Science Saru
Native name | 株式会社サイエンスSARU |
|---|---|
Romanized name | Kabushiki-gaisha Saiensu SARU |
| Company type | Subsidiary |
| Industry | Film Japanese animation |
| Founded | February 4, 2013 in Tokyo, Japan |
| Founders | |
| Headquarters | , Japan |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Masanori Fujita (president and CEO) |
| Products | Animated feature films Animated series |
Number of employees | 66 (As of November 2025) |
| Parent | Toho (2024–present) |
| Website | www |
Science Saru, Inc. (Japanese: 株式会社サイエンスSARU, Hepburn: Kabushiki-gaisha Saiensu SARU), stylized as Science SARU, is a Japanese independent animation studio headquartered in Kichijōji, Musashino, Tokyo. Established on February 4, 2013, by director Masaaki Yuasa and producer Eunyoung Choi, the studio has produced feature films and animated series, as well as co-productions, compilation films, and episodes of series for other studios. Science Saru's first animation was the "Food Chain" episode of the American animated series Adventure Time (2014); its most recent projects are the animated feature film Inu-Oh (2021), two short films for the animated anthology project Star Wars: Visions (2021), and the animated series The Heike Story (2021), Yurei Deco (2022), Scott Pilgrim Takes Off (2023), and Dandadan (2024).
The studio's work has received critical acclaim both within Japan and internationally, winning awards from Annecy, the Japan Academy Film Prize, the Mainichi Film Awards, and the Japan Media Arts Festival.
Science Saru utilizes a hybrid animation production method which combines hand-drawn animation and Flash animation, a technique not previously used in Japanese animation. The studio was led by Eunyoung Choi until 2025.