>>1104269>>1104311>ClaymoreYes. If you like the story, then pick up the manga, afterwards, as the anime changes a bunch in its final arc to create some kind of ending, but the manga has little of those things happen and continues on. Plus, it has the male protagonist stop being useless (though, the manga also has an abrupt BS ending, so...).
I recommend One Punch Man, if you haven't gotten into it, already. The first season, especially, is very "anti-shounen" in many ways that it's pretty refreshing. You'll hear a lot of praise about the fights, but there are two reasons, aside from good animation and sound, why they work:
1. They go way beyond what your expectations would be. Most shounen try to "push their limits," but OPM smashes through them with full confidence. Hell, the opening is a perfect example of that.
2. Its most impressive bits don't rely on cartoon physics. Materials are treated with a sense of having absolute properties (like density), as is in the real world, while many action series make them relative to the "emotional" context of the character or story or situation (sometimes walls are easy to bust though and other times they stop and injure a character who smashes into them). Since OPM is more absolute in how its environmental physics work, it makes everything feel very grounded and, as a consequence, the action feel so awe-inspiring: because you take it more seriously.