Fortnite has always been a game about cosmetic expression, but nothing has expanded that creative range quite like anime collaborations. From the earliest Naruto drop back in Chapter 2 to the wave of collabs running through Chapter 7, Fortnite anime skins have become one of the most consistently exciting parts of the Item Shop. We are talking full franchise partnerships, reactive styles, franchise-specific emotes, mythic weapons, and original cel-shaded characters that hold their own against any collab skin.
If you are hunting for specific skins, wondering what is coming next, or just want the full picture of every anime skin in Fortnite so far, this is the only list you need.
Quick Reference: All Fortnite Anime Skins at a Glance
| Franchise | Notable Skins | First Arrived |
|---|---|---|
| Naruto | Naruto, Itachi, Sasuke, Kakashi | Chapter 2 |
| Dragon Ball | Goku, Vegeta, Gohan, Beerus, Cell, Frieza | Chapter 3 |
| My Hero Academia | All Might, Deku, Bakugo, Toga, Shigaraki | Chapter 4 |
| Attack on Titan | Eren, Mikasa, Levi | Chapter 4 |
| Jujutsu Kaisen | Yuji, Gojo, Nobara, Megumi | Chapter 5 |
| Kaiju No. 8 | Kafka, Kikoru, Reno | Chapter 6 |
| Cowboy Bebop | Spike, Faye Valentine | Chapter 6 |
| One Punch Man | Saitama, Genos, Tatsumaki | Chapter 6 |
| Bleach | Ichigo, Rukia, Orihime, Uryu | Chapter 6 (Winterfest 2025) |
| Solo Leveling | Sung Jinwoo, Cha Hae-In, Igris | Chapter 7 |
| Vocaloid / Miku | Hatsune Miku, Snow Miku | Fortnite Festival |
| Kizuna Ai | Kizuna Ai (2 styles) | Icon Series |
| Original Anime Skins | Erisa, Mae, Remi, Reina, and many more | Various Seasons |
Quick note: Some of these are Battle Pass exclusives, and others rotate through the Item Shop. If you are working with a budget, check our guides on all free Fortnite skins and how to get free skins in Fortnite before spending V-Bucks. And if rarity matters to you, the rarest Fortnite skins guide is worth a read too.
Every Anime Collaboration in Fortnite, Broken Down
Naruto: Where It All Started

The Naruto collab was the one that proved anime skins within Fortnite could actually work at scale. When it first dropped, the execution was solid but not perfect. The good news is that with each returning wave, Epic has refined the style and added more characters. What started as a handful of fan favorites has grown into one of the most recognizable anime skin lineups in the game.
All Naruto skins in Fortnite:
- Naruto Uzumaki
- Itachi Uchiha
- Sasuke Uchiha
- Gaara
- Kakashi Hatake
- Sakura Haruno
- Hinata Hyuga
Itachi and Kakashi are consistently among the most used anime skins in Fortnite across any given season, which tells you everything about how well these landed with the community.
Dragon Ball: The Deepest Anime Collab Fortnite Has Done

If Naruto opened the door, Dragon Ball kicked it off its hinges. This collab has had more waves than any other anime franchise in the game, and it has pulled from across the entire DBZ and DBS timeline, including the villains. You get hero skins, villain skins, aura effects, and reactive styles that actually reflect the power level energy of the show.
All Dragon Ball skins in Fortnite:
- Goku
- Vegeta
- Bulma
- Gohan
- Piccolo
- Beerus
- Goku Black
- Cell
- Frieza
- Android 17
- Android 18
- Future Trunks
The sheer depth here sets it apart. Most collabs give you three to five characters. Dragon Ball gave us a full roster spanning generations of the franchise.
My Hero Academia: Heroes and Villains Both Represented
My Hero Academia arrived in Chapter 4 and quickly established itself as one of the stronger collab packages. Epic did not stop at the obvious picks either. Eventually they added Toga, Dabi, and Shigaraki, which made the roster feel complete rather than a quick cash grab.
All My Hero Academia skins in Fortnite:
- All Might
- Izuku Midoriya
- Ochaco Uraraka
- Katsuki Bakugo
- Shoto Todoroki
- Eijiro Kirishima
- Mina Ashido
- Himiko Toga
- Dabi
- Tomura Shigaraki
Attack on Titan: Small Roster, Big Impact
The Attack on Titan collab was compact but well-executed. Beyond the skins, it also brought in-game items and a map element referencing the series basement, which is a level of world-building most collabs skip entirely.
All Attack on Titan skins in Fortnite:
- Eren Jaeger
- Mikasa Ackermann
- Captain Levi
Jujutsu Kaisen: One of the More Recent Shonen Arrivals

Jujutsu Kaisen brought some of the most talked-about anime skins within Fortnite in recent memory, partly because of how well the cel-shaded style suited the franchise’s aesthetic. The in-game weapons tied to the collab were a nice bonus. A couple of skin design choices raised some eyebrows in the community, but overall this collab hit.
All Jujutsu Kaisen skins in Fortnite:
- Yuji Itadori
- Satoru Gojo
- Nobara Kugisaki
- Megumi Fushiguro
Kaiju No. 8: Chapter 6’s Breakout Collab
Chapter 6 slowed down on collab frequency compared to earlier chapters, but Kaiju No. 8 was a solid addition. It is a newer franchise without the legacy of Naruto or Dragon Ball, but it has a massive and growing fanbase that was clearly excited to see it in the game.
All Kaiju No. 8 skins in Fortnite:
- Kafka
- Kikoru
- Reno
Cowboy Bebop: The Collab Nobody Expected

This one was a genuinely surprising choice, and that is exactly what made it great. Instead of pulling from the current Shonen Jump lineup, Epic went classic. Cowboy Bebop is widely considered one of the greatest anime series ever made, and giving it a spot in Fortnite felt like a tribute to long-time anime fans.
All Cowboy Bebop skins in Fortnite:
- Spike Spiegel
- Faye Valentine
One Punch Man: Timed to the New Season
The One Punch Man collab dropped in coordination with the anime’s new season, which made the timing feel intentional and well-planned. Saitama’s design in particular translates surprisingly well into Fortnite’s art style.
All One Punch Man skins in Fortnite:
- Saitama
- Genos
- Tatsumaki
Bleach: The Winterfest 2025 Surprise
Bleach arrived during Winterfest 2025 and was one of the more welcome surprises of that holiday season. It is a franchise that fans had been requesting for years, and the four-skin lineup covered the core Soul Society cast well.
All Bleach skins in Fortnite:
- Ichigo Kurosaki
- Rukia Kuchiki
- Orihime Inoue
- Uryu Ishida
Based on usage data, Ichigo is currently the most popular skin from an actual anime franchise in Fortnite right now.
Solo Leveling: The Most Recent Major Collab

Solo Leveling is arguably the biggest anime franchise of the last two years, so its arrival in Fortnite made complete sense. What is interesting is that these skins were placed under the Gaming Legends category rather than the standard collab section, which is a bit of an unusual call.
The skins themselves are visually accurate to the manhwa and anime. Sung Jinwoo’s shadow aesthetic translates well, and the Igris backbling referencing the dungeon from the opening of the series is a genuinely thoughtful piece of design.
All Solo Leveling skins in Fortnite:
- Sung Jinwoo
- Cha Hae-In
- Blood-Red Commander Igris
Beyond the Big Collabs: Vocaloids, VTubers, and Original Anime Skins
Hatsune Miku and the Vocaloid Corner
Hatsune Miku does not come from a manga or anime series in the traditional sense, but her art style is unmistakably anime and her inclusion in Fortnite Festival was a big deal. She got two different styles during her featured season, and Epic later added a Snow Miku variant for Winterfest 2025. Leakers are also pointing to Kasane Teto as an upcoming addition, which would make Fortnite’s Vocaloid section an actual lineup rather than a one-off.
Kizuna Ai: The First VTuber in Fortnite
Kizuna Ai holds the distinction of being the first VTuber to enter Fortnite, arriving as part of the Icon Series. She has two versions: the standard skin and a sportswear style. Whether this opens the door to more VTubers in the game is an interesting question, because the demand is clearly there.
Original Fortnite Anime Skins: Epic’s Own Cel-Shaded Creations
Not every anime skin in Fortnite comes from an outside franchise. Epic has built a solid library of original characters in the anime art style, from multi-skin characters like Erisa and Reina to anime takes on existing Fortnite personalities. Some of the most polished designs in the game live here.
Full list of original Fortnite anime skins:
Ace Academic, Antheia, Assist Maven, Erisa, Ayida, Finesse Forward, Belle Berry, Board Crasher, Golden Gear Midas, Court Commander, Court Controller, Court Queen Erisa, Culture Club Commander, Mae, Megumi, Midterm Maverick, MrBeast60000, Imani, Joss, Nezumi, Khaby Lame, Layup Legend, Lennox Rose, Post Patroller, Perfect Patroller, Ready Penny, Revel Rival, Rebound Warrior, Reina, Remi, Reno Ichikawa, Trey Specialist, Retro Zoe Clash, Ricochet Rox, Varsity Vanguard, Victory Valedictorian, Shot Caller, Sport Skirmisher, Streetwear Yuji Itadori, Striker Senpai, Studious Scout, Winterfest Lexa, Zoe Clash
What Is the Most Used Anime Skin in Fortnite?
This one might surprise you. According to Fortnite API data, the single most-used cel-shaded skin in the game is actually Arcane Jinx. Technically a Western animation style rather than traditional anime, but she uses the same cel-shaded filter that defines the look.
After Jinx, the Juice WRLD anime skin sits high on the list largely because it was free, meaning a huge pool of players picked it up and never switched. Among skins from actual anime franchises, Ichigo from Bleach currently leads the pack. Given that the collab only arrived at Winterfest 2025, that is an impressive run to the top.
What Fortnite Anime Skins Are Coming Next?
Leakers have pointed to Demon Slayer and Kasane Teto as confirmed upcoming additions. One Piece has also been rumored for a larger drop than what has appeared before, and Chainsaw Man keeps coming up in survey skin data, which Epic uses to test audience interest. If survey results translate into actual releases, the next year of Fortnite anime collabs could be the most ambitious yet.
Tips Before You Buy
Most anime skins within Fortnite are sold as Item Shop bundles ranging from 1,500 to 2,500 V-Bucks per outfit, usually including a back bling and pickaxe. Many include reactive styles or franchise-specific emotes. Naruto’s Rasengan and the Dragon Ball aura effects are good examples of how much extra value some bundles carry.
For current availability, check the in-game shop or Fortnite.gg. Collabs like Naruto and Jujutsu Kaisen rotate back regularly, so if you missed a skin the first time, it will likely return.



