Home Music Why yutori’s “Ending Theme” Is the Secret Weapon of Witch Watch’s Second Cour
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Why yutori’s “Ending Theme” Is the Secret Weapon of Witch Watch’s Second Cour

Japanese band yutori steps into the magical realm with their haunting ending theme for Witch Watch—and their choice signals something far more enigmatic than melody. What deeper resonance lies beneath the music?

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The screen fades, and the world of Witch Watch lingers in the hush left by yutori’s ending theme—“Tsuki to Watashi no Kakurenbo”. It’s not just song by a new band; it’s a tonal shift, an emotional pivot that wouldn’t feel out of place in a dream—or a déjà vu. What we hear isn’t lighthearted fantasy; it’s a question draped in moonlight, asking: what happens after magic ends?

yutori—no longer just a name whispered among Tokyo’s indie circuits—has quietly risen to prominence. Their theme for Witch Watch Cour 2 isn’t the glossy pop we expect; instead, it’s a subtle echo of longing, a melodic counterpoint to the witch-and-ogre comedy that preceded it. The music teases as much as it soothes, channeling the show’s contradictions—and perhaps revealing what lies beneath its whimsical surface.


Where Whimsy Meets the Unspoken

Anime ending themes are often afterthoughts—pleasant fades as credits roll. This one demands attention. With hushed vocals mingling nostalgia and melancholy, yutori crafts a lingering moment that makes viewers pause—and wonder. Is this sadness or anticipation? Comfort or warning? The ambiguity lingers, as if Nico and Morihito’s story isn’t closing a chapter—it’s hinting at pages still unread.

Given their reputation in My Hero Academia: Vigilantes—where they delivered a pulse-driving closing track—the band was already familiar with emotional gravity. Now, with Witch Watch, they show restraint layered with intensity. Do they push the narrative forward—or merely reflect its hidden depth?


When the Ending Resonates Like Revelation

It’s telling that yutori was entrusted with the closing chapter of Cour 2: a season pivot with new characters, transformations, and a darker prophecy. Their music aligns with that shift—less overt and more emblematic of internal turmoil than external spectacle. Their evolution from indie rock rebels to anime’s emotional confidants suggests that storytelling through sound can carry as much weight as animation frames.

Their path—from festival stages to anime credits—is unfolding before us. Yet, the most compelling question isn’t where they came from, but where they are going. If a song can redefine tone, can an artist redefine expectations?


The ending theme ends—but its resonance remains. As Witch Watch evolves, yutori’s song hangs in the air like a veiled promise. It’s not goodbye—it’s a secret left unsaid.

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