Violet Evergarden CMs

ヴァイオレット・エヴァーガーデン

8.0(4,386)
MAL Score
Popularity #6953
  • Drama
Episodes
2
Status
Finished Airing

Synopsis

Violet Evergarden CMs consists of a series of captivating promotional trailers that were unveiled on YouTube to herald the adaptation of the beloved anime. Each trailer showcases stunning, original animation that was not included in the final series, providing a unique glimpse into the world and themes of the story.

These special clips serve to deepen the viewer's connection to the narrative and its emotional depth, highlighting the poignant journey of the protagonist. With beautifully crafted visuals, they invite audiences to immerse themselves in the rich atmosphere of Violet Evergarden, setting the stage for the touching exploration of love, loss, and the search for purpose.

Otaku Consensus

Violet Evergarden CMs is valued less as conventional viewing and more as a precision-crafted Kyoto Animation showcase, with Taichi Ishidate’s storyboards and Akiko Takase’s character supervision giving the two advertisements a polish that outclasses most promotional material. Its strong MAL and AniList scores reflect fan appreciation for the original animation and tonal clarity, while the main criticism is unavoidable: at only two promotional clips, it offers atmosphere and craft rather than a self-sufficient dramatic experience.

Why You Should Watch

Watch Violet Evergarden CMs if you want a concentrated look at Kyoto Animation’s production values without committing to a full rewatch. These two YouTube promotional pieces contain original animation not carried into the final TV series, so they function as a small archive of alternate visual thinking around Violet Evergarden rather than recycled marketing footage. The appeal is closest to studying a high-end key visual come to life: Taichi Ishidate’s boards, Akiko Takase’s character control, and Yuuka Yoneda’s color design compress the franchise’s emotional register into brief, carefully paced images. If you admire the tactile elegance of Violet Evergarden or the controlled visual storytelling of KyoAni works like Liz and the Blue Bird, this scratches the same craft-first itch with almost no narrative overhead.

Key Characters

  • V
    Violet Evergarden

    Violet is treated here as the franchise’s emotional and visual anchor, a character whose posture, framing, and stillness carry more weight than dialogue in this promotional format.

What Makes It Stand Out

  • 1

    The two clips were released as YouTube promotional trailers and include original animation that was not used in the finished TV series, making them relevant even for viewers who already know the main anime.

  • 2

    Both episodes were storyboarded by series director Taichi Ishidate, giving the CMs a direct line to the adaptation’s core visual identity rather than outsourcing the campaign’s tone to a separate promo unit.

  • 3

    Akiko Takase, the character designer for Violet Evergarden, also served as animation director on both episodes, which helps explain why the designs retain the same polished line control associated with the main production.

  • 4

    The key animation credits are unusually notable for such short promotional works: Yoshiji Kigami worked on both episodes, while Ishidate and Haruka Fujita contributed key animation to episode 2 and Kouhei Okamura and Nami Iwasaki to episode 1.

  • 5

    Its reception is niche but strong: despite a MAL popularity rank of #6953, it holds a 7.97/10 from 4,386 MAL votes and an 80/100 AniList score, suggesting it is mostly sought out by committed Violet Evergarden and Kyoto Animation followers.

Fun Facts & Trivia

Fun fact 1
Taichi Ishidate is credited three ways on the CMs: director of the project, storyboard artist for both episodes, and key animator on episode 2.
Fun fact 2
Akiko Takase’s dual role as character designer and animation director on both clips makes the CMs a compact example of her direct influence over Violet’s screen presence.
Fun fact 3
Yuuka Yoneda is credited for color design, an especially important role for promotional animation built to communicate mood quickly in a very short runtime.
Fun fact 4
AniList categorizes the work heavily under Advertisement at 80% and Female Protagonist at 79%, which accurately reflects its identity as a character-centered promotional artifact rather than a normal OVA or special episode.
Fun fact 5
The CMs are listed as a finished two-episode Kyoto Animation production, but their purpose was to herald the anime adaptation rather than expand it with a separate story arc.

Studios

  • Kyoto Animation

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