
TL;DR, Doga Kobo’s original anime Mebius Dust announced six more cast members and their roles. The series premieres July 9 on Tokyo MX and BS Fuji, with a July 10 MBS airing.
Evening lights spill across a small shopping street. The official site revealed six more voice actors for the Mebius Dust anime from Doga Kobo and set its July TV rollout in Japan. Here’s who they play and when it airs.
The newcomers expand a neighborhood cast built around a flower shop, eateries, and a bottle shop, tying into the series’ everyday-life setup with a hint of mystery. Key staff and theme songs are also confirmed, so fans can plan the summer start. ASMIK Ace frames the story around high schoolers Araki, Stella, and Olga in a cozy downtown, where routine days may hide more beneath the surface.
Mebius Dust adds six more cast members
Thursday’s update on the official website named six new cast members for the original series, broadening the Mebius Dust cast around its flower shop hub. The voice actors announced are Hiroshi Tsuchida, Ryōhei Shioguchi, Ryō Hirohashi, Yūki Kuwahara, Mari Hino, and Hiromichi Tezuka. Each role slots into the show’s close-knit shopping district.
ASMIK Ace describes the setup as three high school friends enjoying everyday routines in a warm downtown, where normal might not stay normal. These new cast members inhabit that block, adding links to family storefronts and local hangouts that shape the story’s rhythm.
- Hiroshi Tsuchida plays Shippo Marimo, the flower shop’s mascot and de facto head, a figure who guides the store’s mood and daily flow.
- Ryōhei Shioguchi voices Tenrō, heir to the same flower shop, positioned to carry the family’s trade and tradition forward.
- Ryō Hirohashi is Shirayuki, Tenrō’s half-sibling, a connection that hints at layered family dynamics within the shop.
- Yūki Kuwahara portrays Takara, the only daughter of a family running a Vietnamese restaurant near the arcade’s bustle.
- Mari Hino is Kirara, a fashion-conscious middle schooler whose family operates a sushi shop, tying youth culture to the neighborhood’s food scene.
- Hiromichi Tezuka plays Atsushi, a former soccer player whose family runs a liquor store, bringing a sports past into the district’s daily trade.
Together, these additions map the neighborhood’s routes, from bouquets to bento to bottles, and set the stage around the trio of Araki, Stella, and Olga. For a quick look at faces and voices in motion ahead of the broadcast, check the Mebius Dust cast promo, which spotlights the new cast members.
Meet the new Mebius Dust cast and the characters they play
The official site published concise bios for each addition. Below are the roles as listed, pairing the actors with the character blurbs. You will see core ties to the flower shop at the heart of the story, plus families running a Vietnamese restaurant, a sushi shop, and a liquor store, as the block’s community takes shape.
- Hiroshi Tsuchida Shippo Marimo: Tsuchida voices Shippo Marimo, the flower shop’s mascot and de facto head. The role reads as the store’s guiding presence, setting tone, fielding requests, and anchoring day-to-day life around the counter.
- Ryōhei Shioguchi Tenrō: Shioguchi plays Tenrō, heir to the flower shop. His inheritance of the business frames him as the next keeper of bouquets, arrangements, and the legacy attached to the storefront.
- Ryō Hirohashi as Shirayuki: Hirohashi is Shirayuki, Tenrō’s half-sibling. That single line promises family complexity within the shop, threading sibling bonds and responsibilities through the workplace.
- Yūki Kuwahara Takara: Kuwahara voices Takara, the only daughter in a family that runs a Vietnamese restaurant in the neighborhood. Food, family service, and after-school rhythms converge around her role.
- Mari Hino as Kirara: Hino plays Kirara, a fashion-conscious middle school student whose family operates a sushi shop. The blurb suggests a trend-aware teen balancing style, school, and helping at home.
- Hiromichi Tezuka as Atsushi: Tezuka brings Atsushi to life, a former soccer player whose family runs a liquor store. The description pairs an athletic past with shelves of bottles and a local clientele.
These six bios keep details brief yet concrete, pointing to a street where families and part-timers cross paths. If you want an at-a-glance roundup with images ahead of broadcast week, our Mebius Dust July debut cast preview collects the new artwork and roles in one place.
Placed beside leads Araki, Stella, and Olga, the shop-linked characters suggest a slice-of-life frame that could pivot at any time. With ties to flowers, food, and drink, the cast grid hints at regulars, deliveries, and favors, the small moving parts that let a mystery breathe.
When to watch Mebius Dust, plus staff and theme song details
The Mebius Dust July 9 premiere is set for Tokyo MX and BS Fuji, followed by MBS on July 10. The series runs one cour. The Mebius Dust anime is an original Doga Kobo production adapted from Hajime Shinagawa’s story, with a summer slot that positions it cleanly between spring finales and fall debuts.
- Studio and project: Doga Kobo produces this original, the third anime realized from Project Anima’s contest winners, with the story selected as the 2019 Kids/Game category winner.
- Director: Tarou Iwasaki leads direction at Doga Kobo, known for Baki the Grappler, Bibliophile Princess, and One Week Friends, bringing steady character-focused pacing.
- Series composition: Yoriko Tomita handles scripts, with credits on The Elusive Samurai, two seasons of My Dress-Up Darling, and Senpai is an Otokonoko.
- Opening theme: Leo Ieiri performs the OP, titled “Mebius,” signaling a looping motif that matches the show’s name.
- Ending theme: Ai Tomioka performs the ED, “Dilemma,” pairing reflective mood with endcard visuals.
- Broadcast: Tokyo MX and BS Fuji on July 9, MBS on July 10, confirmed on the official site, with a quarter-year run.
If you are planning your watchlist, bookmark the Mebius Dust July premiere details. The Doga Kobo staff lineup and the Leo Ieiri Ai Tomioka theme pairing set a clear tone, while Project Anima pedigree frames the series as a public-submission idea refined into TV, backed by fixed dates and networks.
Source: ANN
