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MyAnimeList Is Showing Its Age — Here Are the Platforms That Have Moved On

If you have been using MyAnimeList for any length of time, you already know the feeling. You search for a series you just finished, try to update your watchlist, and end up wrestling with a cluttered interface that looks like it has not seen a meaningful redesign since the mid-2000s. No shade to what MAL built — for its era, it was genuinely impressive. But anime culture has grown dramatically, the global audience has expanded beyond anything the original developers could have anticipated, and the tools people use to engage with that culture have a responsibility to grow with it. MAL, for the most part, has not kept pace.

This is not just a surface-level design complaint. It runs deeper than that. The discovery features are weak. The social layer feels frozen in time. Mobile usability is an afterthought. And for newcomers arriving from polished apps in every other corner of their digital lives, MAL can feel like stepping into a waiting room that nobody has renovated in fifteen years.

The good news is that several platforms have quietly — and in some cases very publicly — filled that gap. Below is an honest look at what is out there, why real users are making the switch, and which MAL alternative might actually suit how you watch anime.


Why MAL Feels Outdated in 2025 (And What Users Are Saying)

Before diving into the best MyAnimeList alternatives, it is worth spelling out the specific problems, because "it feels old" is a symptom, not a critique.

The interface is genuinely difficult to navigate for new users. The profile and list pages are dense with information presented in ways that prioritise quantity over clarity. For power users who have been there for years, familiarity makes it manageable. For anyone newer, it is overwhelming and confusing from the very first session.

Anime discovery tools are almost nonexistent on MAL.
The platform can tell you what is popular and what is airing this season. It cannot meaningfully help you find your next favourite show based on mood, niche genre tags, pacing preferences, or what people with genuinely similar taste are currently watching. That kind of personalised recommendation has become standard everywhere else.

"Community and social features are stuck in an earlier internet."Forums, clubs, and profile pages have not evolved in any meaningful direction. Compared to platforms that have integrated modern social features, MAL's community layer feels like a bulletin board long after everyone else moved to dynamic, real-time conversation spaces.

"The mobile app experience is consistently poor." The official app has been criticised widely for being slow and feature-incomplete. Third-party apps have stepped in to paper over the cracks, but that is itself a sign that the core product is not meeting the needs of a primarily mobile audience.

None of this makes MAL worthless. Its database is enormous and reasonably accurate. Its user scores carry real cultural weight in the anime community. But relying on it as your primary hub for engaging with anime has real costs in 2025, and more people are starting to recognise that.


  1. AniList — The Best Direct MyAnimeList Alternative for Most People

If you want the closest thing to a MAL replacement without rethinking how you track anime, AniList is the first recommendation for good reason. It covers the same core function — maintaining a watchlist, scoring shows, tracking progress through a series — but does it with a UI that actually feels designed for contemporary use.

Profile pages are clean and visually appealing. The list editor is fast and responds the way you expect it to. There is robust support for custom lists, so you can organise your watching history the way your own brain works rather than fitting into a rigid, one-size-fits-all structure. The social features are meaningfully better too, with activity feeds, status updates, and a notification system that is actually readable.

AniList also maintains a well-documented public API, which means the developer community around it is genuinely active. A large number of third-party tools connect to AniList data, giving you flexibility and integration options that MAL simply no longer provides.

Where it still falls short: the recommendation and discovery layer remains relatively thin. AniList shows you what is trending among people you follow, which is useful, but it does not yet offer the kind of deep taste-matching that would make it a complete discovery engine for anime fans who want help finding hidden gems.


  1. AniTroves — The Best Anime Discovery Platform for Finding Hidden Gems

This is where the conversation gets genuinely interesting. "AniTroves.com" approaches the problem from a completely different angle. Where MAL and AniList are fundamentally databases that you interact with, AniTroves is designed around helping you find things you did not know you were looking for — making it one of the strongest dedicated anime recommendation sites currently available.

The platform leans into curated collections, mood-based browsing, and thematic groupings that go well beyond the standard genre tags every other site uses. Instead of scrolling through a flat list of Action titles ranked by aggregate score, you might move through something like slow-burn psychological thrillers with unreliable narrators or found-family stories built around unconventional settings. These are not algorithmic recommendations in the cold, statistical sense — they feel more like suggestions from someone who actually watches anime and thinks carefully about what makes it work.

The interface is modern and uncluttered. Pages load quickly. It works well on mobile without requiring a dedicated app download.

For users who feel like their MAL list has become a chore to maintain rather than an enjoyable part of their hobby, AniTroves offers a genuinely different relationship with the content. The emphasis is on engagement and enthusiasm rather than completionism, which makes it an excellent fit for casual and mid-level fans who want help deciding what to watch next rather than a comprehensive log of everything they have ever seen.


  1. Using AniTroves Alongside a Tracker — A Two-Platform Workflow That Actually Works

It is also worth acknowledging that you do not necessarily have to choose one platform and abandon everything else. Many people are settling into a practical two-platform workflow: using AniList or Kitsu for formal list management and progress logging, while using "AniTroves" as their primary browsing and discovery environment.

This split makes real sense. List tracking and content discovery are genuinely different tasks that require different design priorities, and a platform optimised for one is not always the best at the other. AniTroves has leaned deliberately into the discovery niche, and for those moments when you have a free evening and genuinely cannot decide what to watch, it outperforms anything MAL currently offers.


  1. Kitsu — The Best MAL Alternative for Socially Connected Anime Fans

Kitsu has been around long enough to have built a loyal and active user base, and its particular strength is in the social dimension of anime fandom. If watching anime for you is partly about community — reacting to episodes alongside others, staying connected to what your friends are watching, sharing recommendations through conversation rather than just list comparisons — Kitsu has thought about that experience more carefully than most of its competitors.

Profile pages are genuinely personalised and visually appealing. The feed-based social layer keeps you connected to your network's activity without requiring you to actively check individual profiles. There is also a consistently updated mobile app that handles the basics well without the frustrations that come with MAL's official app.

The honest trade-off is that Kitsu's database, while solid for mainstream content, is not as comprehensive as MAL's at the edges. If you need to track obscure OVAs, older catalogue titles, or every entry in a long franchise's extended media, you may encounter gaps that require cross-referencing elsewhere.


  1. Annict — For Viewers Who Want Granular Episode-Level Tracking

Annict is a lesser-known platform that has earned a dedicated following among more detail-oriented anime viewers. It is particularly strong at granular tracking — logging individual episodes rather than just series completion, recording exactly when you watched something, and building a detailed picture of your viewing patterns over time.

If you are the kind of viewer who finds MAL's tracking too coarse and wants something closer to what Letterboxd does for film — where every watch is a distinct, datestamped event — Annict is a serious option worth exploring. The interface is clean, the data model is more expressive than any mainstream alternative, and it integrates well with other tools.

It is primarily Japanese-language in its community-facing features, which creates a barrier for some users, but the core tracking functionality is fully accessible regardless of language background.


The Bottom Line: Is It Time to Leave MyAnimeList?

MyAnimeList is not disappearing. Its scale means it retains cultural relevance even as individual users migrate to better tools. Show scores on MAL still carry weight in community discussions. The underlying database, even when the front-end frustrates, remains a genuine resource for looking things up.

But its position as the unchallenged default home for serious anime engagement is clearly over. The platforms covered above — AniList for general list tracking, AniTroves for discovery and browsing, Kitsu for community-first watching, and Annict for granular logging — have collectively demonstrated that this space has real room for better ideas and better execution.

The anime audience deserves platforms that match the craft and ambition of the content they love. In 2025, those platforms exist. Whether you do a full migration or simply start using a second platform for specific purposes, broadening beyond MAL is genuinely worth the effort.


The platforms mentioned in this article are independent services. This piece reflects an editorial assessment based on usability, feature sets, and community feedback gathered across multiple sources.

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