Fate Watch Order
The Fate series is one of the most rewarding and most confusing franchises in all of anime. What started as a 2004 visual novel by Type-Moon has grown into a multiverse spanning over 25 anime entries, multiple film trilogies, OVAs, and a mobile game with its own anime universe. The total runtime across every entry exceeds 100 hours. This guide covers everything and tells you exactly what to watch, skip, or save for later, all the way through Fate/Strange Fake in 2026.
A prototype version of the story with a female protagonist and male Gilgamesh. Historical curiosity only, and pretty safe to skip.
Dated and tonally uneven. Skip it and read the visual novel for the Fate route instead. Only revisit after you’ve finished everything ufotable produced.
Rushes 26 episodes into under two hours and misses critical character moments along the way. The 2014 TV series covers this route far better. Arguably one of the best anime movies ever.
Start here, no exceptions. Written by Gen Urobuchi, Fate/Zero follows the dark and morally complex Fourth Holy Grail War through Kiritsugu Emiya. It introduces the Holy Grail War mechanics clearly and stands entirely on its own. This is the single best entry point for new viewers, and it’s not particularly close.
Follows Shirou Emiya and Rin Tohsaka through the Fifth Holy Grail War. Archer’s true identity is one of the franchise’s best payoffs, and the battle animation still sets the benchmark years later.
Presage Flower, Lost Butterfly, Spring Song. The darkest route, centered on Shirou and Sakura Matou. Watch all three in order. Spring Song is some of ufotable’s finest animation, full stop.
A 14-Servant Great Holy Grail War set in an alternate Romania timeline. More optimistic in tone than the main series and home to fan-favorite Servant Astolfo.
A surreal digital Holy Grail War inside a lunar supercomputer. Best saved for after you’re already deeply familiar with the franchise.
A mystery series following Waver Velvet from Fate/Zero, now a mage detective working out of London. Slower paced, but genuinely rewarding for fans of the prequel.
Sketch comedy crossing Fate/stay night and Tsukihime characters. Hilarious if you know the cast, which is why it’s worth watching after Fate/Zero and UBW at minimum.
Shirou and Saber cook food in a peaceful alternate universe. Pure comfort viewing, and you can watch it any time after the main series.
A magical girl spin-off universe starring Illya. Starts light and comedic, and then becomes genuinely dark in ways you probably won’t see coming.
The mobile game anime universe, following Master Ritsuka Fujimaru traveling through time to correct historical singularities. Watch in this order:
A one-hour prologue establishing Snowfield, Nevada, and the key players. Watch this before touching the main series.
Written by Ryōgo Narita of Baccano! fame, with music by Hiroyuki Sawano of Attack on Titan. An American organization attempts to recreate the Fuyuki Holy Grail War and produces a deliberately broken conflict, two simultaneous wars, rule-breaking Servants, and genuine chaos throughout. Currently holds an 8.3 on IMDb with Episode 5 hitting a 9.1. The directors confirm newcomers can enjoy it, but core-series viewers are going to catch a lot more.
The Fate watch order debate doesn’t really have one single correct answer, but this one gives you the best experience in the right sequence, building toward a 2026 series the franchise spent over a decade developing. Start with Fate/Zero, work through Heaven’s Feel, and arrive at Fate/Strange Fake ready for everything it throws at you.
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