In the Age of AI Animation: Will Fandoms Shift? And What Will That Mean for Creativity and Culture?
Animation has never been just about movement on a screen. It is labor made visible, intention translated into motion, and risk preserved frame by frame. Across decades, animation has built its cultural power not only through stories and characters, but through how those stories were created, through studios with recognizable identities, directors with unmistakable voices, and creative teams whose collective efforts defined entire eras. This is why the current moment feels so uneasy. The rise of AI in animation is not simply another technological evolution like digital ink, CGI integration, or new compositing software. It challenges something more fragile, which is the relationship between process, authorship, and the fandoms that have grown around them. In an age where images can be generated rather than crafted, the question is no longer whether animation will change but whether fandoms will, and what that shift will mean for creativity, legacy, and culture itself. Anima...