Stop losing your place in a 200-episode series or forgetting the title of a show you loved. An anime tracker is the essential second brain for organizing your watch history, discovering new favorites, and turning a passive activity into a real hobby.
You know the feeling. You’re three seasons deep into some sprawling shonen epic, the names of side characters are blurring together, and you can’t remember if you watched episode 57 or 75 of that one isekai from two years ago. Your spreadsheet is a mess. Your notes app is a graveyard of half-remembered titles.
This is the point where you need an app.
Forgetting your progress in a 200-episode series is one thing. My breaking point came on a Tuesday at 4:17 PM. I was trying to recommend a beautifully animated, single-season slice-of-life series to a friend. I could picture the art style, the main character's weird cat, everything... except the title. Gone. Vanished. My brain, stuffed with a decade of anime, had staged a revolt. I spent the next hour searching "anime with orange cat that talks" while my 2011 Honda Civic baked in the parking lot.
That's when I got serious about tracking.
An anime tracker is your second brain. It’s the tool that saves you from the "what episode was I on?" vortex and helps you find new shows based on what you already love.
The biggest names are basically institutions: MyAnimeList (MAL) and AniList. Think of them as the Coke and Pepsi of anime tracking. They both have huge databases and active communities, and you can log everything from "Currently Watching" to "Dropped."
Then you have the trackers that want to do more than just anime.
The website is one thing. But the mobile experience is where a tracker becomes part of your routine. Most of us aren't updating a list on a desktop. We're finishing an episode on the couch and want to mark it "watched" immediately.
A lot of third-party apps plug into MAL or AniList. This means you can get a much better interface that's still powered by those huge databases. Apps like ManGo and MyAniList have clean designs for Apple devices, and there are great alternatives for Android, too. It's worth trying a few to see which one sticks.
Using a tracker consistently does more than keep you organized. It builds a habit. You see streaks for how many days in a row you've watched something, and you get reminders when new episodes air. It makes the whole thing feel more like a game. Some apps even let you set up focus sessions to block out distractions while you watch.
It turns watching anime from a passive activity into a real hobby. You’re building a library that reflects your taste—a personal database of stories that have stuck with you. And the next time a friend asks for a recommendation, you won't be stuck trying to remember the name of that show with the talking cat.
Need to make money *now*? A new class of gig apps connects you with on-demand hourly shifts in warehousing, hospitality, and skilled trades, letting you work today and get paid tomorrow.
The era of asking for a paper application is over; the right app on your phone is the key to cutting through the noise and finding local jobs hiring right now. We break down the essential apps you need, from industry giants to niche specialists, to land your next gig.
Your job search is now on your phone, but endlessly applying is a losing game. Win by mastering the heavyweight apps and using specialized platforms to find the right roles faster.
Tracking your Jeep is more than watching a dot on a map. We break down the best apps for adventure, security, and maintenance so you can find the right tool for your rig.
Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.
Get it on Play Store