Published: May 2026 | Category: News | Reading Time: 7 min
Every single year since 2007, millions of Death Note fans have typed the same question into Google: Death Note Season 2. And every single year, the answer has been the same — not yet. Now in 2026, with Death Note experiencing one of its biggest cultural comebacks in years thanks to the upcoming Musical in London and the ongoing Netflix series drama, the question is louder than ever. Is a Death Note anime continuation finally on the horizon? Or are fans condemned to wait forever?
Here is the complete, honest, brutally detailed breakdown of everything we know about Death Note Season 2 in 2026 — including the new manga material that could make it possible, what Madhouse has actually said, and whether hope is genuinely justified or just a painful fantasy.
Why Death Note Season 2 Is the Most Searched Anime Question of 2026
Before diving into the facts, it is worth understanding why Death Note Season 2 refuses to leave the conversation even nearly two decades after the original anime ended.
The 37-episode Death Note anime, produced by Madhouse and directed by Tetsurō Araki, aired from October 2006 to June 2007. It adapted the entire original manga by Tsugumi Ohba and Takeshi Obata — all 108 chapters across 12 volumes. The anime ended with the death of Light Yagami, a conclusion that is simultaneously satisfying and devastating enough to leave fans in a permanent state of wanting more.
The problem — and the reason Death Note Season 2 has never happened — is a fundamental one: the original story is complete. The anime told everything the manga had to tell. There is no leftover source material from the original 12-volume run sitting in a vault somewhere, waiting to be animated. Light’s story began and ended. L’s story began and ended. The Death Note returned to the Shinigami realm.
As of 2026, there has been no official confirmation of a second anime season from either Madhouse or the publisher Shueisha, and no announcement has been made. This is the brutal baseline reality that every Death Note anime continuation discussion has to start from.

The New Manga Material That Could Change Everything
Here is where things get genuinely interesting for fans hoping for a Death Note sequel.
The original manga concluded in 2006, but Tsugumi Ohba has not entirely left the Death Note universe since then. Two significant pieces of new material exist that the anime has never touched:
The 2008 One-Shot: C-Kira
Shortly after the original manga ended, a one-shot chapter titled C-Kira was published in Weekly Shōnen Jump on February 9, 2008. Set two years after the manga’s epilogue, this chapter introduces a new Kira — a copycat who obtains a Death Note — and shows how the surviving characters respond to this new threat. The chapter shows the Death Note once again appearing in the human world, this time in the hands of a new user, and even Ryuk the Shinigami returns.
This is exactly the kind of material that could serve as the foundation of a Death Note Season 2 — a fresh protagonist, Ryuk back in play, and the world still grappling with Kira’s legacy.
The 2020 Special One-Shot: a-Kira
The more significant piece of new material is the Death Note: Special One-Shot chapter published in Jump SQ in February 2020. This story takes place many years after the original events and introduces a student named Minoru Tanaka as a new Death Note holder. The story was warmly received by fans and immediately reignited serious discussions about a possible second season.
The a-Kira story is particularly interesting because it does something the original manga deliberately avoided — it introduces a Death Note user who has a completely different philosophy and approach to the notebook than Light Yagami. This creates narrative space for a Death Note anime continuation that could feel genuinely fresh rather than like a lesser retread of the original.
If Death Note Season 2 were ever to happen, the 2020 one-shot chapter would be the most likely starting point for the new story.
What Madhouse Has Actually Said About Death Note Season 2
This is the section that will disappoint fans the most, because the answer is essentially nothing.
There have been no official announcements from Madhouse studio or the series creators regarding a direct sequel to the original anime. The animation studio that brought Death Note to life in 2006 has moved on to other projects — their recent slate includes Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End and other new productions that have no connection to Death Note.
Despite Death Note’s continued massive popularity and the existence of one-shot manga chapters that could serve as source material, a sequel series has not been announced by Madhouse or by original creator Tsugumi Ohba.
The silence is not necessarily permanent — it simply reflects the current reality. Studios do revisit beloved properties years and even decades after they originally aired. Bleach: Thousand-Year Blood War returned after a decade of absence. Shaman King got a complete remake. The precedent for beloved anime returning after long gaps absolutely exists in the industry.
But as of May 2026, there is no Death Note Season 2 in active development, no production announcement, and no confirmed release date. Anyone claiming otherwise is speculating — or spreading misinformation.
Three Realistic Scenarios for a Death Note Anime Continuation
While no announcement exists, there are three genuinely realistic paths through which a Death Note sequel could emerge:
Scenario 1: OVA Adaptation of the One-Shot Chapters
This is the most likely and most achievable path. Rather than committing to a full second season, Madhouse or another studio could produce a single OVA episode — or a short series of OVAs — adapting the C-Kira and a-Kira one-shot chapters. This approach would require significantly less investment than a full Death Note Season 2 while still giving fans new animated Death Note content.
The success of the 2026 Death Note Musical revival in London, and the ongoing cultural conversation around the Netflix series, suggests that commercial interest in new Death Note content is very much alive. An OVA would be a low-risk way for a studio to test the appetite for more animated Death Note.
Scenario 2: A Full Remake of the Original Series
Rather than a Death Note anime continuation in the traditional sense, some fans have speculated that the most likely next animated Death Note project could be a full remake of the original 37 episodes — with updated animation quality, a new creative team, and potentially a different ending that stays closer to the manga’s final chapter.
This approach has worked successfully for other classic anime — Hunter x Hunter received a highly praised complete remake in 2011, years after the original. A Death Note remake produced at 2026 animation standards, with the kind of budget and quality that the franchise deserves, would be a genuinely exciting project.
Scenario 3: A Brand New Anime Original Story
The most ambitious and most uncertain scenario is a completely original Death Note anime sequel — a story set in the Death Note world but not directly adapting any existing manga. This would require Tsugumi Ohba and Takeshi Obata to be involved in developing new narrative material, which is a significant ask given that both creators have been focused on other projects since Death Note concluded.
However, the massive financial incentive that a high-quality new Death Note Season 2 would generate cannot be ignored. Death Note is one of the highest-selling manga franchises in history, with over 30 million copies sold worldwide. The commercial case for bringing it back in anime form has never been stronger.

The Liar Game Connection: Madhouse Is Already Making Death Note’s Successor
Here is a fascinating detail that many fans have missed: Madhouse — the exact same animation studio that produced the original Death Note anime — is currently producing the Liar Game anime, set to debut in 2026. Liar Game is a psychological thriller manga that directly echoes Death Note’s themes, featuring highly intelligent characters competing in high-stakes games of deception and strategy.
The fact that Madhouse chose Liar Game as a project in 2026 tells us something important: the studio has not lost interest in the psychological thriller genre that Death Note defined. They are actively working in that space right now. Whether this makes a future Death Note anime continuation from Madhouse more or less likely is debatable — but it certainly shows the studio has not abandoned the type of storytelling that made Death Note so special.
Should Death Note Fans Be Hopeful or Realistic in 2026?
The honest answer is: cautiously realistic, with a genuine sliver of hope.
The case for hope is real. Death Note has never been more culturally relevant. The 2026 Musical revival at London’s Barbican Theatre is sold out. The Death Note Netflix series — despite its uncertain status following the Duffer Brothers’ departure — has kept the franchise in mainstream entertainment conversation. Google Trends data consistently shows Death Note Season 2 as one of the most searched anime-related terms globally, year after year. The commercial incentive for a new animated Death Note project is enormous.
The case for realism is equally real. Until a production is officially confirmed, Death Note Season 2 remains a dream — not a fact. The original story concluded perfectly. A poorly executed continuation could damage the legacy of one of anime’s greatest achievements. And neither Madhouse nor Shueisha have given any indication that an announcement is coming.
The most likely outcome in the near term is not a full Death Note Season 2 — but rather an OVA or short animated adaptation of the one-shot chapters that would serve as a bridge between the completed original story and whatever comes next.
In the meantime, the Death Note universe in 2026 is genuinely rich with new content: the Musical in London, the ongoing Netflix series situation, and the Liar Game anime from Madhouse. For Death Note fans, there has never been more to engage with — even without a confirmed Death Note anime continuation.
Stay tuned to Manga-Hive for all updates on Death Note Season 2, the Death Note sequel situation, and everything else happening in the Death Note world in 2026. When Madhouse or Shueisha makes an announcement of Death Note Season 2, we will have it first.
