Before I knew what anime was, probably something like Speed Racer.
First "let's see what this anime thing is about" anime that I watched: Ghost in the Shell (the OG movie). It was a good choice.
It's exactly what it says on the tin. Anime, manga, and other forms of Asian entertainment like them.
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Before I knew what anime was, probably something like Speed Racer.
First "let's see what this anime thing is about" anime that I watched: Ghost in the Shell (the OG movie). It was a good choice.
Oh no how dare you remind me lol. Wolf's Rain here's episode 1 https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x82c7kc the theme SLAPS but the whole things lowkey furry bait. still good, kinda wanna watch it again.
The Wizard of Oz was the first, before I knew there was some sort of a difference between this or that animation.
The first "proper" one was either Spirited Away, Chobits (by recommendation) or Bleach. I adore Miyazaki's work still, Wizard of Oz has a special, nostalgic place in my heart and I want to see it again sometime, Bleach I probably couldn't bother to watch anymore (soooo much filler and pointless fan-service aimed at teenaged boys, I couldn't stand all that stuff even then), Chobits I might give a spin sometime just to see if it's at all not-horrible, but it's been a while so I can't really remember. The whole virgin-boy wants sex angle and fan-service thing never appealed to me and ruins so many animes that would be good or even great otherwise.
I have a vague recollection of seeing part of Princess Mononoke as a child, so I guess that would be my "first", although what really got me interested in anime was watching the first couple episodes of Attack on Titan at a high school club.
It's been pretty long ago for either interpretation, so my memory might be off.
The first ever was probably Heidi or Biene Maia.
The first ever not explicitly produced for a western audience was probably Captain Tsubasa.
The first after having a concept of anime vs. cartoons was one of Akira, Ghost in the Shell or Blue Lagoon.
Spirited Away
Circa 2002, I had refused to give anime a chance because it looked like kid junk to me. Spirited Away singlr-handedly convinced me I was wrong.
It depends on what qualifies as "watched". If you mean "what was the first anime you watched all the way through" it would be some 2012 anime like Code Geass or something. The first anime I ever remember watching seasonally was Parasyte: The Maxim, because a friend of mine told me I might like it but it turned out there was only 1 episode of it out. That's definitely when ~~the infection~~ my passion for anime began. I started watching everything I could get my hands on seasonally then. Parasyte is still a 10/10 show by the way, and it 2000% holds up today.
Hard to say for sure but probably Speed Racer. Dragonball Z is definitely the first one I followed consistently. But Speed Racer would have likely been the first I came across.
It would have been playing on Cartoon Network pre-toonami when I was a kid. Back before the US thought there was any difference in Japanese Animation vs US animation.
Spirited Away is what set me to going out of my way for more. But Toonami gave me Gundam Wing, Outlaw Star, .Hack//Sign and Inuyasha while Adult Swim got my Cowboy Bebop, Trigun, Wolfs Rain, etc.
I saw Spirited Away in a theater in the mid 2000s and started downloading stuff left and right.
Saturday morning cartoons: DragonBall Z, Gundam Wing Endless Waltz. Friend then introduced me to Pokémon. But I just watched these casually.
A few years later, high school friends got me to watch Cowboy Bebop, Trigun, Ranma 1/2, Great Teacher Onizuka, Azumanga Daioh, Love Hina, and several Studio Ghibli movies. I'm sure there are more that I'm forgetting, but high school was when it started for me. Action, drama, comedy, romance, slice of life, everything.
GTO is still one of my all time favorites. I've rewatched it a few times, read the manga, and watched the live action remakes. This class is known for getting teachers to quit, but Onizuka sensei is a former gang member that has a totally different perspective on life. Because of his background, he has a very different approach to teaching and relating to his students.
There have been a lot of good anime with great stories, animation, comedy, etc. GTO isn't the best anime ever, but I connected with it on a deeper level, so it holds a special place.
Ever? Or first after knowing about/wanting to get into anime?
I certainly saw plenty as a kid before I knew anime was a distinct thing. Super old stuff like Kimba, speed racer and voltron.
I think a much later first was robotech, even if it’s a edited/remixed version of Macross.
Beyond children's stuff, and entry-tier Ghibli films, I think K-On! was one of the first anime I actually watched. I'm not really sure what I thought of it, certainly don't recall much about it. Probably took an interest in Japanese media more from manga than anime; yuri like Morinaga's Girl Friends helped me realise I was bisexual.
But to focus back on anime, Nichijou is probably what made me realise anime could be worth my time beyond the odd film, that made me smile on a lot of otherwise dark days. And on the opposite side of things, I'd probably attribute Madoka and NGE with teaching me the value that anime could hold as 'art'. (I'm a sucker for an effective deconstruction of a genre.)
Probably Pokemon or Dragonball Z.
The first anime I watched fully knowing it was an anime is Vampire Hunter D back in the late 80's. I still have a soft spot for it.
Dragon Ball and Toonami pulled me back in hard. I loved anime but didn't have much access to it until Toonami.
I had watched some anime adaptations (Voltron, etc) when I was younger, but I had no idea what anime was back then, and not sure those would count.
Akira. Hell of a way to get introduced to anime as a kid.
Akira was my intro to anime too. It came on IFC incredibly early in the morning (no idea who picked that time slot) and I was often the only one awake in my house at 4am on a Saturday.
Me too!
I was about 12. The last 1/3rd of that movie really fucked with my kid brain, gave me nightmares for weeks, and turned me completely off from trying any other anime until I found Dragon Ball Z on Cartoon Network like 8 years later. XD
Same! I remember watching Akira as a kid when it was on TV back in the 90s and it just blew my mind.
Created a life long appreciation for anime and animation in general.