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6%% This list of examples has been alphabetized. Please add your example in the proper place. Thanks!
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13ValuesDissonance plays a huge part in this category, as Japan obviously has different metrics than American culture on what's not acceptable for younger audiences. As such, considering the userbase of this website, almost any {{shonen|Demographic}} or {{shoujo|Demographic}} {{anime}} and manga falls under this category.
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15The first factor in this is that Japanese as a language has very little "swearing" as it's understood in most Indo-European languages, which results in some of the harsher words or interjections being [[SpiceUpTheSubtitles translated into English as profanities]]; therefore, it's not uncommon to find an anime series intended for children where less expert translators will often use "damn" or "shit" as equivalents. This ValuesDissonance is largely what ''created'' Western anime fandom in the 1980s and early 1990s - teens and young adults wishing to see more mature animated fare.
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17If not that, it's usually due to violent content; graphic violence doesn't have anywhere near the social stigma in Japan as it does in much of the rest of the world (where prevailing attitudes are that blood and gore in media may desensitize children to committing violent acts in real life)... ''so long as such acts are portrayed in a negative light and shown as being villainous''. You'll still rarely ever see the heroes engage in senseless violence (and the more shonen you watch, for example, the more you may notice the heroes decrying such things and how carefully stories and shows are constructed to avoid having the ''heroes'' do anything of the sort), but because it's "okay", by most editorial and network standards in Japan, for such things to be shown as '''''evil''''', there's a lot more latitude for the villains to really [[KickTheDog punt puppies with steel toes]].
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19In any case, when adding examples, please make sure that they are actually from works within the {{kodomomuke}}, shonen, or shojo demographics. By the same measure, double-check that your own sensibilities aren't making you mistake a particularly DarkerAndEdgier work for these demographics as actually being {{seinen}} or {{josei}} before removing an example.
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21* Let's get this out of the way first: A lot of the anime that airs or has aired on Creator/AdultSwim or the revived Creator/{{Toonami}} block is {{shonen|Demographic}}, despite varying levels of gore, sex, and dub profanity. Again, an all-ages rating in Japan is often a TV-14-DLSV in America due to ValuesDissonance.
22* The manga adaptation of ''Anime/AngelsOfDeath'' is filled with gore, on-screen murder and has a suicidal protagonist. It runs in a ''{{Shojo|Demographic}}'' magazine.
23* ''Manga/AttackOnTitan'' may be one of the most relentlessly serious, dark, violent, and horrifying manga in recent memory, easily on par with some of the grimmer {{Seinen}} out there, but it was serialized in Kodansha's ''Bessatsu Magazine/ShonenMagazine''.
24* ''Manga/AzumangaDaioh'' is widely believed to be a {{seinen}} series, but it's actually {{shonen|Demographic}}, since the manga was serialized in the shonen magazine ''Dengeki Daioh''. In some countries it's lumped in with 18+ manga because of the perverted Mr. Kimura, but perverted teachers creeping on teenage girls in Japanese children's shows is just one of those things anime fans have to accept. The anime received an [[http://www.madman.com.au/images/slicks/very-large/mmb938.png MA15+]] rating in Australia ''purely'' because of the aforementioned teacher (according to licensee Creator/MadmanEntertainment).
25* ''Manga/BananaFish'' is actually a shoujo series, despite its brutal portrayal of the violence of child sexual assault, child prostitution and pornography, and a number of rather gruesome scenes of violence. That means they sold the series to teenage girls.
26* ''Manga/BarefootGen'', a semi-autobiographical manga series best known for its graphic depiction of the nuclear attack on Hiroshima, was originally published in ''Magazine/ShonenJump'' and aimed at kids, complete with intermittent history lessons throughout.
27* The manga ''Manga/Bastard1988''. First off, the title stopped it from hitting mainstream in the US. It ran in ''Weekly Magazine/ShonenJump'' up until volume 8 or so (when it moved to the {{seinen}} magazine ''Ultra Jump''), but even before volume 8 it is a crazy-R-rated manga, with sex (comically-sized penises included, and one sex scene so explicit Viz wouldn't publish it uncensored - and they released ''Manga/TenjhoTenge'' without edits!), gory violence and a metric crapton of creative swearing/expressions ("This fuckwad is getting cocky just 'cause he's the world's biggest ball of shit!" "I don't need help from a shit stained ass-monkey!").
28* ''Manga/BlackButler''. It has {{Seinen}} written all over it, but is published in a {{Shonen|Demographic}} magazine. It contains violence and gore, murder, child abuse, sex ranging from abusive in some manner to flat-out rape, pedophilia, and [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything questionable dialogue]]. To top it all off, its protagonists are manipulative, black-hearted {{Villain Protagonist}}s who shamelessly stoop down to unbelievable lows during their missions, kill ''anyone'' who gets in the way of their goals and, if one looks past Sebastian's charms and Ciel's backstory, only appear decent in comparison to their major enemies because said enemies tend to be ''even worse''. On the other hand, cooking competitions, dance lessons, boys put in fluffy dresses, a CastFullOfPrettyBoys, and a huge female fanbase might cause it to be mistaken for {{Shoujo}}.
29* ''Anime/BloodPlus'' has r-rated violence on par with shows like ''Manga/{{Hellsing}}'' and ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'', where almost every fight results in a missing limb and copious amounts of blood and gore littering the landscape (granted most of it are from monsters, but even the humans are shown being bifurcated in a gruesome fashion). It's also worth nothing that it aired at 6pm, the same time that family-friendly entertainment such as ''Manga/SazaeSan'' and ''Manga/CaseClosed'' are shown to be airing. It also aired in the same timeslot that aired ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEED'' and ''Anime/FullmetalAlchemist2003'', both shows which, while having their moments of graphic violence, tend to be more in line with pg-13 films in terms of content and are no way near as brutal.
30* It can be argued that this trope, combined with ValuesDissonance, is why ''Manga/CaseClosed'' failed when it was broadcast on Creator/CartoonNetwork in the United States: it was too childish for '''Creator/AdultSwim''', yet too violent for Creator/{{Toonami}}.[[note]]A revamp of CN's action lineup in April 2004 that resulted in the dissolution of the Creator/SaturdayVideoEntertainmentSystem block (which served as a middle ground between Toonami and Adult Swim's anime lineup) along with the two blocks gaining Saturday slots and the creation of Creator/{{Miguzi}} didn't help matters, either.[[/note]] The aged animation style was the final nail in the coffin. In fact, this anime was aired during family hours in Japan. Complete with brutal murders (albeit with BlackBlood); complex plots involving suicide, drugs and business dealings; and copious amounts of sexual tension. And apparently that's why it worked in the German language broadcast. Not only has the German dubbed run more than twice the episodes compared to the English, but those extra episodes run uncut in a children's block.
31* The anime film ''Anime/{{Catnapped}}'' is a fantasy adventure about two children getting whisked off to a colorful world of [[FunnyAnimal anthropomorphic cats]] in AnotherDimension. It might look cute on the surface, but the movie contains ''numerous'' scenes of DerangedAnimation likely to [[NightmareFuel scare]] small children, [[EldritchAbomination a giant dog]] (actually the children's pet dog turned into a monster) [[PersonOfMassDestruction who chomps down on buildings to abduct villagers]] and a downright ''creepy'' antagonist in [[GodSaveUsFromTheQueen a princess]] with a curse enabling her to [[InflatingBodyGag turn living things into balloons]] by [[TheMagicTouch touch]] and isn't above ''popping'' anyone [[DisproportionateRetribution if angered sufficiently]] (she's only shown doing this with [[ThatPoorPlant a potted flower]] and an insect) and even [[WouldHurtAChild tries to kill the main character and his sister]] with this ability ([[spoiler:[[NoSell which fortunately doesn't work because the two are human]]]]). And that's without getting into said princess' EvilPlan of using abducted prisoners turned into balloons to fill out a giant mouse balloon and awaken the Sleeping Cat on which the feline world rests, explicitly stated to cause ''[[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt destruction]]'', if [[LaResistance the good guys' resistance movement]] doesn't surrender. And yet Pioneer rated this suitable "for 3 and up".
32* ''Manga/ChainsawMan'' is a brutal and often highly cynical series with violent deaths, horrific creature designs, and a lot of sex (including a lesbian orgy adorning a color spread). However, it first ran in ''Weekly Shonen Jump'', and later moving online to ''Shonen Jump +'', which are both still intended for younger audiences.
33* ''Anime/{{CLANNAD}}'': Fans would be surprised to learn that the anime was based off a visual novel for people of all ages in Japan, despite the show having darker themes as the series progresses.
34* ''Manga/DamekkoDoubutsu'' is a SliceOfLife style anime/manga about animals (Humans wearing animal costumes [[WesternAnimation/PeterPan Peter Pan style]]) [[RagTagBunchOfMisfits who are very different from what they are usually well-known for]]. [[SuperDeformed Despite the art style]], upbeat opening, [[SliceOfLife and laid back feeling]]. [[JerkAss Usahara]] one of the main characters, [[SmokingIsCool is a chain-smoker who is very agressive]]. There's also a Tobacco store, and Yunihiko is first seen drinking tons of alcohol which Usahara would later join in. Resulting in them getting drunk, and passing out in the process. Doesn't help that this aired on Creator/KidsStation which airs the majority of Japanese children's shows.
35* ''Dash & Spin Super Fast Sonic'' is an official ''Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog'' GagSeries manga and supposed to be for children, having been published in ''[[Magazine/CoroCoroComic Bessatsu CoroCoro Comic Special]]''. It has more mild profanity than ''VideoGame/ShadowTheHedgehog'', Eggman shedding blood [[BloodyHilarious (comically)]], and VulgarHumor (including [[FanDisservice naked Eggman]], Sonic peeing off a cliff, and Eggman [[UrineTrouble acting as a dog and peeing]] near [[{{Squick}} Amy]]).
36* ''Manga/DeathNote'' has all the makings of a {{Seinen}} series, but it originally ran in ''Weekly Shonen Jump''. This was acknowledged by the creators, who mention in their [[Manga/{{Bakuman}} manga about manga]] the idea of writing otherwise {{seinen}} stories for {{shonen|Demographic}} magazines. Author Tsugumi Ohba does mention in ''Death Note: How to Read'', however, that the story would have taken a different path if it ran in a seinen magazine, exploring the morality involved in using a Death Note and how society responds to it rather than putting the cat-and-mouse chase between Light and L at the forefront.
37* The [[{{Gorn}} gory]], [[{{Fanservice}} sexually-charged]], [[ClusterFBomb profanity-laden]] anime series ''Manga/DeadmanWonderland'' was used as the flagship title for the revival of Creator/{{Toonami}} as part of Creator/AdultSwim. All signs point to this being a {{Seinen}} series. But in reality, it's a {{Shonen|Demographic}} series whose original manga version was serialized in the same anthology magazine that housed significantly tamer series such as ''Manga/AngelicLayer'' (which is actually aimed at '''children''' in the United States), ''Manga/{{Nichijou}}'' and ''Anime/KaitouTenshiTwinAngel''.
38* ''Manga/DemonSlayerKimetsuNoYaiba'' is easily one of Shonen Jump's most violent and gory titles at certain points (the plot is kicked off by Tanjiro arriving home to discover that most of his family has been brutally slaughtered by a demon), and one arc focuses on infiltrating a RedLightDistrict (the English localization calls it the Entertainment District Arc, but anyone familiar with Japanese terminology will know exactly what kind of "entertainment" is provided there), but it's still aimed at the same 12-18-year-old male demographic. In Japan, a surprisingly large amount of children who are even younger than the intended demographic are fans of the series as well, though [[https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2020/11/28/national/media-national/demon-slayer-violent-for-kids/ there was still some concern from parents]] over whether or not the ''Mugen Train'' movie was appropriate for young children. The series also got [[https://soranews24.com/2021/03/08/demon-slayer-and-pretty-cure-anime-themed-happy-meals-arrive-at-mcdonalds-japan/ a Happy Meal promotion]] at UsefulNotes/McDonalds, paired with ''Anime/PrettyCure''.
39* The manga series ''[[https://web.archive.org/web/20200219150413/https://animecorner.me/2018/02/a-new-shonen-manga-series-drawn-by-hentai-manga-artist-began/ Destiny Lovers]]'' (''Desu Raba'') is drawn by hentai artist Kai Tomohiro, and involves a high school boy who hates girls being kidnapped and waking up to a girl trying to rape him, in a prison where women keep men in cages. It was serialized on Magapoke, the app for Kodansha's ''Shonen Magazine'', alongside series like ''Manga/FairyTail'' spin-offs.
40* ''Manga/DGrayMan''[='s=] main theme is tragedy, according to WordOfGod. It is aimed for kids but the main antagonist revives people in the form of Akuma/demons who often engage in cannibalism to hide within society as humans that can eat other humans so that they can become stronger. The main character, Allen Walker, is often described as a gentleman, but later in the series it is revealed he suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder following his guardian's death and revival as an Akuma. Other major characters also go through tragic backstories but it seems Allen takes the cake.
41* ''Manga/{{Devilman}}''. Yes, ''that'' Devilman. It ran in ''Weekly Shonen Magazine'' in 1972, and a few pages looks light-hearted with goofy-looking JapaneseDelinquents, right? No, violence, gore, and nudity abound, and has one of the most depressing {{Downer Ending}}s in a Shonen series. ''Manga/ViolenceJack'' also qualifies since it ran in 1973, with the same thing, but more sex and gore (until later parts were in a Seinen magazine). The former has a rather LighterAndSofter anime adaptation by Creator/ToeiAnimation (until the {{OVA}}s happen). ''Violence Jack'', not so much. Sequels to ''Devilman'' and ''Violence Jack'' are straight {{Seinen}}.
42* ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}''
43** ''Anime/DigimonTamers''. Especially notable since [[Anime/DigimonAdventure its]] [[Anime/DigimonAdventure02 predecessors]] had their share of darkness, but nowhere ''near'' its level. Case in point that ''The first episode'' had two separate Digimon killing ''and eating'' another one, and to make matters worse, Digimon who die that way are never reborn. Other [[SarcasmMode highlights]] include some of the most [[NoHoldsBarredBeatdown horrifying]] and [[CurbStompBattle brutal]] battles in the series' history, one of the hero's Digimon being eaten and thus permanently killed (by a former friend, no less), someone trying to commit ''suicide'', at least two {{Heroic Sacrifice}}s, a good chunk of the Digital World and its residents being deleted, one of the Digimon getting stabbed nearly to death and thrown into a sea of deletion ''while his/her Tamer/s can do nothing but watch'', a heart-breakingly BittersweetEnding, and [[BarbieDollAnatomy naked children with no genitals]]. The absolute worse offender, however, is a sweet little 10-year-old girl getting [[MindRape mind fucked]] by an EldritchAbomination for at ''least'' a week. If the title didn't have "Digimon" attached to it, you'd think it was intended for high school students, but ''no'', it's (theoretically) aimed at kids around that girl's age.
44** Also ''Anime/DigimonDataSquad''. Less mindfuck than Tamers, but less shy about detailed violence or blatant {{Fanservice}}.
45** ''Anime/DigimonGhostGame'' does advertise itself as [[SpookyKidsMedia kids-friendly horror]] and wouldn't had been that bad if it stayed that way. It doesn't. There are all sorts of brutal ColdBloodedTorture, AndIMustScream situations, grossly detailed murders of Digimon (and sometimes humans), and {{Jump Scare}}s. There's an episode where a group of Chamblemon use young brides as living mushroom plantations in a heinously gruesome manner, and there's another where the corpse of an actual dead person is being controlled to walk around the victim of the week's house (not even by a normal Digimon, by a ''[[EldritchAbomination MoonMillenniumon]]''). Yet, it's still broadcasted on a 9 a.m. Sunday morning despite the content would be easily overboard for even adults.
46* ''Manga/DomesticGirlfriend'' ran in ''Weekly Shounen Magazine'' despite being a romance series filled with plenty of nudity and numerous on-screen graphic sex scenes.
47* ''Manga/DragonBall'' and ''Anime/DragonBallZ'' is very clearly a kids' series, but it can get pretty violent, including one scene of [[ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice bloody impalement]], and [[DirtyOldMan Muten Roshi's]] hijinks sometimes run a little blue.
48* The heavy amount of violence present in later episodes of ''Anime/EurekaSeven'' forced Creator/CartoonNetwork to air the English dub on its Adult Swim block with a TV-MA rating. However, ''Eureka Seven'' is a show targeted for kids, as evidenced by its [[http://www.japansociety.org/resources/content/2/0/5/4/documents/sato_mcgray%20interview.pdf 7 A.M. Sunday morning time slot in Japan]]. Even the voice actors express their confusion over the timeslot during several of the more violent scenes in the Japanese [[DVDCommentary DVD commentaries]].
49* ''Anime/HellGirl'' seems like a mature seinen or josei series. Nope, it's shoujo. So it's probably aimed at the older end of the shoujo spectrum, right? Nope. It was serialized in a magazine for 8-14 year old girls.
50* ''Manga/FistOfTheNorthStar'' is textbook {{Gorn}} with blood and guts flying around and torture and sick villains... and it's also the TropeMaker for {{Shonen|Demographic}} FightingSeries. It's also from the late Showa era; you probably couldn't get away with a lot of that in a modern {{shonen|Demographic}} series. Its modern iterations only do get away because of the GrandfatherClause. Japan had a few scares with [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsutomu_Miyazaki an otaku serial killer]] and teen murders in the intervening 22 years, prompting more scrutiny from MoralGuardians.
51* ''Manga/FrankenFran'' is serialized in a Shonen magazine, but it is full of {{Gorn}}, graphic BodyHorror, [[{{Fanservice}} nud]][[FanDisservice ity]] and other suggestive scenes.
52* ''Anime/FullmetalAlchemist2003'' started off as a light-hearted shonen (ignoring the Elrics' backstory) with an [[MonsterOfTheWeek Antagonist of the Week]] popping up often until several episodes in. After [[spoiler:Nina's death]] the dark moments got more on the closer side together and more frequent. By the mid-point it hit full CerebusSyndrome and by the end it resembled more of a seinen than a shonen. The [[Manga/FullmetalAlchemist original manga]] and ''Brotherhood'', however, stay generally shonen even with their dark moments.
53* ''Manga/FutureDiary'' is often thought to be a {{Seinen}} series due to its violence and dark themes, but the manga was published in the same {{Shonen|Demographic}} magazine as ''Manga/DeadmanWonderland''.
54* The original ''Manga/GetterRobo'' manga wasn't just aimed at kids, but a MerchandiseDriven series meant to sell action figures. The ''second chapter'' features Ryoma, the main lead, kicking an attack dog's head clean off, and Hayato, the deuteragonist, ripping a high-school boy's face off and slicing off another's ears. In general, it's hard to find a chapter of the original run that doesn't feature at least one moment of insanely brutal violence, and two of the three leads are {{Unscrupulous Hero}}es at best initially. The anime is a different story, though, featuring [[LighterAndSofter far less violence relative to the manga and much cleaner depictions of the heroes.]]
55* ''Anime/GhostStories'' (a.k.a. ''Gakkou no Kaidan'') is an anime about a group of prepubescent children who chase ghosts, which is targeted at kids. Notable ghosts they encounter are an incredibly scary and unstoppable GrimReaper lookalike, a grotesque HumanoidAbomination with a giant eye for mouth and a [[Literature/TheRing Sadako]] relative (who even comes out of a TV) who almost strangles the female lead to death. The ending theme is also very blatantly IntercourseWithYou. All of the ghosts are played seriously, albeit the English GagDub makes the series quite silly. However, said English gag dub is [[WhatDoYouMeanItsNotForKids definitely]] [[CrossesTheLineTwice NOT]] this trope.
56* Despite having some VERY raunchy humor that would make some western animated shows intended for adults blush, ''Manga/{{Gintama}}'' aired on Sunday mornings in Japan, a children's timeslot, and the manga was serialized in ''Weekly Shonen Jump''. Like ''Manga/HunterXHunter'' though, it did eventually move to OtakuOClock for its conclusion, but the manga is still shonen.
57* ''Manga/GirlsBravo'' was mildly controversial when it came over to the United States; Geneon had to put a warning on the back (something usually only done for {{hentai}}) advising stores not to sell it to people under 17. It averts the usual non-nude ecchi that was popular at the time with detailed, graphic nudity and sexual situations. So how on Earth did its manga run in the same shonen magazine as squeaky-clean manga like ''Angelic Layer''?!
58* ''Anime/GraveOfTheFireflies'' was released as a children's film. Yes, the film that shows two children slowly starving to death in the final days of the World War II was only not marketed towards children, it was released as a double-bill with the diametrically opposed ''Anime/MyNeighborTotoro''. Unsurprisingly, the film, regardless of its merits, turned off a lot of people back then, and it was only thanks to ''Totoro'' being a box office juggernaut that Studio Ghibli still managed to recoup its budget.
59* The anime anthology ''Anime/GrimmsFairyTaleClassics'' was clearly aimed towards small children. However, it contains many scenes of intense cruelty (such as a princess being falsely accused of killing her baby in the episode "The Six Swans", characters being beaten by abusive guardians in "Brother and Sister" and "Rapunzel", and the main character being framed by his brother's cruel trick in "The Water of Life"), as well as semi-frequent use of violence and NightmareFuel. One episode is based on the Grimms' story "Allerleirauh", which features a princess fleeing from her father who wants to marry her. The darkest episode was perhaps "Bluebeard", which features the title character killing his wives and nearly kills the most recent one until her brothers save her. Much of the dark imagery was toned down for the English dub, but the show was still quite dark considering its target audience. The catch? This show was aired on Nick Jr., which is better known for cutesy kids' shows such as ''WesternAnimation/BluesClues'', ''WesternAnimation/DoraTheExplorer'', & {{Toys/Lalaloopsy}}.
60* ''Manga/GTOTheEarlyYears'' ran in a shonen magazine, despite having frequent graphic violence and RapeAsDrama. Its better-known sequel ''Manga/GreatTeacherOnizuka'' is a little toned down, but still features many of the same themes. The English translation was released with a "Mature Teens" rating.
61* ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamAge Gundam AGE]]'' is targeted to a younger audience than ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamSeed SEED]]'' and ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundam00 00]]''. Yet, despite its [[ArtStyleDissonance children's cartoon art-style]], ''AGE'' has a really dark story and it doesn't hold any punches when it comes to killing off characters and showing their death scenes. And that's before you get into [[spoiler:having a main protagonist become a genocidal, [[WellIntentionedExtremist if well-intentioned,]] maniac, [[TheWarOfEarthlyAggression the whole back-story for Vagan (also known as the Unknown Enemy),]] or even [[EnfantTerrible Desil Galette.]]]]
62* ''Manga/HappySugarLife'' has a [[DeceptivelySillyTitle rather saccharine title]] and art style, but [[ArtStyleDissonance don't let the cute character designs fool you]]. The cast is made up of several people with mental disorders, with the main protagonist in particular being a mentally unstable psychopath who had kidnapped a young girl after "falling in love with her". Despite its dark themes, it ran in the shonen magazine ''Gangan Joker''.
63* ''Anime/HelloSandybell'' is an 80's slice-of-life adventure anime aimed at little girls. The first arc is light-hearted and focuses on Sandybell and the nieghborhood kids having all sorts of adventures with the resident BigFriendlyDog and the mysterious castle of the Wellingtons. The next arcs are about Sandybell becoming a newspaper reporter and discovering international drug cartels, criminal gangs, kidnappings, attempted murders and all sorts of dark themes. Some of the content was so graphic that the Italian dub [[Bowdlerise/HelloSandybell cut it out]], but many other international dubs (such as the Hungarian, Latin American Spanish, French and Arabic) didn't.
64* ''Anime/HigurashiWhenTheyCry'' is best known for its extremely graphic gore and murder scenes. Its manga adaptation, which is BloodierAndGorier than even the anime, was serialized in various ''shonen'' magazines. The original visual novels that both the anime and manga are based on weren't really marketed towards a particular demographic, being [[{{Doujinshi}} doujin]] games.
65* ''Manga/InterspeciesReviewers'' is about a group of adventurers who have sex with CuteMonsterGirl prostitutes and write reviews of their experiences with them. Despite this premise, it runs in the shonen magazine ''Dragon Dragon Age''. However, the manga is actually tamer than its anime adaptation; it doesn't actually show any sexual activities on-screen, unlike the much HotterAndSexier anime, which got so increasingly explicit that networks that didn't drop it for being TooHotForTV had to show certain scenes with just the audio playing under a black screen.
66* ''Manga/{{Inuyasha}}'' is aimed at preteen and teenage boys, since the manga was serialized in ''[[Magazine/ShonenSunday Weekly Shonen Sunday]]''. However, it has frequent instances of violence and nudity (the very first chapter/episode alone has Kagome being [[FullFrontalAssault attacked by a topless female centipede youkai]]), so in North America the anime aired late at night and was aimed at an older teenage/college-age audience.
67** This was also complicated by the English dub localizing the yokai as "demons," making the series seem more occult than it actually was for Western audiences.
68** Apparently, even Cartoon Network was unsure what to make of it. It was allegedly picked up to air on the more kid-friendly Toonami, but ultimately ended up on Adult Swim. This didn't stop TV listings from counting it as a kid's show at the time. It also should be noted that Adult Swim used it as a lead-in show, which is often used for the lighter, more transitional shows in case kids are still watching. A famous ''Robot Chicken'' sketch also notably showed a teenage girl watching it, and played it for laughs when her adult father started watching it, [[spoiler: though it was a gambit to get his TV time back.]]
69* In ''Manga/KenganAshura'', despite this mixed martial arts fighting series running in a magazine meant for young teens it features many graphical scenes one would see in series aimed at older audiences, such as many brutal portrayals of highly detailed violence and in the middle of that some quick shots of sexual intercourse.
70* The manga of ''VisualNovel/RoseGunsDays''' first three seasons also ran in Shōnen Gangan, G-Fantasy and Gangan Online. While they're far less violent than the ''When They Cry'' series, they still have some decidedly un-childish themes such as war, the loss of your homeland, colonization and Chinese-Japanese relationships; and Season 3 features some pretty brutal murders. However, Season 4, as well as the spin-off ''Aishū no Cross-Knife'', appropriately ran in Big Gangan.
71* ''Manga/HotGimmick'', a manga with lots of sexual blackmail raunchier than most MTV shows and getting a 16+ rating for the American publication (with a few additional disclaimers about underage drinking and other such material), points towards being a josei, but somehow ran in Betsucomi, a shoujo magazine originally targeted to elementary and middle school girls (though there has been a bit of an aging up of the magazine in recent years).
72* ''Manga/HunterXHunter'', a series where almost Main/AnyoneCanDie. It contains, among other things, a heart being torn out, beheadings, fights to the death and a floor being covered in fresh blood. The series is serialized in ''Weekly Shonen Jump''. This goes double for the Chimera Ant arc, which features BlackAndGrayMorality bordering on EvilVersusEvil, along with much of the graphic violence described above, plus significant dismemberments, genocidal plots [[spoiler:(though neither side succeeds in this aim)]], disturbing imagery and themes left, right, and center, and a depiction of [[spoiler:nuclear apocalypse]], though the last one isn't part of the arc's main focus. The 2011 series officially switched to a late-night timeslot in the middle of the Chimera Ant arc; however, some affilates in Japan had already moved it to that slot beforehand based on the violent content alone.
73* ''Iinari! Aibure-shon'' is a manga about a girl who is prone to [[PottyFailure having accidents]] that may look like a seinen or even an ecchi manga, but it was serialized in Monthly Dragon Age, a shounen magazine.
74* ''Manga/ItsudatteMySanta'''s original printing was recalled for having the wrong rating on the package, TV-PG instead of TV-MA. Despite that, nobody complained even before its recall, plus that it was serialized on a Shonen magazine.
75* ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure'' ranks up there with ''Manga/FistOfTheNorthStar'' and ''Manga/ApocalypseZero'' as the top candidate for this trope. The sheer frank homoeroticism and casual ''brutality'' of this franchise, tolerable to teenage boys in Japan, would have [[ComicBook/ChickTracts Jack Chick]] doing gymnastics in his grave! It moved to the {{seinen}} magazine ''Ultra Jump'' with ''[[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureSteelBallRun Steel Ball Run]]'' onwards, though. ''[[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureGoldenWind Golden Wind]]'' is probably the worst in this regard, occurring before the shift to a more mature seinen magazine--each and every arc in the series (which is to each of the dozen conflicts with stand users) centers around some aspect of bloody, gory, painful body horror. The next part, ''[[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStoneOcean Stone Ocean]]'', is also pretty bad with the gore. And has prostitutes, vibrators as currency and people exploding into snails.
76* ''Manga/JuujikaNoRokunin'' is one of, if ''not'', the [[DarkerAndEdgier darkest]] mangas ever written in much of anime and manga history, and ''yet'' it gets published as a SHŌNEN manga. From [[ColdBloodedTorture tortures]] to [[RapeIsASpecialKindOfEvil outright sexual assault]] and gore, this manga seems to be more on par with the darker seinen mangas like ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'' or other dark fantasy series like ''Anime/RedoOfHealer''.
77* The American publication of ''Manga/KareFirstLove'' (via Viz) is rated T (13+) despite Aoi's consistent pressure on his girlfriend to have sex with him. Curiously, the series' rating never increases, even after it displays a rather explicit sex scene and a pregnancy scare resulting from an affair between an adult man and high school teen. Other manga published by Viz has been marketed to older teens/adults simply for containing frontal nudity -- such as ''Manga/RanmaOneHalf''.
78* ''Manga/{{Kinnikuman}}'' originally started out as a parody of ''Ultraman'' complete with action and comedy being somewhat expected of a Shonen manga. Then, the series shifted from being just a parody of superheroes to a series about ProfessionalWrestling. Despite the comedy remaining in the series, there was notably a lot more violence in the show. For one, the wrestling matches couldn't really be called matches anymore, as whenever someone won, it usually meant that they won via killing the other person, complete with FamilyUnfriendlyDeath for the defeated (One person actually got ''eaten alive'' by their opponent). It was still considered a Shonen manga after the shift. The anime tried to tone down the violence, but a lot of it was still kept in.
79* ''Kinnikuman Nisei'', the sequel to ''Kinnikuman'' (known in the US as ''Anime/UltimateMuscle''). Despite being aimed at kids, it still follows in the footsteps of its predecessor with violence and loads of innuendo in both the original ''and'' the dub. The manga averts this trope, as it's marketed for adults.
80* ''Manga/Life2002'' may be a {{Shoujo}} manga however it's considerably more mature in nature than most shoujo. From the graphic nudity, sexual scenes, and gore... it's no wonder {{Creator/Tokyopop}} changed it from being for "Older Teens" to "Mature". One scene in volume 6 even involved showing two characters somewhat graphically having sex. It can easily be mistaken for a {{Josei}} manga.
81* The jokes done for FanService in ''Anime/MagicUsersClub'' might make one believe it was strictly aimed at otaku. The franchise was actually aimed at young girls in Japan.
82* The MagicalGirlGenreDeconstruction manga ''Manga/MagicalGirlSite'' is extremely dark and violent, has a suicidal protagonist who has to [[CastFromLifespan sacrifice a certain amount of lifespan every time she casts magic]] when she becomes a magical girl, and fights nothing but [[DeadlyGame between magical girls to death]], and has lots of {{Yuri|Genre}} innuendos and implications. And it's considered as a Shonen manga.
83* Like ''Kare First Love'', ''Manga/Mars1996'' deals with very dark subjects like suicide, sexual abuse and also has an explicit sex scene yet Tokyopop kept the rating at Teen 13+.
84* Anime News Network's reviewers have condemned ''Manga/MermaidMelodyPichiPichiPitch'' for sexually suggestive dialogue and scenes as well as its aversion of BloodlessCarnage, even though it was originally published in Nakayoshi. The {{anime}} sanitized a lot of these scenes anyway, but it's confusing that people who ought to know better would judge this way. (The same review ''also'' exemplified [[WhatDoYouMeanItsNotForKids this trope's opposite]], in that it stated that no-one that the reviewer deemed old enough to read the series would dare touch a cute MagicalGirl manga.)
85* ''Manga/MissMachiko'' is an anime about a quirky teacher who helps her students through everyday problems such as bullies and school work. Sometimes, she takes them on wacky adventures as well. Oh, and every episode featured the main character naked due to her students' pranks. And yes, BarbieDollAnatomy was completely averted. And yet, it was a show aimed at middle school children. Even in early 80s Japan, it attracted controversy.
86* ''Manga/{{Nana}}''. With its fairly adult storyline and content, it runs in a {{Shoujo}} magazine. {{Josei}} would have been more like it.
87* ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'' and its anime adaptation; the manga was serialized in ''Weekly Shonen Jump'' and the anime series is aimed at younger teenagers and is shown on a family-friendly time slot in Japan, but it still has a rather dark tone, and tackles some pretty serious topics, including death, loss, relationships, slavery, mass murder, suicide, etc, which a lot of kids won't understand or might get frightened by. The series also has a fair amount of profanity (especially in the uncut versions, both English and Japanese), a lot of rather crude and sexual scenes (like the Sexy Jutsu, some swimsuit scenes, a few character designs, Kakashi's books, Drunken Rock Lee, Jiraiya's antics, breast jokes and the Thousand Years of Death), a massive amount of violence, some terrifying imagery, especially from villains like Orochimaru, Sasuke, early Gaara, Madara Uchiha and the Akatsuki (notably Itachi, Hidan, Pain, Obito and Kisame), a large amount of tearjerker moments, and a lot of the fights can be extremely bloody, cruel and violent, and then there is [[DirtyOldMan Jiraiya]], who is extremely perverted and does stuff no kid should be watching at all. When the anime first aired on Cartoon Network in North America, the show was noticeably toned down (for example, words like kill and death being replaced by "destroy" and "defeat", deaths being shown off-screen, backstories being changed, blood edited out, etc) but it didn't stop it from still being violent, especially for a kids series, as some scenes, such as several fights, some deaths, the Sexy Jutsu, Jiraiya's perverted nature and several deaths were left uncensored. Viz Media and ShoPro later averted this trope when they released the uncut version of the anime, now with a well-deserved TV-14 rating on a late-night weekday time slot on Adult Swim.
88* The film version of ''Anime/NausicaaOfTheValleyOfTheWind'' has quite a bit of disturbing material despite being marketed as a family movie. This includes nuclear warfare and the protagonist killing several people on-screen and later getting shot multiple times in graphic detail.
89* Despite being run in a shonen magazine that also runs ''Manga/FairyTail'' and its remake anime ''Anime/NegimaSecondSeason''[[note]]which admittedly cut out almost all of the fanservice[[/note]] being run during afternoons for children on Creator/TVTokyo, ''Manga/NegimaMagisterNegiMagi'' has a lot of sexual innuendo, nudity, and fetish material, such as [[spoiler:Asuna being stripped naked and tickled on one page where we can see ''everything'' - barely managing to not become hentai with BarbieDollAnatomy]].
90* ''Anime/NeonGenesisEvangelion'': In regards to the ''Rebuild'' series, Hideaki Anno mentioned briefly that it was intended for teenagers and even kids, and that the message of the series was important for their ears more so than anyone else. You know, that show where a naked teenage girl grows to the size of a planet and then falls apart, where another character goes through horrific MindRape, and ended up squarely defining pessimism in the Super Robot genre. [[WhatDoYouMeanItsNotForKids In the States, it was once the victim of the opposite trope;]] nowadays ''Evangelion'' is put on par with ''Manga/{{AKIRA}}'', ''Legend of the Overfiend'' and violent anime/hentai in general. In spite of this, all of the movies in the series (both based on the original series and the ''Anime/RebuildOfEvangelion'' quadrilogy) are rated G for General Audiences under Japan's equivalent of the MPAA.
91* ''Anime/OjamajoDoremi''. Let's be real. It may be a kids' show, but the series' commitment to tackling serious issues (from divorced parents to terminal illness) and occasional reference to things like alcohol and the 90s stock "creepy old man" character have made some people debate it.
92* ''Manga/OnePiece'' is a Shonen manga in the vein of ''Manga/DragonBall'' (Creator/EiichiroOda's main inspiration for the series) that's supposed to be meant for all ages, but it surprisingly features a huge amount of adult content that seems to push every single boundary of the Shonen genre to the extreme, what with insane amounts of extreme violence (including all sorts of extremely bloody and messy fights), some sexual material, foul language befitting of a sailor, [[NightmareFuel frightening imagery]], a gigantic plethora of [[TearJerker surprisingly incredibly heart-wrenching moments]], racism, slavery, torture, and genocide that would make ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'' look like a picnic, [[CompleteMonster some truly vile and heinous villains]], one of the most horrific and utterly evil totalitarian governments in all of fiction being largely responsible for [[CrapsaccharineWorld all the suffering in the series' otherwise optimistic setting]], and so much more. It's telling that the U.S. version of the anime adaptation tried to make it kid-friendly by reducing most of the violence and language for any kids channel, including Cartoon Network, but after 4Kids dropped the license, Like what Viz Media and ShoPro did with Naruto, Funimation averted this trope when they released the anime in its uncensored form, now with a well-deserved TV-14 rating.
93* ''Manga/PandoraHearts'' is a shonen manga series similar to ''Manga/BlackButler''. Like ''Black Butler'' and ''Manga/DeathNote'', it probably would be more suited for a Seinen magazine, due to its violence, characters with violent and complex pasts (quite a few involving EyeScream) and generally being quite a mature manga series. This is something that has only gotten darker and darker as it goes on, especially what with the rampant character death the author likes to pull on people.
94* ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}''
95** ''Manga/PokemonAdventures''. It is in fact classified as a ''kodomo''[[note]]children's[[/note]] manga. However, its strong sense of continuity and characterization over decades (and thus generations of target demographics), as well as frequent use of violence and even occasional deaths, has people convinced it's meant for an older crowd.
96** Quite a few of the [[Manga/{{Pokemon}} other manga]] too, either due to violence or {{Fanservice}}. ''Manga/PokemonDiamondAndPearlAdventure'' can be as violent as ''Adventures'' at times, and features dark themes like it, but can't be above {{Shonen|Demographic}}.
97** Creator/TakeshiShudo [[note]]The head writer for the anime from Kanto until Johto[[/note]] had originally wanted [[Anime/PokemonTheSeries the show]] to be [[MultipleDemographicAppeal enjoyed by anyone]], not just kids, and it shows in most of the episodes written by him which noticeably clash in tone with a lot of the show's other, more lighthearted episodes. For example, ''[[Recap/PokemonS1E1PokemonIChooseYou the very first episode]]'' was a {{deconstruction}} of being a Pokémon trainer, and the Japanese version of ''Anime/PokemonTheFirstMovie'' (as well as the international versions of its remake, ''Anime/MewtwoStrikesBackEvolution'') features a complex backstory for Mewtwo involving the ethics of cloning, among other things. ExecutiveMeddling prevented Shudo from using a lot of the bonuses he'd intended to, and he ended up leaving because he felt it had become overly kid-focused. Nonetheless, the anime still does get pretty dark at times, such as in the Hunter J arc of the ''[[Anime/PokemonTheSeriesDiamondAndPearl Diamond and Pearl]]'' saga.
98** The uncensored edition of ''Manga/TheElectricTaleOfPikachu'' is a ''Pokémon'' shonen manga but the artwork was done by a hentai artist, turning something that is a TY-Y show at first straight into a full on {{Ecchi}}. [[WorldOfBuxom All the characters have huge busts]] which are shown off frequently, most female characters show off lots of cleavage or {{Underboobs}}. There's also a bath scene where Misty is shown to start playing with her breasts such as groping herself so [[ACupAngst she could get them larger]] and this was just a scheme made by Ash so Ash could perv on her. Ash is also a LovableSexManiac. It also doesn't mind [[BloodierAndGorier hiding the brutality of Pokémon battles]] with a couple of fights sporting [[{{Gorn}} high amounts of blood]] including [[NoHoldsBarredBeatdown the last battle]]. Needless to say, this uncensored version is very adult despite it being a ''Pokémon'' manga.
99** ''Manga/PocketMonsters'' is a GagSeries, but it contains a lot of gross-out moments that wouldn't be out of place in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark''. This includes a scene of Pikachu's face being smashed into his own shit and [[http://snarp.dreamwidth.org/40223.html multiple shots clearly showing Red and Clefairy's]] ''genitalia.''
100** ''WebAnimation/PokemonGenerations'' features an in-universe version. AZ's history (which features a war and countless innocents being sacrificed to power a WeaponOfMassDestruction) is apparently treated as a children's fairy tale.
101* ''Anime/PopeeThePerformer'' is particularly infamous for this. The show regularly features extreme violence, and the main characters die painfully in almost every episode. The best example of this is probably episode 11, Swallower. The episode contains the main character, Popee, attempting sword swallowing. This goes horribly wrong as usual, and resulting in Popee being impaled, with the tip of the sword stuck in the sand. Kedamono attempts to help him out, and tries attaching the hilt of the sword to a car and driving fast in an attempt to pull it out. This results in Popee being dragged around the circus and bashed into the ground and walls, his face covered in blood. Eventually the sword is pulled out, but Popee is furious at Kedamono for dragging him around. He chases Kedamono down and swallows him whole, then repeats his sword trick from the beginning of the episode, impaling and killing them both. The episode ends with Popee's lifeless, impaled body falling to the ground, then a fade to black.
102* ''Anime/PrettyCure''
103** Toei held two all-night events at a movie theater for grown ups only due to a Japanese law that doesn't allow children to see movies after 8:00PM. They showed some ''Pretty Cure'' movies during this marathon so that the large adult fanbase could see them without getting in the way of the kids.
104** The show itself is primarily known for its abundance of martial arts fighting, not normally seen in magical girl anime aimed at a young audience.
105** ''Anime/HeartcatchPrettyCure'' is regarded as one of the more dramatic ''Pretty Cure'' installations due to date, as many of its character episodes bring up serious topics. [[spoiler:And that's not even getting into the whole predicament and suffering Yuri experienced throughout the series, as she has two people closest to her dying. And no, they didn't come back to life after that; the novelization even addresses that she had to break the news back home that her DisappearedDad is dead.]]
106** ''Anime/HugttoPrettyCure'' gets this for many different reasons: a baby falling into a coma in an early episode, main characters realizing at the last second that they might actually kill enemies if they're not careful (whereas for most Precure, purifying named villains peacefully instead isn't even a question), the painful scene of [[spoiler:Ruru nearly being killed by Papuru with a remote energy beam and reprogrammed]] when she started turning good, implied infidelity, and a villain [[spoiler:committing suicide in her human body with visuals similar to that of harakiri/seppuku to be reborn as a monster]].
107* The [[MagicalGirl magical-girl]] {{anime}} series ''Anime/PrincessTutu'' is aimed at children in Japan ([[GirlShowGhetto just look at the title]]), but it's rated PG-13 for scenes with blood and violence, as well as surprisingly common [[BarbieDollAnatomy Barbie Doll Nudity]].
108* ''Anime/PriPara'', an idol show aimed at children, has a satanic girl who uses magic to control others into acting bad and says "hell" OncePerEpisode, mascots who drink alcohol occasionally (and one of them run what appears to be a bar), a few sequences with the girls in revealing swimsuits, an adult woman going nuts over Michaelangelo's David statue while at a museum, two crossdressing characters, a baby giving three girls a golden shower, a girl [[spoiler: who wants to commit suicide in order to get a dress]], an elementary schooler who likes seeing boys wet the bed and a train that yells "Go to hell!" in the first movie.
109* Despite all the fanservice and sex jokes, ''Manga/RanmaOneHalf'' is very much considered Shōnen. Promos for the series were often put on US VHS tapes for anime that are kid-friendly by western standards, such as the ''Pokémon'' anime.
110* ''Anime/ReadOrDie Rehabilitation'' is more risque than its {{Seinen}} counterparts ''Anime/ReadOrDie'' and ''Read or Dream'', yet is serialized on a {{Shonen|Demographic}} magazine.
111* ''Anime/RevolutionaryGirlUtena'' is full of mature themes and taboo sexual relationships/metaphors, and as such has never received a rating lower than 13+ on a North American release. However, the show is indeed a shoujo, and was scheduled at a timeslot on TV Tokyo in which lots of young children would be watching (for a few months, it aired right before ''WesternAnimation/BeastWars'').
112* ''Anime/SailorMoon''. No, it was not only for teens in Japan; [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m8rV3i71C8c watch the commercials]]. The first season finale deserves special mention where four of the Sailors are brutally killed (they get better). Reportedly so many children were upset about the deaths that they made themselves sick. For TheNineties Creator/DiC US dub, the deaths were censored by implying that they were merely being held prisoner and the two-part finale was edited into one episode. The second Creator/VizMedia DVD/Blu-Ray set, which includes said finale completely uncut, is still rated PG like the first and gives no warning. Anyone who hasn't seen it before (including those who only saw the "Day of Destiny" [=DiC=] version) is in for quite a surprise.
113** The turning point for the anime was when Nephrite died. Before that it was a mostly straightforward and lighthearted super-heroine show, but that episode made it painfully clear that death was a reality and what the true stakes were (and this scene was ''not'' removed from the 90's dub, so even English-speaking audiences felt the full force of this WhamEpisode). The first season's finale ''much'' further emphasized it, and things were never really the same again for the entire series.
114** The manga is much worse, featuring much more deaths that tend to be rather gory and barely avoiding showing Usagi and Mamoru having sex (fairly common in shoujo manga; from ''Sailor Moon'' to the aforementioned ''Mermaid Melody Pichi Pichi Pitch'', you'll find lots of magical girl fans rereading old favourites and realizing what was going on just offscreen that [[ParentalBonus they didn't realize as kids]]). Then there's ''Manga/CodenameSailorV'', closer to the funnier tone of the 90s anime but still showing the terrifying toll that fighting alone for a year and [[spoiler:killing her true love]] took on Minako, [[StepfordSmiler casting quite the shadow on her]] FunPersonified character in the main manga.
115* ''Manga/SaintSeiya'' was aimed to children in Japan, as well in Europe and South America, having a lot of controversy due the huge amounts of violence, frightening scenes and religious/mythological references.
116* ''Anime/ScienceNinjaTeamGatchaman'' has a gender-bending villain, plenty of violence and death, and (in the first series) TWO attempts to destroy the planet. Its target audience was 6-year-olds.
117* ''Manga/SgtFrog'' is a [[ShonenDemographic shonen]] manga, but it has a very raunchy sense of humor and the female characters are often a source of {{Fanservice}}. The anime is TamerAndChaster as a result of being made more family-friendly, but there's still some mild fanservice left in as a ParentalBonus and Dororo frequently contemplates suicide as a RunningGag.
118* ''Manga/ShinuHodoKimiNoShojoGaHoshii'' (''I Would Die to Have Your First Time'') is filled with adult themes, intense events, and numerous depictions of all manner of sex acts (real and imagined). Despite this, it was published on an online Shounen magazine, meaning it was meant to target boys from 12 to 18, and [[NippleAndDimed deliberately never drew nipples on the girls]] because this was required for the "Shounen" title. Repeat: explicit sexual intercourse was deemed completely acceptable for middle and high school boys, just as long as the women didn't have nipples.
119* ''Manga/ShugoChara'', like many MagicalGirl series, is aimed at young girls and the manga ran in the shoujo magazine ''Magazine/{{Nakayoshi}}''. However, it has a more risque sense of humor compared to other series of its demographic, and one of Amu's love interests is much older than her (Ikuto is in high school, but Amu is in ''elementary school''). There's also the fact that Utau is obsessively in love with Ikuto despite the reveal that [[BigBrotherAttraction she's his younger sister]]. This is likely why the anime [[AmericansHateTingle never really caught on in western countries]], as it was considered too mature for kids ''and'' too immature for teenagers.
120* ''Anime/TheSecretGarden'': The anime was broadcast in several TV stations aimed at children, and they keep in the scene of Archibald attempting suicide. It ends up being a HappilyFailedSuicide, but the fact that the censorship board had no issues with a man holding a gun to his head and nearly pulling the trigger is crazy.
121* ''Manga/SoulEater'' may seem like a Seinen to some people due to its premise and title, but one might be surprised to learn that it originally aired on Monday evenings in Japan, in the same slot where children's shows such as ''WesternAnimation/DoraTheExplorer'', ''Anime/ShimaShimaToraNoShimajiro'' and ''Anime/{{Bakugan}}'' aired.
122* The ''Manga/{{Splatoon}}'' manga manages to be even more "kid-friendly" than [[Franchise/{{Splatoon}} the video game series it's based on]] thanks to lacking the source material's love of {{Surprisingly Creepy Moment}}s and BackstoryHorror. Many of its running gags are of the NakedPeopleAreFunny variety, including the main character pantsing friends and rivals alike (regardless of gender), as well as one-off jokes such as a scene where the main character [[AssShove shoves the barrel of his Splattershot up a rival's ass]], ''and pulls the trigger''. Somehow, it defied NoExportForYou and made it to international shores where it is marketed to the same elementary school demographic as in Japan.
123* ''Manga/SuperMarioBrosMangaMania'' is a children's GagSeries manga based on a children's video game series with content that would not be appropriate for a children's comic in the West, such as VulgarHumor and depictions of [[NakedPeopleAreFunny nudity]].
124** Behold, Kodansha's ''Manga/SuperMario'' manga, which aired in ''Magazine/CoroCoroComic'''s rivals, ''Comic [=BomBom=]'' and ''Deluxe [=BomBom=]'', and has an illustration of Mario's... [[UnusualEuphemism warp pipe]]. That's coupled with the plenty of adult humor the manga already has, some due to ValuesDissonance.
125* One might think that a plot involving three guys who's goal is to hunt down every female elf maiden they can find in a fantasy world in order to strip them all naked - the plot of ''Manga/ThoseWhoHuntElves'', in a nutshell - would be some [[{{Hentai}} porno]] with gratuitous sex and nudity. Actually, it's a comedy satire with barely enough mature content to rate a PG in the United States. (And it ''did'' get that rating, actually. Maybe not ''made'' for kids, but still can make them laugh their butts off.)
126* ''Manga/{{Tomie}}'' was published in ''Monthly Halloween'', a Shoujo Magazine - yes, Tomie, one of Creator/JunjiIto 's most famous manga series famous for its BodyHorror and gratuitous violence and gore. In fact, more than half of Junji Ito's works are shoujo.
127* ''Anime/UminekoWhenTheyCry'' had the same treatment as its sister-series ''Higurashi'', with the manga adaptations running in ''Shōnen Gangan'', ''G-Fantasy'' and ''Gangan Online'' despite having mature themes and being very violent at points. In a weird inversion, the much LighterAndSofter extra stories of ''Umineko Tsubasa'' ran in Big Gangan, a Seinen magazine.
128* ''Anime/YokaiWatch'' has some really disturbing backstories for the characters, has a lot of {{demographically inappropriate humour}} (even in the English dub), and has occasional swearing, despite it being aimed at kids ages 3-10.
129* ''Franchise/YuGiOh'' itself has always been this, but its [[Anime/YuGiOhArcV fifth series]] takes it up a notch. Lets see, we have: an interdimensional war, a genocide, {{Child Soldiers}}, who, willingly or not, fight in the war, complete with a broad range of brutality each soldier shows in battle; from the reluctant wobble who doesn't want to hurt anyone to the psychopathic sadist who takes pleasure in tormenting others. The main protagonists philosophies are repeatedly proven false, and his character gets thoroughly deconstructed. Then there's the Akaba family, which consists of: a child with possible autism, who sees the world as a grey place and strives to become a copy of his [[spoiler: adopted]] brother [[spoiler: and grew up in a war zone]], an Abusive Mama who uses said child as a test-subject for some unknown project, her other son, who is a complete MagnificentBastard and can at best be called ALighterShadeOfGrey, and the father himself who began the interdimensional war. We also have a lot of crazy faces from everybody, starting with the protagonist [[http://kh13.com/forum/uploads/profile/photo-45471.jpg?_r=1431136573 (Just Look)]] and ending with minors, traitors, {{Heroic BSOD}}s, etc. The second season introduces huge economical and social inequality, the causes of said inequality being supported by many of its victims, a prison mini-arc, slavery being publicly accepted, and more psychological turmoil. In case it wasn't clear, this show also includes some HumansAreBastards and BlackAndGrayMorality. Yes, a children’s anime indeed.
130* ''Manga/YuYuHakusho'' ran in Weekly Shonen Jump, a magazine aimed at young audiences, yet it features some extremely bloody violence, and one of the three kings, Mukuro, was raped. The English dub of the anime also featured tons of profanity, and yet it aired on Cartoon Network.
131* ''Manga/ZekkyouGakkyuu'' is a shoujo horror anthology aimed at ''elementary and middle-school girls.'' Stories in said anthology feature murder, stalking, mentions of rape, torture, grade-school girls planning to kill classmates [[DisproportionateRetribution over petty trifles...]] Oh, and AnyoneCanDie and most of the stories contain [[DownerEnding Downer Endings]], and aren't shy about showing the victim's blood pooling on the floor. That's not even getting into the narrator's backstory: being bullied so badly she committed murder-suicide by blowing up both herself and the bullies, and now wanders the town as a disembodied, ghostly torso.
132** However, due to complaints sent in by parents, the stories have altered a little bit. They still contain the same horrible moments of intense bullying, suicide and implied torture of and to ''elementary and middle-school girls'', but several of the stories tend to end on [[HappyEnding happier]] notes than before.
133* Blockbuster Video once had a point where they rated every anime "Youth Restricted Viewing", even relatively kid-friendly titles like ''Anime/TenchiUniverse'', ''Anime/KOBeast'', every anime that wasn't ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries''. However, Blockbuster's system for the "Youth Restricted Viewing" rating was all messed up; on your account, you either had to allow it all or none of it. So, you either could have none of the anime section, or you could have all of it, including the hentai, with the same rating, showing no difference between the two. You could end up with a "Youth Restricted Viewing" title that had a "dammit" or two and maybe a puddle of blood, or you could end up with an also "Youth Restricted Viewing" hentai that has everything but the kitchen sink in it, with no warning. A rather difficult system to deal with if you had a young kid into anime.
134* Creator/{{CLAMP}} is good at this. Case in point being ''Manga/TsubasaReservoirChronicle'' which starts off as a fluffy GottaCatchEmAll romantic comedy drama. Later you can just substitute "fluffy" and "comedy" with "violent" and "depressing" and you're all set.
135* Many works of Creator/GoNagai could be considered way too frightening and violent to be for children, but are aimed to children in Japan (Like for example: ''Manga/DororonEnmaKun'' and ''Anime/MazingerZ''.)
136* Some of Creator/OsamuTezuka's {{anime}} and manga aimed at children/young teens tend to fall under this. The first episode of ''Manga/KimbaTheWhiteLion'' for example can be summed up as one massive BreakTheCutie for the eponymous character, and [[DownerEnding the ending for the manga and movie is one of the most infamous endings in the industry]].
137* Creator/YoshiyukiTomino's early career is littered with examples of shows that were marketed to kids but were ''not'' so kid-friendly in their content:
138** ''Anime/{{Zambot 3}}'', which earned him the nickname "Kill 'Em All Tomino", looks like a typical Saturday Morning cartoon, with a bunch a school age kids saving the day with a colourful CombiningMecha, but quickly turns into something much darker; the property damage and civilian casualties are depicted much more realistically than in the typical Super Robot show, the public turns against the kids and tries to murder them several times when it becomes apparent that they're the whole reason Earth is getting attacked in the first place, and most of the main characters die a bloody death in the finale.
139** The original ''Anime/MobileSuitGundam'' had a similar effect at the time it first appeared, as the term RealRobot hadn't been invented yet and HumongousMecha were still widely considered the stuff of children's programming, Mr. Tomino's earlier work not withstanding.
140** And let's not even mention ''Triton Of The Sea'' or ''Anime/SpaceRunawayIdeon''...
141** Played with hilariously in ''Manga/GundamSousei'' with regards to ''[[Anime/SpaceRunawayIdeon Ideon's]]'' conception [[spoiler:and cancellation]].
142* A lot of {{Kodomomuke}} series have an issue where fans realize they're for children, but they think they're for older children than intended. Despite popular belief, works such as ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'', ''Manga/PokemonAdventures'', ''Franchise/{{Beyblade}}'', ''Anime/PowerpuffGirlsZ'', and ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'' are not {{Shonen|Demographic}} or {{Shoujo|Demographic}}, but are in fact {{Kodomo|muke}}. ValuesDissonance also hits these series as some are [[AudienceShift treated as]] shounen and shoujo in certain regions.
143** In general, a lot of Kodomomuke manga (especially those made before the late 2000s) can get incredibly raunchy and violent despite being aimed for kids, sometimes rivaling shonen manga. Comic Bon Bon, a now-defunct comic magazine, was the most notorious for this for having fanservice in a lot their series, and also being more targeted towards otaku than actual children. Part of this is why most of them have not been licensed in English.
144* The earlier chapters of ''Manga/TheKurosagiCorpseDeliveryService'' are serialized in ''Shonen Ace'' despite the fact that it features graphic deaths and nudity. The later chapters are run in a Seinen magazine, but still.
145* Aside from stuff published in hentai magazines, Satoshi Urushihara's works range from overly ecchi to borderline hardcore porn. They all ran in either technically Shonen or at least mixed demographic (shonen-seinen) magazines, however.

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