Season Two of One-Punch Man has traveled every which way, with Saitama and the Hero Association doing their best to avert the endeavors of both Garou and the Monster Association.
Garou’s campaign of chasing legends alongside the Monster Association’s endeavors to overwhelm the surface world may have made some awesome stories. There are fans who missed the animation of One-Punch Man season one that was created by Madhouse Entertainment and directed by Shingo Natsume.
Some One-Punch Man fans have propelled a request to have the first executive of the main season, Shingo Natsume, come back to coordinate the establishment’s third season.

Change.org got an appeal demand from fans hoping to achieve the adjustment in the executive’s seat for the up ’til now affirmed third season of One-Punch Man. While the appeal is requesting around 1,000 marks at present, it has been clear this season numerous fans are requesting a change.
The first season of the One-Punch Man arrangement that stars Saitama, the “Hero for Fun”, was made by Madhouse Entertainment and coordinated by Mr. Natsume.
One-Punch Man is a continuous Japanese superhero webcomic made by ONE which started distribution in mid-2009. The arrangement rapidly became famous online, outperforming 7.9 million hits in June 2012. The Japanese abbreviated name Wanpanman is a play on the long-running youngsters’ character Anpanman, wanpan being a withdrawal of wanpanchi (“one punch”). One-Punch Man recounts to the tale of Saitama, a hero who has become exhausted by the nonattendance of the test in his battle against insidiousness and tries to locate a commendable rival.
A digital manga redo of the arrangement, shown by Yusuke Murata, started distribution on Shueisha’s Tonari no Young Jump site in 2012. The parts are intermittently gathered and printed into tankōbon volumes, with nineteen volumes discharged as of April 4, 2019. Viz Media has authorized the change for English serialization in its Weekly Shonen Jump advanced magazine.