
Nibiru
Oshimeter
Synopsis
If the universe decided to throw a party and needed a DJ, it would call Nayutan Seijin — and this music video matches that energy beat for beat. Nibiru is a single animated music video — just under four minutes — that pairs one of Nayutan Seijin's cosmic J-Pop tracks with futuristic, anime-styled visuals full of abstract space imagery and neon-drenched motion. There's no traditional story here. No protagonist, no arc, no dialogue. It's pure vibes: kinetic animation synced to a high-energy track, the kind of thing you put on when you want your eyes and ears doing the same thing at the same time. The aesthetic leans into that boundless, interstellar feeling — think celestial bodies, bright colors, and fluid movement that makes the whole thing feel like a dream sequence set in deep space. If you liked what Daft Punk and Toei did with Interstella 5555, or the emotional punch Porter Robinson packed into Shelter, this sits in that same neighborhood of music-meets-animation. It's also got a little of the cosmic curiosity you'd find in something like The Orbital Children, just distilled into a few minutes instead of a full series. It's short, it's original, and it's the kind of thing you can throw on between episodes of whatever else you're watching. Good for a mood reset.
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