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Total Recommendations: 6

If you liked
Kino no Tabi: The Beautiful World
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...then you might like
A Piece of Phantasmagoria
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In both anime, we get glimpses of many different places and cultures, all very different from each other. Kino's Journey focuses more on the characters involved in these scenarios, while Phantasmagoria sticks to general overviews of each setting. Also, in Kino's Journey there is conflict, but Phantasmagoria is more like a peaceful slice of life.

If you liked
Kujira no Chouyaku
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...then you might like
A Piece of Phantasmagoria
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Both are stories from the charming world of Shigeru Tamura. In fact, Glassy Ocean takes place on the same planet featured in Phantasmagoria.

If you liked
Ginga no Uo Ursa Minor Blue
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...then you might like
A Piece of Phantasmagoria
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Both are stories from the charming world of Shigeru Tamura.

If you liked
Plastic Neesan
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...then you might like
Choboraunyopomi Gekijou Ai Mai Mii
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Both are mini-episode random comedies where a group of girls in a club do very little that has anything to do with the club and instead random nonsense happens all over the place, although Plastic Nee-san is slightly more coherent than Ai Mai Mi.

If you liked
Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou
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...then you might like
Aru Tabibito no Nikki
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Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou is the quintessential tranquil anime. It paints a picture of wonderfully laid back countryside life, with warm relationships between characters. And of course, there is the relaxingly slow pace, unmatched in anime as far as I'm concerned. Most of that can also be said for The Diary of Tortov Roddle. In this anime, a traveler goes on a journey across rather peaceful landscapes to all sorts of different places. There is no dialogue, only the travel notes written by Mr. Roddle. Both shows will warm your heart.

If you liked
Popotan
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...then you might like
Mnemosyne: Mnemosyne no Musume-tachi
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In almost every single aspect, Popotan is quite the opposite of Mnemosyne. The one aspect that both shows share is the idea of immortality (albeit in different ways). In both shows, certain characters remain the same age-wise while having to watch the world go by around them. The people they encounter may grow old and die while they do not age a day. The emotional consequences of this situation are touched on more heavily in Popotan. If you watched Mnemosyne and are dying for more anime that spans long gaps of time while the main characters remain unchanged, try Popotan (or vice versa). However, the two are radically different in all other respects, so exercise discretion.

It’s time to ditch the text file.
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