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Coming Soon
29 days away
The Pokémon Company brings a 30th anniversary EDM concert to the Kia Forum in Inglewood on June 15, 2026 — Marshmello and Alison Wonderland headlining with custom sets built entirely around the Pokémon universe. The venue holds 18,000 people. The nostalgia-to-bass ratio is off the charts. This is not a concert with Pokémon branding slapped on it. The production is purpose-built: visuals, set design, and stage elements created specifically for this show by the people who own the IP. Marshmello's fanbase and the Pokémon generation overlap almost perfectly — which means the room on June 15 will be full of people who grew up watching the anime and now have the budget to see it brought to a 50-foot screen while a DJ plays underneath it. The Kia Forum is one of the best large-venue experiences in Los Angeles — the acoustics are excellent, the sightlines are clean from the upper bowl, and production teams that play there are used to working at scale. Tickets at pokemon.com/events. This one sells on nostalgia alone, but the actual show is going to be something.
Coming Soon
5 days away
FanimeCon is one of the oldest and largest anime conventions in the United States, running every Memorial Day weekend since 1994 at the San Jose Convention Center. It draws 25,000-30,000 attendees over four days and is the flagship event for the West Coast anime community. Unlike larger conventions, FanimeCon is entirely fan-run. No corporate booths dominating the floor. The panels, screenings, and programming are organized by volunteers who have been running this event for decades. That community ownership gives it an atmosphere that is hard to replicate. It feels less like a trade show and more like the largest anime club meetup in California. Programming runs 24 hours across the weekend. The cosplay masquerade on Saturday is a full theatrical production. The gaming hall is one of the best at any convention, running tournaments, free-play consoles, and retro arcades through the night. The dealer room and artist alley are substantial, with indie creators outnumbering corporate licensors. Bay Area, Sacramento, and Central Valley attendees make up the core, but it draws convention-goers from across the West Coast. Four-day badges sell out. Single-day passes may be available at the door. If you have been to Anime Expo but not FanimeCon, the culture is meaningfully different.
Coming Soon
14h away
Promenade Temecula, 40820 Winchester Rd. May 17th. The Anime Temecula Valley Monthly Meetup is the version of the fandom community that exists outside of convention weekends — a regular gathering at a familiar spot for the people who care about anime and want to talk about it with someone who does too. Temecula's anime community has been building this through the monthly format: show up, bring whoever you've been watching, find the conversation that starts. The Promenade setting gives the meetup room to breathe — outdoor, accessible, easy to find and easy to leave if you only have an hour. But the meetups tend to run long because anime fans talking about anime in person rarely find a natural stopping point. Free to come. May 17th. meetup.com/anime-temecula for the details and headcount. This is the Temecula version of the community event that doesn't require a badge or a convention floor — just show up and introduce yourself to whoever's already there. The Inland Empire has a real anime community. This meetup is one of the places it exists.
Coming Soon
18h away
So-Cal Cosplay Scene holds their community photoshoot at Balboa Park on May 17, 2026 — any fandom, any level of build, free to attend, in the most photogenic park in San Diego. Balboa Park makes sense for this. The architecture — Spanish Colonial Revival, warm and ornate — reads as a fantasy backdrop regardless of what you're cosplaying. A Zelda build photographs against the museum facades like a production still. A Star Wars costume catches the fountain light in ways that look impossible. The park provides all the production value. The community runs this as an open call: no entry requirements, no competition, no hierarchy. Beginners with store-bought costumes show up next to people who spent six months on a foam build, and neither group makes the other feel out of place. Photographers are welcome and encouraged — bring your gear. The shoot starts in the morning when the light is best and the park is quiet. Follow @socosplayscene on Instagram for the exact gathering point and start time. Just come. That's the whole instruction.
Coming Soon
5 days away
Anime Conji is San Diego's longest-running fan-organized anime convention, held annually at the Handlery Hotel in Mission Valley for a three-day weekend of anime, manga, gaming, cosplay, and the specific community that has kept this event running for over a decade as an independent, fan-operated alternative to the larger commercial conventions. The convention's fan-run character gives Anime Conji a distinct personality: the programming decisions are made by people who attend because they genuinely love the material, the guest selection reflects real community enthusiasm rather than marketing considerations, and the convention floor has the energy of a community gathering rather than a marketplace. Anime Conji features programming across multiple rooms covering series-specific panels, AMV (anime music video) competitions, voice actor guest Q&As and signings, a dealers room with merchandise from licensed and independent vendors, an artist alley with original work from regional creators, and a cosplay competition with detailed craftsmanship judging. The Handlery Hotel is at 950 Hotel Cir N in Mission Valley, accessible from the I-8 at Hotel Circle. The Mission Valley Trolley stop connects to downtown San Diego. Convention badge holders receive discounted hotel rates at the Handlery when booking through the Anime Conji room block. Weekend and single-day badges available through the Anime Conji website.
Coming Soon
6 days away
GameSync San Diego, May 23rd. $10 to compete. The Dragon Ball Sparking Zero Community Tournament is the version of the game that the ranked queue can't replicate: a room, real people across from you, and the specific pressure of knowing that the person on the other side of the table has been in the training room longer than the character select screen suggests. Dragon Ball Sparking Zero at the tournament level is a different game than the one you've been playing online. The reads are faster, the character matchup knowledge runs deeper, and the crowd around a close set turns a fighting game into a performance. The GameSync setup — real monitors, proper controller support, tournament bracket management — creates the environment where the game gets played at its best. $10 entry. May 23rd. Register at gamesync.us or show up and enter at the door. If you've been playing since launch and haven't tested your game against anyone in person, this is the tournament where you find out where you actually stand. If you've watched competitive Dragon Ball but never entered a bracket, a local GameSync tournament is the right first step — small enough to be accessible, competitive enough to mean something.
Coming Soon
6 days away
GameSync San Diego, 2860 Main St. May 23rd. $10. Dragon Ball Sparking Zero Community Night is the version of the game that ranked matches can't give you — a room, real people, and the specific energy of a fighting game played with an audience watching who has an opinion about every character select. GameSync runs the setup right: real monitors, proper controllers, a bracket that treats the evening like the event it is. Community nights at GameSync have the benefit of regulars — players who come monthly and have history with each other, which produces a level of play and a level of competitive conversation that you don't find at a random online lobby. The Dragon Ball community is vocal. A close match in this room has an audience. $10 at the door. May 23rd. If you've been playing since launch, show up and see where your game stands against the room. If you're new to Sparking Zero, community night is the right entry — you'll lose to players who can explain what you did wrong, which is how you get better. gamesync.us for the full event details and schedule.
Coming Soon
6 days away
The Southern California Pinball League runs competitive pinball tournaments throughout the summer at rotating venues across the Los Angeles and Orange County areas, offering IFPA-sanctioned competition that counts toward world ranking points and the SoCal circuit standings. The Summer Series format typically runs 6-8 events between May and August, with venues rotating through the established pinball locations of Southern California: Full Tilt in North Park, Pins and Needles in Los Feliz, Pacific Pinball Museum in Alameda (visiting events), 82 Bar in Hollywood, and hobbyist host locations where private collectors make their machines available for competition. Competitive pinball at the SoCal League level is matchplay format: players face a random opponent each round on a randomly selected machine, accumulating match wins across the tournament. The format rewards machine versatility — knowing current Stern productions, classic 1990s WMS games, and vintage electromechanical tables equally is an advantage that specialists in any single era don't possess. The league welcomes players at all skill levels. If you know what a multiball is and can drain intentionally, you have enough foundation to participate in a league event. The regulars are uniformly welcoming to newcomers and the post-event gatherings at the host venues extend the experience well beyond the competition itself. Check the IFPA Southern California player directory and the SoCal Pinball League social channels for the 2026 Summer Series schedule, venues, and registration requirements.
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