
Tomoshibi
Oshimeter
Synopsis
Whether or not you've ever touched the source material, DUSTCELL's "Tomoshibi" works as a standalone piece of art in animated music video form. It's the ending theme for Gachiakuta, and the visuals — directed by YKBX — carry that same gritty, atmospheric weight the show deals in. Think discarded things, forgotten people, and a quiet kind of defiance running underneath it all. The video itself is a single piece, clocking in at one episode's worth of animated imagery set to DUSTCELL's track. There's no traditional narrative here, no dialogue or character arcs. Instead, you get mood and motion — the kind of thing where the animation breathes alongside the music rather than telling you a story outright. It's closer to a visual poem than anything else. If you've been watching Gachiakuta, this adds another layer to the emotional texture of that world. If you haven't, it still holds up on its own as a short, evocative experience. If you liked the visual style of music videos from artists like Eve or Kenshi Yonezu — where the animation carries just as much meaning as the lyrics — this hits a similar spot. Fans of Chainsaw Man's ending sequences, where each one felt like its own little art piece, will probably appreciate what's going on here too. It's a few minutes long. Worth your time if you want something moody and well-crafted without any commitment.
Episode Guide
Community Feed
Loading…


