Naruto -dub- Episode 26 -

If you watched Naruto on Toonami or Cartoon Network in the mid-2000s, you know that Episode 26 is where the training wheels come off. Titled “Special Report: Live from the Forest of Death,” this isn’t just another survival challenge—it’s the episode where the English voice cast truly shines, and where Naruto Uzumaki stops being the class clown and starts becoming a legend.

“Special Report: Live from the Forest of Death” is a weird title for an episode that contains no actual reporters. But maybe that’s the point. The only report that matters is the one Naruto delivers—with his fists. Naruto -Dub- Episode 26

100%. Whether you’re revisiting for nostalgia or introducing a friend to Naruto for the first time (who prefers dubs), Episode 26 is the moment the series promises something bigger. It’s the episode where you realize: This kid isn’t just comic relief. He’s the hero. If you watched Naruto on Toonami or Cartoon

If you watched this on TV, you remember the commercial breaks teasing Yu-Gi-Oh! or Rave Master . The dub’s soundtrack—while different from the original Japanese score—hits hard here. The orchestral swells during Naruto’s rage moment are pure early-2000s anime drama. It’s cheesy? Yes. Does it work? Absolutely. But maybe that’s the point

For dub fans, this is the first time Naruto sounds less like a cartoon character and more like a kid who has finally found something worth protecting.

Naruto Dub Episode 26: The Moment "Dead Last" Became a Hero

Meanwhile, Kate Higgins (Sakura) delivers one of her best early performances. Sakura’s breakdown—cutting her hair to escape a ninja’s grip—is iconic, but Higgins sells the desperation without making it whiny.