Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Spy x Family Chapter 138 Release Date, Time & Where to Read

    July 12, 2026

    How to Watch The Westies Series Premiere

    July 12, 2026

    Lamborghini’s Apple Vision Pro App Reimagines the Showroom at Home

    July 12, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube TikTok
    Comic Vibe
    Sunday, July 12
    • Home
    • Comics
      • Comic Vibe News
    • Gaming
    • Movies
    • TV
    • Anime
    • Toys & Collectibles
    • Cosplay
    • Tech
    • Digital Culture
      • Creators & Fan Culture
      • Creator Economy & Fan-Driven Platforms
      • Digital Fandom & Online Communities
      • Metaverse & Virtual Worlds
      • NFTs & Digital Collectibles
      • Virtual Events & Online Conventions
      • Virtual Identity & Avatars
    • Shop
    Comic Vibe
    • Home
    • Contact Us
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Advertise With Us
    • DMCA Policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • About Us
    Home»Anime»AI Tools Sweep Into Anime Production
    Anime

    AI Tools Sweep Into Anime Production

    JamesBy JamesJuly 12, 2026No Comments10 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter
    AI Tools Sweep Into Anime Production
    Share
    Facebook Twitter

    Web3

    AI Tools Sweep Into Anime Production

    Jul 13, 2026 | News On Japan

    TOKYO –
    Japan’s anime industry, one of the country’s leading cultural exports, is beginning to confront the arrival of artificial intelligence in production as studios grapple with labor shortages, rising output and deep concerns over copyright and the future of animators’ jobs

    The anime market has more than doubled in size over the past decade, and the number of anime titles produced in Japan is said to be around 300 a year. But behind that expansion, production sites are under pressure from a shortage of workers, prompting companies to study whether some parts of the process can be replaced or supported by AI

    The creation of a single anime cut can involve many animators before it reaches the screen. Based on storyboards that serve as the blueprint for a scene, a first key animator creates the layout, while animation directors and episode directors make corrections and adjustments. Second key animators then clean up and refine the drawings. To make the images move, additional drawings known as in-betweens or animation frames must be created between key poses, much like a flipbook

    One cut shown in the production process took shape through several stages before colors and backgrounds were added. The completed footage lasted just 1.5 seconds. Depending on the work, a single episode may require about 4,000 drawings, while some recent productions exceed 10,000

    Anime production can take several years from planning to broadcast. Even after drawing work begins, the process may take six months to more than a year, with more than 100 people often involved in a single title. Production companies say the number of animators is not keeping pace with the number of titles being made, and studios are working aggressively to secure available artists

    One production supervisor said the industry is studying whether parts of the workflow can be replaced by AI, but that his company has not yet introduced such tools because of the risks. The biggest concern is copyright: if it is unclear what data was used to train an AI model, who checked it, and whether the resulting image may infringe on existing works, the tool cannot be used in a production setting, he said

    The risks are not theoretical. An anime created with a video-generation application from OpenAI in the United States drew attention after the company announced in March that it would end the service. The app had been criticized because it could generate videos of popular anime characters, raising copyright infringement concerns. For anime studios, bringing tools with unresolved rights issues into a production could create a serious risk. In the worst case, a completed work might be unable to air or stream.

    Some companies are trying to develop AI tools that clear those legal hurdles. One such tool, released at the end of last year, supports anime production by training only on data provided by anime studios and used with permission. The system can automatically generate in-between frames, filling movement between key drawings

    In one demonstration, five prepared drawings were loaded into the tool. After about 10 minutes, it produced 80 in-between images. The company says this can sharply improve efficiency. A single in-between drawing usually takes about 30 minutes on average, and difficult ones can take an hour. With AI, around 200 drawings can be produced in about 10 to 20 minutes, helping ease production schedules

    The company says the goal is not to remove people from the process. It says images that are ultimately released should still pass through human hands, and that it is working with anime studios to build tools that support creators rather than replace them

    Other firms are developing AI tools for tasks such as automatically generating lip and eye movements. By registering a base character image and the audio the character is supposed to speak, one system can create animation with mouth and eye movement in about one minute. Another program takes CG movement and applies it to a specific character, with AI drawing movement in clothing, hair and facial expressions even when those elements have not been set on the CG side. The company says the tool can cut about 80% of the conventional process.

    AI is also being used to create background images. Sample backgrounds can be converted into a preferred style in about one minute. One company used such AI technologies to produce an anime work after clearing legal rights issues, but it still faced criticism. Some critics said the use of AI would destroy the environment in which creators are trained and damage the future of the content industry. Others called it harmful to the anime industry and disrespectful to animators

    The second major issue surrounding AI adoption is whether it will take work away from animators

    Akiko Nakano, an animator with 46 years of experience, has lived through previous technological shifts in anime production, including digital drawing, digital editing and the introduction of 3D. She said digital drawing was introduced around 10 years ago, but she found it difficult and still works faster on paper. In previous innovations, she said, there was no sense that drawing itself would be eliminated. But if fully AI-generated anime becomes possible, she said, the drawing department could disappear, and that prospect is frightening.

    At the same time, Nakano said she believes AI must ultimately be accepted as part of the times. “Even if my work disappears, I think that is what it is,” she said. She added that the role of humans may not vanish completely. People may still add finishing touches, make images feel more human, convey emotion and work together with AI. She said both AI and viewers are still not used to the technology, and that ordinary animators making anime now may serve as the bridge between the two

    People involved in anime production say the subject remains highly sensitive. Some animators and production companies declined to be interviewed once they heard the topic was AI and anime. Views differ widely among anime fans and creators, and some show strong rejection of the technology. The atmosphere has not yet reached a point where AI and anime can be said to be widely accepted, and merely being associated with AI can carry a risk of public backlash

    As a result, some production companies are believed to be using AI quietly even when they are following rules, because the current mood makes it difficult to disclose its use openly. Many companies are nevertheless continuing research, preparing for a time when rules are clearer and public sentiment changes enough to allow AI to be used openly. Studios do not want to fall behind if that wave arrives

    How AI affects the industry will depend on how it is used. It could take work away, but it could also relieve tight schedules, create more time, make new productions possible and generate new jobs. Industry participants describe AI as something that could be either poison or medicine

    Nakano has also said that while she worries about losing work, AI carries a sense of possibility. If anime that once required many people, much time and large budgets can be made more easily through AI, she said, that prospect is exciting

    Those interviewed shared a desire to create new works and a respect for creators. If people with that mindset use AI carefully, it may help the future of anime. But if companies pursue only short-term profit, offering cheap production through heavy AI use, the technology could become harmful. For Japan, which is seeking to strengthen anime as a major industry, the challenge will be to build rules, improve literacy and find a balance that protects talent development while also using AI where it can make the industry more sustainable.

    Osaka’s Minami Rebuilt Into Tourist Hub

    Osaka’s Minami district, now entering another period of major change with the planned opening of the Naniwasuji Line, the redevelopment of Midosuji and improvements around Nankai Namba Station, has transformed from an area once described as “scary” and “dirty” into one of Japan’s leading tourist destinations

    Crowds Join First Pull of 10-Ton Gion Festival Float

    A 10-ton hoko float was pulled through central Kyoto on July 12 in a trial run ahead of the Yamahoko Junko procession during the Gion Festival’s early parade

    Young Doctors Flock to Cosmetic Medicine

    A growing number of young doctors in Japan are moving directly into cosmetic medicine after obtaining a medical license and completing their initial clinical training, raising concern that the trend may be worsening staff shortages in insurance-covered medical care

    Typhoon No. 9 Travel Disruptions Continue on Some Okinawa Routes

    Transport disruption from Typhoon No. 9 (Bavi) continued on July 12, with airlines warning that some flights serving Okinawa’s outlying islands could still face delays, cancellations or conditional operations even after the storm moved away from the prefecture

    JAXA Successfully Lands Reusable Rocket Test Vehicle

    JAXA successfully landed a small experimental vehicle for a reusable rocket on July 11, marking a step toward technology that could increase the frequency of space launches while helping reduce costs

    AI Tools Sweep Into Anime Production

    Japan’s anime industry, one of the country’s leading cultural exports, is beginning to confront the arrival of artificial intelligence in production as studios grapple with labor shortages, rising output and deep concerns over copyright and the future of animators’ jobs

    Mitsubishi Announces AI Robot Mass Production

    Mitsubishi Motors and Highlanders, a startup founded from the University of Tokyo, announced on July 10 that they will jointly develop humanoid “physical AI” robots and move toward mass production as Japan faces growing labor shortages

    Best proxy server sites: Top proxy providers

    There are many different proxy providers that operate large IP networks around the world, and before choosing one, you have to answer many questions. Where do these IPs come from?

    Which RPC Providers Work Well for Blockchain Teams in Japan

    Japan’s crypto and blockchain scene has grown steadily over the past few years, and the wallets, exchanges, and dapps built here all lean on RPC nodes to talk to the chains they run on

    Joint Recommendations Issued to Grow AI Medical Device Industry

    A council of 39 companies, including startups developing medical devices that use artificial intelligence, called for greater support to expand Japan’s AI medical device industry, including subsidies for hospitals and financial assistance for overseas exports

    FxVerge レビュー|2026年版・取引プラットフォーム完全ガイド

    FxVerge レビュー や利用者の FxVerge 口コミ を先に調べてから口座を作るかどうか決める。ブローカーを選ぶとき、多くのトレーダーがこの手順を踏みます。

    Next-Gen Slots and How Immersive Graphics Are Changing the Game

    Slot screens no longer look like flat reels wearing shiny paint

    Humanoid AI Robot Demonstrates World-First Gesture Technology

    A humanoid AI robot under development in Japan demonstrated what its developer described as a world-first gesture-recognition technology during a studio appearance, raising questions over whether Japan can regain ground in a field now led by the United States and China

    Anime into production Sweep Tools
    Share. Facebook Twitter
    Previous ArticleBiggest TV Changes in Netflix’s ‘Little House on the Prairie’: Missing Characters to Religious Details
    Next Article X-Men #33 Preview: Magneto’s Power Runs Out of Steam
    James

    Related Posts

    Spy x Family Chapter 138 Release Date, Time & Where to Read

    July 12, 2026

    ONE PIECE Card Included with Jump as Shueisha Prints 500,000 Extra Copies

    July 12, 2026

    One Piece Chapter 1189 Release Date, Time & Where to Read

    July 12, 2026

    Blue Box Manga Ends After Five Years

    July 12, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Our Picks

    Spy x Family Chapter 138 Release Date, Time & Where to Read

    July 12, 2026

    How to Watch The Westies Series Premiere

    July 12, 2026

    Lamborghini’s Apple Vision Pro App Reimagines the Showroom at Home

    July 12, 2026

    Shekhar Suman`s `triple engine` joke on Aamir Khan`s wedding goes viral

    July 12, 2026
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • Telegram
    Don't Miss
    Creator Economy & Fan-Driven Platforms

    Former Priceline executive debuts Plannin, a booking platform that uses travel influencers to help plan trips

    By JamesMay 30, 20240

    Hotelsbycity.com co-founders and former Priceline executives Andrew Loewen and Randy Schartner have announced their latest…

    Twitch DJs must pay music labels to play their songs on live streams

    June 6, 2024

    Patreon introduces gifting features and more creator tools

    June 25, 2024

    Stripe’s seemingly easy acquisition, why is Twitch still in the red?

    July 30, 2024

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    About Us
    About Us

    Comic Vibe is a pop-culture destination created for fans who live and breathe comics, movies, anime, TV shows, gaming, tech, cosplay, and collectibles.

    Our mission is to deliver engaging news, reviews, features, guides, and opinions that celebrate geek culture in all its forms. From the latest comic releases and blockbuster films to anime trends, gaming updates, cutting-edge tech, and collector culture, Comic Vibe brings everything together in one vibrant hub.

    Our Picks

    Spy x Family Chapter 138 Release Date, Time & Where to Read

    July 12, 2026

    How to Watch The Westies Series Premiere

    July 12, 2026

    Lamborghini’s Apple Vision Pro App Reimagines the Showroom at Home

    July 12, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest comics, anime, movies, TV, gaming, cosplay, and pop culture news delivered directly to your inbox. No spam—just the stories every fan should know.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube TikTok
    • Home
    • Contact Us
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Advertise With Us
    • DMCA Policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • About Us
    © 2026 Comic Vibe. Designed by Comic Vibe.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.