Am I Actually the Strongest?
実は俺、最強でした? (Jitsu wa Ore, Saikyou deshita?)
- Adventure
- Fantasy
- Isekai
- Reincarnation
- Episodes
- 12
- Duration
- 23 min per ep
- Aired
- Jul 2, 2023 to Oct 1, 2023
- Status
- Finished Airing
Synopsis
A 20-year-old shut-in is whisked away from his apartment and brought before a goddess, who grants him a fresh start in another world—along with absurdly powerful magic. Reborn as Prince Reinhardt, he’s judged to be only Level 2 and is cast aside by his royal parents in the forest. Taking the name Haruto, he survives thanks to an unexpected ally: Flay, a Flame Fenrir who pledges herself to him. Soon after, Gold Zenfis finds the pair and brings Haruto into his own household.
Nine years later, Haruto’s barrier magic has grown even more overwhelming, but he’d rather keep it hidden and let everyone think he’s harmless. That quiet plan starts to unravel when his younger sister, Charlotte, learns the truth, and danger begins to circle the Zenfis family. With unrest brewing in the kingdom, Haruto’s dream of staying indoors and watching anime is threatened—forcing him to decide how far he’ll go to protect the home that finally accepted him.
Otaku Consensus
Am I Actually the Strongest? lands as comfort-food isekai: Takashi Naoya’s relaxed direction and Tatsuya Takahashi’s series composition make the comedy, family-life beats, demons, royal drama, and school-life material feel smoother than the title’s generic power-fantasy hook suggests. The recurring criticism is equally clear: Staple Entertainment’s production is decent rather than distinctive, and the anime is widely treated as a pleasant time-filler that rarely challenges or reinvents its genre.
Why You Should Watch
Watch Am I Actually the Strongest? if you want an overpowered isekai that treats absurd strength as a social inconvenience rather than a heroic destiny. It scratches a lighter version of the itch served by In Another World with My Smartphone and the low-effort-secret-identity comedy of The Eminence in Shadow, but with more family-life warmth and less aggressive parody. The appeal is not tactical battles or deep worldbuilding; it is the rhythm of a NEET-minded protagonist trying to stay invisible while the cast keeps pulling him into royal politics, demon trouble, and school-life complications. Viewers who like relaxed pacing, kemonomimi companion energy, barrier-magic gimmicks, and a show that knows it is a laid-back genre snack will get the most out of it.
Key Characters
- HHaruto Zenfis
Haruto is most interesting as a power-fantasy lead whose real motivation is avoidance, making social attention and responsibility feel like bigger threats than combat.
- FFlay
Flay gives the series its strongest kemonomimi-monster-companion flavor, balancing fierce loyalty with the kind of exaggerated presence that keeps the comedy from becoming purely domestic.
- CCharlotte
Charlotte turns Haruto’s secrecy into a recurring family-life and superhero-style gag, which is why she often functions as the show’s energy source rather than just a younger-sister figure.
- GGold Zenfis
Gold Zenfis anchors the warmer side of the anime, giving the Zenfis household a tone of acceptance that contrasts with the harsher royal-family material.
What Makes It Stand Out
- 1
Staple Entertainment’s 12-episode adaptation aired as a single cour from July 2 to October 1, 2023, giving the series a compact structure rather than the stretched pacing common to longer fantasy adaptations.
- 2
The anime’s identity is closer to relaxed comedy than high-stakes adventure; web reviews repeatedly highlight its easygoing tone, smooth mixture of royal drama, demons, and school life, and value as a low-pressure watch.
- 3
Barrier magic is the defining power gimmick, shifting the overpowered-protagonist formula away from pure attack spells and toward concealment, protection, and secret-identity comedy.
- 4
The AniList tag profile is unusually telling: Reincarnation at 98%, Magic at 96%, Kemonomimi at 85%, Family Life at 80%, and Superhero at 62% place it at the intersection of isekai wish fulfillment, domestic warmth, and masked-power antics.
- 5
The production’s character pipeline is clearly separated: Ai Takahashi provided the original character designs, Shouko Yasuda handled the anime character designs, and Taeko Ougi is credited for both sub character design and prop design.
Fun Facts & Trivia
- Fun fact 1
- The anime is based on an original story by Sai Sumimori, with Ai Takahashi credited for the original character design before the TV staff adapted the look for animation.
- Fun fact 2
- Takashi Naoya directed the series, with Matsuo Asami as assistant director and Tatsuya Takahashi handling series composition, a staff setup that matches the show’s review-noted emphasis on relaxed pacing over intensity.
- Fun fact 3
- Reception is notably consistent across major databases: MyAnimeList lists it at 6.46/10 from 102,428 votes, while AniList reports a 63/100 score and 1,456 favourites.
- Fun fact 4
- Taeko Ougi held two design roles on the production, covering both sub character design and prop design, which is a useful credit to notice in a show with many fantasy-world and household details.
- Fun fact 5
- Its MAL popularity rank of #1321 is much stronger than its MAL score rank of #8201, showing that the series reached a sizable isekai audience even while critical enthusiasm stayed modest.
Studios
- Staple Entertainment






