Call of the Night Season 2 Hindi Subbed [09/12] | Yofukashi no Uta 2 Hindi Sub

Poster for Yofukashi no Uta Season 2 By ANiMExSUB.iN

Yofukashi no Uta Season 2

Call of the Night Season 2
Aired: 2025-09-19
Status: RELEASING
Ratings: 82/100
Genres: Comedy, Psychological, Romance, Slice of Life, Supernatural
Tags: Vampire, Urban Fantasy, Heterosexual, Urban, Male Protagonist, Female Protagonist, Tragedy, Coming of Age, Age Gap, Hikikomori, LGBTQ+ Themes, Shounen, Yuri, Detective, Gyaru, Femboy
Total Episodes: 12
Duration: 23 min
Studio: Animax Broadcast Japan
Source: MANGA
Format: TV
Season: SUMMER
Release Year: 2025
Season No: 2
Director: Tomoyuki Itamura

Synopsis

The second season of Yofukashi no Uta. Ko overcomes his confusion about becoming a vampire and decides to "like" Nazuna, while Nazuna resolves to make Ko "fall in love" with her. Without understanding what "love" even is, the two of them spend their nights together in a frenzy. Meanwhile, Detective Uguisu Anko is closing in with her plot to kill vampires, not just Nazuna. A vampire's weakness is "anything they were attached to when they were human" and so they all try to get rid of this weakness before it's too late. But, Nazuna has no memory of her human life. What is Nazuna's hidden past? Why did Anko start killing vampires? And what is the "secret" that Nazuna and Anko share? For Ko, Nazuna, Anko, a fun "late night" doesn't end here... a new "night" begins! (Source: HIDIVE)

Watch Trailer


Characters

Character Nazuna Nanakusa from Yofukashi no Uta Season 2
Nazuna Nanakusa
MAIN
Character Kou Yamori from Yofukashi no Uta Season 2
Kou Yamori
MAIN
Character Anko Uguisu from Yofukashi no Uta Season 2
Anko Uguisu
MAIN
Character Akira Asai from Yofukashi no Uta Season 2
Akira Asai
MAIN
Character Niko Hirata from Yofukashi no Uta Season 2
Niko Hirata
SUPPORTING
Character Seri Kikyou from Yofukashi no Uta Season 2
Seri Kikyou
SUPPORTING
Character Akihito Akiyama from Yofukashi no Uta Season 2
Akihito Akiyama
SUPPORTING
Character Hatsuka Suzushiro from Yofukashi no Uta Season 2
Hatsuka Suzushiro
SUPPORTING
Character Kiku Hoshimi from Yofukashi no Uta Season 2
Kiku Hoshimi
SUPPORTING
Character Haru Nanakusa from Yofukashi no Uta Season 2
Haru Nanakusa
SUPPORTING
Character Kabura Honda from Yofukashi no Uta Season 2
Kabura Honda
SUPPORTING
Character LoveGreen from Yofukashi no Uta Season 2
LoveGreen
SUPPORTING
Character Mahiru Seki from Yofukashi no Uta Season 2
Mahiru Seki
SUPPORTING
Character Midori Kohakobe from Yofukashi no Uta Season 2
Midori Kohakobe
SUPPORTING
Character Matsuda from Yofukashi no Uta Season 2
Matsuda
BACKGROUND
Character Kai from Yofukashi no Uta Season 2
Kai
BACKGROUND
Character Tonio from Yofukashi no Uta Season 2
Tonio
BACKGROUND

Episodes

Episode 1
Ep. 1
2025-07-04
Episode 2
Ep. 2
2025-07-11
Episode 3
Ep. 3
2025-07-18
Episode 4
Ep. 4
2025-07-25
Episode 5
Ep. 5
2025-08-01
Episode 6
Ep. 6
2025-08-08
Episode 7
Ep. 7
2025-08-15
Episode 8
Ep. 8
2025-08-22
Episode 9
Ep. 9
2025-08-29
Episode 10
Ep. 10
2025-09-05
Episode 11
Ep. 11
2025-09-12
Episode 12
Ep. 12
2025-09-19
Next Episode:Episode 10 on 2025-09-05 20:00

How To Download Tutorial


Eternal Whispers: The Nocturnal Odyssey Resumes in Call of the Night Season 2

In the shadowed underbelly of urban Japan, where neon lights bleed into the infinite black canvas of night, Call of the Night (Yofukashi no Uta) Season 2 emerges as a haunting evolution of its predecessor. Premiering on July 4, 2025, via Fuji TV’s Noitamina block, this 12-episode arc—produced by Liden Films under director Tomoyuki Itamura—delves deeper into the fragile boundaries between humanity and eternity. What began as a whimsical tale of insomnia and infatuation has transformed into a labyrinth of forgotten memories, lethal pursuits, and the raw ache of unspoken bonds. Drawing from Kotoyama’s manga, which concluded its 200-chapter run in January 2024 after amassing over 5.3 million copies, Season 2 adapts pivotal arcs like the Cigarette Case and Halloween Night, revealing layers of tragedy beneath the series’ signature playful veneer.

Fractured Alliances: Ko and Nazuna’s Tangled Dance with Destiny

At the heart of this nocturnal saga lies Ko Yamori, the disillusioned middle schooler voiced by Gen Sato, whose quest for vampiric transformation hinges on igniting true love with Nazuna Nanakusa (Sora Amamiya). Season 1 ended with a charged kiss, but Season 2 thrusts them into a frenzy of misunderstanding and intensity, as neither grasps the essence of “love” amid their escalating nights. Ko’s resolve hardens—he’s no longer the aimless wanderer but a boy confronting the void of his existence, questioning if eternal night offers salvation or isolation. Nazuna, the born vampire hybrid with her childlike whims and hidden insecurities, pushes back with teasing fervor, yet her amnesia about her human past casts long shadows over their connection.

The production elevates this dynamic through Haruka Sagawa’s character designs, which blend fluid, expressive lines with a purple-hued palette that mirrors the series’ emotional spectrum—from euphoric highs to melancholic lows. Yoshiaki Dewa’s score weaves hip-hop rhythms and jazz undertones, amplifying the pulse of urban solitude. As Ko navigates jealousy over Nazuna’s “night job” and her coven of eccentric vampires, the narrative probes existential themes: Is love a fleeting human illusion, or can it transcend immortality? This season’s episodes, like the opener “That Time’s Not for Us,” peel back Ko’s vulnerabilities, showing how his daytime detachment fuels his nocturnal rebirth, all while the ticking one-year deadline for his transformation looms like a guillotine.

Shadows Unleashed: New Predators and Haunting Revelations

Season 2 introduces formidable antagonists that shatter the series’ lighthearted facade, turning playful escapades into high-stakes confrontations. Central is Anko Uguisu (Miyuki Sawashiro), the chain-smoking vampire hunter whose vendetta stems from a brutal family tragedy—her vampire father slain her mother, igniting her quest to exploit vampires’ weaknesses: mementos from their human lives. Anko’s pursuit isn’t mere extermination; it’s a mirror to Nazuna’s buried origins, forcing the vampire to confront fragments of a past she can’t recall. Their shared “secret”—hinted at in flashbacks—unravels in the Cigarette Case Arc, where Haru Nanakusa (Maaya Uchida), a enigmatic nurse, unlocks Nazuna’s hybrid heritage as the child of a vampire mother and human father, explaining her rapid maturation and outcast status among turned vampires.

Adding intrigue is Kiku Hoshimi (Rina Sato), the alluring vampire who captivates Ko’s friend Mahiru Seki (Kensho Ono), complicating loyalties and introducing a love triangle laced with supernatural peril. The Halloween Night Arc, kicking off with Episode 9 (“What Do You Want to Do, Ko?”) on August 29, 2025, escalates this chaos: Ko, Nazuna, and Anko collide in a midnight showdown amid haunted festivities, blending horror elements with emotional gut-punches. Production assistant Izumi Takizawa and Nao Miyoshi’s direction ensures seamless integration of action sequences—brief but visceral, like Anko’s precision strikes—contrasting the series’ minimalistic animation style that prioritizes atmospheric backgrounds over bombast.

Supporting cast members enrich this web: Akira Asai (Yumiri Hanamori) grapples with Ko’s choices, while vampires like Seri Kikyo (Haruka Tomatsu) and Niko Hirata (Eri Kitamura) inject humor and rivalry. Akihito Akiyama (Hiroyuki Yoshino), the newly turned “Draggo,” embodies the perils of vampiric transformation, his mental fragility underscoring the cost of eternity. These elements culminate in a narrative that critiques immortality’s loneliness, drawing parallels to classic vampire lore while subverting it—Nazuna’s preserved umbilical cord as her sole weakness symbolizes her eternal tether to humanity, a poignant motif absent in traditional tales.

Symphonies of the Void: Creepy Nuts and the Sonic Tapestry of Nightfall

Music remains the series’ ethereal backbone, with hip-hop duo Creepy Nuts returning for the opening “Mirage” and ending “Nemure” (Sleep). Their tracks—zesty and introspective—echo the manga’s naming after their song “Yofukashi no Uta,” infusing episodes with a lo-fi nostalgia that heightens the urban nocturne’s allure. The black-and-white “Nemure” music video, directed by Hidejin Kato, premiered alongside the CD single on September 10, 2025, blending raw energy with thematic depth. Insert tracks like “Loss Time” from Season 1 recur, but Season 2’s soundtrack evolves, incorporating noise textures and filtered instruments to mirror characters’ inner turmoil. This auditory layer transforms quiet moments—Ko’s rooftop confessions or Nazuna’s beer-fueled rants—into symphonies of existential drift, making the night feel alive and oppressive.

Crimson Echoes: Thematic Depths and the Human-Vampire Divide

Beyond romance, Season 2 excavates profound themes of identity and loss. Ko’s arc reflects adolescent alienation, his school-skipping a rebellion against societal norms, while Nazuna’s hybrid existence critiques otherness—outcast for not fitting “traditional” vampire molds, she embodies the hybrid’s eternal insecurity. Anko’s backstory, revealed in Episode 9’s flashbacks, humanizes the hunter: her destruction of her father’s weakness parallels the vampires’ preemptive severing of ties, questioning if erasing the past frees or dooms. The series weaves in subtle social commentary on urban isolation, with Tokyo’s neon sprawl symbolizing fleeting connections in a disconnected world.

Pacing falters occasionally—early episodes linger on comedic beats like poolside antics—but the mid-season pivot to the Cigarette Case Arc delivers unflinching emotional weight, rivaling the manga’s raw introspection. Compared to Season 1’s 7.65 MyAnimeList score, Season 2’s deeper lore and character arcs push boundaries, earning praise for its balanced blend of whimsy and woe.

Viewer Reveries: Fan Sentiments and Critical Resonance

As of August 30, 2025, with Episode 9 airing, social media buzzes with fervor. Fans on X (formerly Twitter) hail the Anko flashback as “spectacular,” praising its emotional delivery and animation quality. Posts like “GOD FUCKKKKK CALL OF THE NIGHT SEASON 2 DELIVERED ON THE ANKO FLASHBACK SO HARD” capture the raw impact, while others dissect manga-anime comparisons, noting faithful adaptations with enhanced visuals. Critics applaud the series’ tonal dissonance—light-hearted comedy juxtaposed with grim tragedy—positioning it as a standout in the 2025 Summer slate. Streaming on HIDIVE (with English dubs from August 2025), Crunchyroll, and Prime Video, it garners a 7.4 IMDb rating, lauded for vibrant designs and relatable protagonists. Detractors note the age-gap dynamic (Nazuna’s estimated 30-40 years versus Ko’s 14), but its thematic purity—exploring consent, autonomy, and desire—elevates it beyond clichés.

Twilight Horizons: Legacy of the Night Walkers

Call of the Night Season 2 isn’t merely a sequel; it’s a profound meditation on the night’s dual nature—liberating yet unforgiving. By August 2025’s end, with Blu-ray volumes slated for October 29 and January 28, 2026 (featuring Kotoyama’s original color prints), the series solidifies its place as a modern vampire odyssey. For those ensnared by its spell, the night calls eternally, whispering truths about love’s fragility in an immortal world.1

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Back to top button
Telegram Logo