged 21 and older, with no purchase necessary to enter. Purchases will not increase odds of winning. The sweepstakes concludes on August 4, 2025, with a total of $175,000 in prizes available. Odds of winning vary, and there is a limit of 504 entries per person per entry period. The Daily Cruise Giveaway is void where prohibited by law. Complete rules and more details are available by visiting: As Light & Wonder's social games division, SciPlay develops and publishes leading free-to-play mobile games, bringing the company's most popular gaming content to millions of players worldwide. SciPlay's portfolio, including JACKPOT PARTY CASINO Slots, QUICK HIT™ Slots, 88 FORTUNES™ Casino, GOLD FISH Casino Slots™ and MONOPOLY Slots, delivers captivating experiences across all leading mobile and digital platforms. All ™ notices signify marks registered by Light & Wonder, Inc., or one of its subsidiaries. The MONOPOLY name and logo, the distinctive design of the game board, the four corner squares, the MR. MONOPOLY name and character, as well as each of the distinctive elements of the board, cards, and the playing pieces are trademarks of Hasbro for its property trading game and game equipment and are used with permission. © 1935, 2025 Hasbro. All Rights Reserved. Licensed by Hasbro. About Light & Wonder, Inc. Light & Wonder, Inc. is the leading cross-platform global games company. Through our three unique, yet highly complementary business segments, we deliver unforgettable experiences by combining the exceptional talents of our 6,500+ member team, with a deep understanding of our customers and players. We create immersive content that forges lasting connections with players, wherever they choose to engage. At Light & Wonder, it's all about the games. The Company is committed to the highest standards of integrity, from promoting player responsibility to implementing sustainable practices. To learn more visit

We All Agreed That Diet Culture Was Bad. So Why Is It Back?
We All Agreed That Diet Culture Was Bad. So Why Is It Back?

Elle

time5 days ago

  • Elle

We All Agreed That Diet Culture Was Bad. So Why Is It Back?

Has anyone noticed a shift lately? You open TikTok and sift through videos of 'fit checks, body checks, workout tips, not feeling much of anything at all. Except, of course, that vague sense of dread in the pit of your stomach. Is that influencer so slim because she follows a clean-eating plan, or because she doesn't eat at all? Maybe there's a seismic change in the air. Celebrities are losing weight, even those who branded themselves as body-positive icons. Others are being scrutinised for signs they're taking weight-loss drugs. Lana Del Rey, a star once reviled for no longer looking 25 years old, appeared at Coachella looking 25 years old. The internet's reaction to her reclaimed thinness was 'WE ARE SO BACK'. A stranger's weight loss, it would seem, is a harbinger of hope. Or maybe a testament that fat shaming works. 'I've seen a huge uptick in content online that promotes diet culture, and very often tips over into eating-disorder territory,' says Alex Light, a body-image speaker. 'A lot of it is subtle, disguised as 'wellness', but some of it is blatant – like 'what I eat in a day' videos glorifying extremely low-calorie [diets], or creators encouraging their followers to be 'skinny legends'.' When you start to notice them, the signs are everywhere. Noughties fashion trends are having a revival, along with the idealisation of Noughties-era bodies. Wellness discourse is crossing into alt-right territory. AI is making everyone even more image obsessedwith people asking ChatGPT if they're 'hot enough'. Politics is influencing beauty trends. Unabashed 'skinny influencers' are mainstream. What on earth happened, would be a fair question to ask. Didn't we all agree, around a decade ago, that diet culture was bad? That there's more to life than being thin? 'Arguably what scares me more is the engagement on these posts: thousands of likes and comments applauding the dedication, or asking for tips,' Light continues. 'It shows this isn't happening in a vacuum – there's a wider cultural appetite for this kind of content.' An 'anti-diet advocate', Light is the author of You Are Not a Before Picture and co-host of Should I Delete That?, a podcast she co-hosts with Em Clarkson, which attempts to apply the nuance 'that is often left out of the polarising conversations that take place on social media'. Indeed, these symptoms of our divided times could be linked to diet culture's big comeback. 'The algorithm doesn't tend to reward nuance, compassion or content that doesn't focus on aesthetics or transformation,' Light says. 'What's common is 'wellness' content that ends up reinforcing body ideals: 'gentle' weight-loss goals, 'healthy swaps' or hyper-disciplined routines. It might not look like traditional diet culture on the surface, but it reinforces the idea that your body is a problem to fix.' Dr Johanna Keeler, a psychologist specialising in eating disorders, confirms that seemingly benign social-media content can have an insidious effect. She points to a recent study of TikTok algorithms, which found that people with an eating disorder were far more likely to be shown appearance-oriented, dieting and exercise content. ('They were 4343% more likely to be shown toxic eating-disorder videos,' she adds.) The problem is that the algorithm perpetuates a 'vicious circle' – those with eating disorders are more likely to be shown triggering content, and the triggering content exacerbates disordered eating. 'The worrying thing is that, because of smartphones, we're exposed to this content a lot more.' This is made more extreme due to tailored content from the algorithms, causing vulnerable people to get stuck in a harmful echo chamber. It's not the first time social media has sparked these concerns. 'This era echoes pro-anorexia Tumblr, but it has a shinier, more socially acceptable veneer,' Light says. The website was host to a huge number of 'pro-ana' blogs that posted 'thinspiration' in the form of personal pictures and Kate Moss gifs, fostering one-upmanship around users' daily food intake and workout routines. While this phenomenon was more brazen in its promotion of dieting, Light argues that 'the result is the same: we're still being told that our value hinges on how small, controlled and ideal our bodies look'. A lot of today's viral content is more implicit in its promotion of the beauty standard – a cursory glance at Instagram's Explore page will reveal paparazzi pictures of celebrities in bikinis, their figures picked apart in the comments, and fitness influencers sharing weight-loss tips. 'It's dressed up as 'wellness', 'clean living' or 'biohacking',' Light says, referencing the coded terms creators use to avoid being cancelled. But as Keeler's research suggests, this can function as a gateway to more extreme, pro-ana subcultures, and influencers who are less precious about their wording. Liv Schmidt, a 23-year-old former TikTok creator, shared videos telling followers what she eats in a day 'to stay skinny', with slogans including: 'It's not a sin to want to be thin'. After being barred from the app, Schmidt started a membership programme she calls the Skinni Société, where subscribers pay $20 a month to gain access to her 'portion-controlled' food diaries, and group chats where members compare step counts and 'progress pics'. 'Seeing Gen Z engage with his rhetoric has been a big shocker,' says Gina Tonic, senior editor and podcast host at Polyester Zine. 'The worst thing I've seen is SkinnyTok and eating-disorder Twitter accounts making their way into 'normal' algorithms – being seen by many who didn't know they existed prior to that.' Though TikTok has banned the #SkinnyTok hashtag, the community is still active and growing on the app. 'You hope younger generations will be more socially aware but it's not necessarily the case; they make the same mistakes we do, and that's hard to watch.' Tonic notes the responsibility to police this content ultimately lies with social-media platforms, who seem to 'prioritise engagement over wellbeing and social justice'. She says an early sign of the pendulum swing back to diet culture was 'creators who centred their brand on self-love or body positivity or fat liberation shifting to be around weight loss'. Many TikTok users who have undergone transformations opened up about their use of GLP-1s, which have been hailed as miracle drugs while giving rise to ethical concerns. Part of a cultural shift to the pursuit of thinness at all costs, these admissions seem even more jarring to those who remember a time when showcasing diverse bodies on the internet was celebrated. 'In the 2010s, we had a mainstream wave of body positivity,' says Light. In an interview with BeautyMatter, beauty-industry critic Jessica DeFino said that, during this time, 'anti-diet culture limited what beauty standards the media could promote without facing public backlash'. But even if the movement was more about optics than genuine progress, with celebrities cashing in on wokeness for clout, Light claims this was preferable to the situation we find ourselves in. 'A lot of it wasn't perfect, of course, but it cracked open the conversation, gave marginalised bodies visibility and challenged narrow beauty standards.' And though it can seem like progress has been permanently reversed, Tonic believes sometimes things have to get worse before they get better: 'Fat liberation, a lot like feminism, has come in waves of popularity, and the tide seems to be out at the minute. I do think it'll come back full-force soon.' In the meantime, it's important to practise awareness, and to consider safeguarding measures. In a recent study, almost one in five UK women screened positive for a possible eating disorder. The most effective way to break yourself out of negative thinking patterns? Addressing that pesky phone addiction. 'Any sort of intervention to try to limit your exposure should help improve your appearance-satisfaction and wellbeing', Keeler advises. Tonic agrees, but also advocates engaging with online content that makes you feel good. 'I think making an active commitment to following and engaging with accounts that are body positive and seek to decentre and oppose these conversations will help so much,' she says. 'Curate a feed and algorithm that feeds you the right things. Negative things online are unavoidable at this point, but pointedly engaging with content that counteracts it will do wonders.' Light, similarly, has found hope by building a positive online community. 'The messages I get from people who've started to eat more freely, wear the clothes they love, stop punishing themselves… all of it reminds me that change is happening, even if it's gradual and it's not trending,' she says. 'I think a great question to ask yourself is, 'Who benefits from me believing I need to be smaller?' The answer is never you. It's the multi-billion-dollar diet industry. Knowing that I'm fine exactly as I am and that I don't need to be smaller is an act of rebellion. Real joy and confidence come from opting out.' If you're worried about disordered eating or concerned about someone else, there are resources that can help: ELLE Collective is a new community of fashion, beauty and culture lovers. For access to exclusive content, events, inspiring advice from our Editors and industry experts, as well the opportunity to meet designers, thought-leaders and stylists, become a member today HERE.

I was dead for 2 minutes and I didn't want to leave — what I saw on the other side was beyond belief
I was dead for 2 minutes and I didn't want to leave — what I saw on the other side was beyond belief

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • Yahoo

I was dead for 2 minutes and I didn't want to leave — what I saw on the other side was beyond belief

A woman who was pronounced dead for two minutes revealed the shocking discovery of what she saw on 'the other side.' Nicole Meeuws was lifeless on a hospital bed, officially pronounced dead for two minutes, when she supposedly felt 'pulled' from her body and entered a tunnel of light where she was met by 'blue-skinned' beings, she told NeedToKnow. The 49-year-old artist was in the hospital after losing her baby and was rushed into emergency surgery, but, due to complications, she started to go in and out of consciousness. 'I found myself passing through a tunnel of blue and white light, not a beam, but a corridor that felt alive,' she said. Meeuws, who is from Greece, said that the light had a temperature and tone — 'almost like music made of water' — and she entered a glowing space with 'luminous' colors such as silver, soft violets and deep radiant blues. 'It didn't feel frightening; it felt like I was being called home,' she said. 'The chamber was vast, larger than any earthly structure, and everything pulsed gently like a heartbeat,' she added. 'And then I saw them.' Meeuws revealed that she was greeted by 'blue-skinned' beings with human faces, similar to the characters in 'Avatar.' 'Two towering beings seated on marble-like thrones, shimmering with energy. Their eyes were large and indigo, filled with kindness and recognition,' she said. 'They looked human, but had gentle gills on their cheeks. I remember seeing their fish-like tails, rather than legs, covered in scales.' 'They were both male and female intertwined and didn't speak in words – but I understood everything they had to tell me,' Meeuws added. She said she didn't understand their language, but the Avatar-like figures allegedly made her feel at home and telepathically communicated with her that life is actually an illusion and we start to live when we die. Meeuws also said they told her that she wasn't meant to have children and rather she was given the gift to teach people about 'the other side.' 'I felt more known than I had ever felt in my life; I didn't want to leave,' she noted. 'I understood this place, this feeling, and I truly believe it was the original home from which we all come from.' 'I learned that death is not an end, it's a return to our actual lives,' Meeuws added. After the minutes she was pronounced dead, Meeuws was 'zapped' back into her body, and when her husband, Christos, 65, tried to speak to her, she communicated in a high-pitched tone in an 'unfamiliar' language. 'It sounded like dolphin clicks. It continued for minutes, which left everyone around us stunned. But I couldn't stop it – it was coming through me, not from me,' Meeuws said. 'My senses were heightened and I could hear emotion in people's voices as color. I returned completely different; almost reborn,' she added. Meeuws hasn't had any near-death experiences since the incident, but she said she has visions of the blue-skinned figures often. She believes they are non-alien creatures from the Apkallu interdimensional tribe, also referred to as Demigods, that allegedly have given civilization to mankind. According to Meeuws, the mission given to her by these blue beings is to spread the message that 'love is stronger than death.' 'Love will always win; it's where we came from. We're all one big family, regardless of boundaries, cultures, religion and politics. Everything that exists came from the same spark,' she said. 'The more we hold onto fear, hate and lies, the easier it is to control humanity.' 'To create heaven on Earth, we must spend each day spreading love. I'm no longer afraid of death because I know what's waiting for me on the other side,' she noted. 'It was a beginning, not an end.' Solve the daily Crossword

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