Today on the show I’m talking about one of the calmest, strangest, and most quietly beautiful OVAs from the late 90s: Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou.
This is one of those anime that almost feels like it exists outside of time. It’s set in a future where the world hasn’t ended with explosions or war—civilization has just slowly faded. The sea levels are rising, cities are disappearing, and the few people left spend their days living simple lives in a quieter world.
At the center of the story is Alpha, an android who runs a small countryside café. Most of the series is just her existing in that space—serving coffee, traveling around the nearby countryside, and interacting with a handful of recurring characters who drift in and out of her life.
And that’s really the magic of Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou. It’s not a plot-heavy show. It’s an atmosphere piece. The whole thing feels soft, calm, and reflective in a way that’s very characteristic of iyashikei anime, the kind of shows that are meant to feel restorative or meditative.
But the OVA also has these little odd details that make the world feel mysterious. There’s a moment where you notice Alpha casually has a gun sitting on her side table like it’s the most normal thing in the world. There’s a strange robot data-transfer scene that’s… let’s just say very weirdly designed. And the second episode opens with Alpha literally getting struck by lightning, which leads to some thoughtful scenes with the local doctor and Shinji.
None of it feels dramatic in the usual anime sense. Instead, it all contributes to this quiet sense that the world is slowly changing and that Alpha is just patiently witnessing it.
That’s why Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou has built such a strong cult following over the years. It captures something rare in science fiction: a post-apocalyptic setting that isn’t bleak. Instead of focusing on survival or rebuilding civilization, it focuses on the beauty of small everyday moments in a world that’s gently winding down.
In this episode, I’m digging into the OVA itself, the atmosphere it creates, and why this tiny two-episode adaptation has remained such an influential piece of iyashikei anime.
If you’ve never seen it before, it’s a fascinating little time capsule from the late-90s OVA era—and a reminder that sometimes the quietest anime can leave the strongest impression.
watch the OVA:
https://youtu.be/cUGFCGzX9SA?si=mjuomUHj_zcTxguB
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