TMS Entertainment Forms Production Alliance With Taiwan's R. Animation

TMS Entertainment has entered into a business partnership with Taiwan-based animation studio R. Animation, as the Japanese production company moves to reinforce its production pipeline amid mounting capacity constraints in the anime industry.
The agreement, announced on January 8, brings together TMS—best known for long-running franchises such as Detective Conan and Anpanman—and Taipei-based R. Animation, a rapidly growing studio founded in 2018. The two companies will collaborate not only on hands-on production work but also on the sharing of technical know-how and production workflows, with the stated goal of building a more stable and high-quality animation production system.
Addressing Structural Strain in Anime Production
The partnership reflects growing pressure across Japan's animation sector. While global demand for anime continues to rise and annual production volumes exceed 300 titles, the domestic production base is under strain from an aging workforce and a shortage of trained newcomers. For major studios, maintaining output and quality increasingly requires deeper partnerships beyond Japan's borders.
TMS said the alliance is designed to stabilize its production capacity while supporting long-term talent development. By securing a reliable overseas partner, the company aims to ensure that projects can move forward without the bottlenecks that have become common across the industry.
R. Animation as a Strategic Production Partner
R. Animation has positioned itself as one of Taiwan's most technically capable 2D animation studios. With a core team of more than 40 staff and an average age under 30, the company has already contributed to multiple Japanese productions, covering a wide range of processes from key animation and in-betweening to storyboards, design work, and post-production.
The studio has also made training a core part of its business model, recruiting students from art universities as interns and placing new hires into structured development programs before assigning them to commercial projects. Through its partnership with TMS, R. Animation expects to further raise the skill level of its artists while gaining exposure to large-scale Japanese production pipelines.
For TMS, the collaboration provides access to a growing pool of younger animators trained in the Japanese 2D style, helping offset domestic labor shortages while maintaining visual consistency across its productions.
A Broader Shift Toward Overseas Production Hubs
The TMS–R. Animation alliance fits into a wider trend among Japanese anime companies, which are increasingly building long-term relationships with overseas studios rather than relying solely on short-term outsourcing. The goal is not simply cost efficiency, but the creation of sustainable production networks that can support the expanding volume and complexity of anime projects.
Other major players have taken similar steps in recent years. Toho formed a capital and business alliance with Thailand-based CG studio Igloo Studio, while Toei Animation has outlined plans to expand its Southeast Asian studio footprint beyond its existing operations in the Philippines. In each case, the emphasis is on turning overseas partners into core production bases rather than peripheral subcontractors.
By aligning with R. Animation, TMS is seeking to do the same—building a cross-border production framework that supports both consistent output and the long-term development of creative talent.
Toward a More Sustainable Production Model
Both companies have framed the partnership as part of a longer-term effort to improve working conditions and training structures in animation. TMS has positioned the initiative under its "Anime SDGs" vision, which aims to balance creative quality with sustainable labor practices, while R. Animation has highlighted the importance of building team-based production systems that can grow over time.
With demand for anime continuing to accelerate globally, the success of such cross-border production alliances may play a decisive role in determining whether Japan's leading studios can scale without sacrificing quality—or the people who make the work possible.
R. Animation official site: https://ranimation.tw/
TMS Entertainment official site: https://www.tms-e.co.jp/
Source: @Press, Animation Business Journal
6 Comments Recent Comments
TMS will share resources and training to make sure there's always a capable outsource team. A reasonable strategy overall.
You have gotten it completely wrong. This isn't an acquisition where the bigger company absorbs all the talent after killing the smaller company. TMS wants to make sure there's a reliable support team in future. This is an investment in human resources.
detarameMAL said:
If you strip away the business-speak, this actually says "the Japanese anime industry is collapsing because we don't train enough newcomers to meet the quantity and quality demanded of anime, so we're partnering with a Taiwanese animation studio to integrate young Taiwanese animators into the anime pipeline. This way, we don't have to train people, and we don't run out of talented animators!! Instead of actually training young talented animators!!"
If you strip away the business-speak, this actually says "the Japanese anime industry is collapsing because we don't train enough newcomers to meet the quantity and quality demanded of anime, so we're partnering with a Taiwanese animation studio to integrate young Taiwanese animators into the anime pipeline. This way, we don't have to train people, and we don't run out of talented animators!! Instead of actually training young talented animators!!"
You have gotten it completely wrong. This isn't an acquisition where the bigger company absorbs all the talent after killing the smaller company. TMS wants to make sure there's a reliable support team in future. This is an investment in human resources.
Jan 11, 2:15 AM by Captain-577
Foreign company involvement means not a pure anime, so unwatchable. I would like tms to cancel these partnership immediately.
Jan 11, 12:04 AM by OeKusoBaba
@detarameMAL Not to be rude, but it seems like you dont know what your talking about when it comes too tms, toei or the industry.
Saying tms or toei are behind the times is so incorrect, i don't know even know how you came up with that especially when talking about Toei which has present day one piece and has one of the biggest names in the industry and other talent as well. And these big companies work under the production committee as well, they just have better rights department so they can claim more of the revenue and have more of a say in scheduling.
And its also wierd that you mention that you dont think tms does not train animators, when they actually do. And the reason why these partnerships dont happen with smaller studios is because they cant really pull it off because of their size and other things I probably dont know, but the big studios can because they have the facilities to pull that off.
What also makes this statement sound off, is that if every single animation studio was like toei and tms, the industry would be in a way better spot. Those two studios have talent, a very good rights department and revenue to expand their studio or put into other things. Something that other smaller studio's wish they could have.
Saying tms or toei are behind the times is so incorrect, i don't know even know how you came up with that especially when talking about Toei which has present day one piece and has one of the biggest names in the industry and other talent as well. And these big companies work under the production committee as well, they just have better rights department so they can claim more of the revenue and have more of a say in scheduling.
And its also wierd that you mention that you dont think tms does not train animators, when they actually do. And the reason why these partnerships dont happen with smaller studios is because they cant really pull it off because of their size and other things I probably dont know, but the big studios can because they have the facilities to pull that off.
What also makes this statement sound off, is that if every single animation studio was like toei and tms, the industry would be in a way better spot. Those two studios have talent, a very good rights department and revenue to expand their studio or put into other things. Something that other smaller studio's wish they could have.
Jan 10, 6:48 PM by 3inPunisher
If you strip away the business-speak, this actually says "the Japanese anime industry is collapsing because we don't train enough newcomers to meet the quantity and quality demanded of anime, so we're partnering with a Taiwanese animation studio to integrate young Taiwanese animators into the anime pipeline. This way, we don't have to train people, and we don't run out of talented animators!! Instead of actually training young talented animators!!"
It's funny how I haven't heard these types of partnerships being done by newer studios, which instead mostly relies on outsourcing. It says a lot about how studios like TMS and Toei are really behind the times, to the point where their big animators are all old; that's just sad. It's even sadder how these ancient studios are the biggest players in the anime sphere in terms of corporate influence; smaller studios still work under the production committee system, while these studios got their money before the production committee system was built up and can now be a part of production committees exploiting the hard work of studios.
It's funny how I haven't heard these types of partnerships being done by newer studios, which instead mostly relies on outsourcing. It says a lot about how studios like TMS and Toei are really behind the times, to the point where their big animators are all old; that's just sad. It's even sadder how these ancient studios are the biggest players in the anime sphere in terms of corporate influence; smaller studios still work under the production committee system, while these studios got their money before the production committee system was built up and can now be a part of production committees exploiting the hard work of studios.
Jan 10, 6:35 PM by detarameMAL
Interesting, I've been following TMS since the Little Nemo days back in the early nineties. Hopefully this will be prosperous for them.
Jan 10, 4:54 PM by Retro8bit
Search News
Related News
-
-
Frontier Works Acquires Yokohama Animation Lab as Subsidiary Sep 6, 2025 9:19 PM by Vindstot7 Comments -
Pierrot and Asahi Production Sign Partnership Agreement Oct 12, 2024 8:00 PM by Vindstot9 Comments -
A-1 Pictures, CloverWorks Establish Flint Base, Strengthening Production Capacity Nov 6, 2025 11:09 PM by Vindstot10 Comments -
Sony, Bandai Namco, and Gaudiy Launch Strategic Partnership May 7, 2025 7:53 PM by Vindstot14 Comments
MoreNew Anime
-
-
P.A. Works Produces 'Cheat Fuyo' TV Anime AdaptationFeb 5, 8:13 PM by Vindstot30 Comments
-
-
-
MoreSpring 2026
-
Additional Cast for 'Diamond no Ace: Act II Second Season' AnnouncedYesterday, 2:30 AM by nirererin2 Comments
-
-
-
-
MoreSummer 2026
-
-
-
Manga 'Yani Neko' Gets TV Anime in Summer 2026Feb 1, 7:44 AM by DatRandomDude18 Comments
-
-
Jan 11, 2:26 PM by 3inPunisher