With Madoka and Sakura it's not even "implied" after a certain point, just there, whereas Utena is more complex but also has several important blatantly queer female (and male) characters regardless of that fact. And Yurikuma, Aoi Hana, Simoun and Flip-Flappers are just... yeah.
Floppy Florpers is so super gay, and has a lot of subtext-based queerness but also some pretty blatant and explicit literal declarations of love, for example.
also, Hidamari Sketch, Love Live!, Yuru Yuri, Yuyushiki, Saki, and Keijo!!!!!!!!
Only one I take issue with would be Keijo Eight Exclamation Marks. It has a canonical lesbian, but her representation isn't near good enough to fit on this list without caveats, which I'd say is important enough. I mean, Flop Flops also requires one small - if still large due to how potentially off-putting it can be - caveat in the gropey robot easily being a turn-off (no less when it's present so early), but that's less to do with representation than it does plain silliness on part of the writers.
Comments
I have no reason to not start watching Yuri!!! on Ice yet, either, although that's a gay boy anime.
☭ B̤̺͍̰͕̺̠̕u҉̖͙̝̮͕̲ͅm̟̼̦̠̹̙p͡s̹͖ ̻T́h̗̫͈̙̩r̮e̴̩̺̖̠̭̜ͅa̛̪̟͍̣͎͖̺d͉̦͠s͕̞͚̲͍ ̲̬̹̤Y̻̤̱o̭͠u̥͉̥̜͡ ̴̥̪D̳̲̳̤o̴͙̘͓̤̟̗͇n̰̗̞̼̳͙͖͢'҉͖t̳͓̣͍̗̰ ͉W̝̳͓̼͜a̗͉̳͖̘̮n͕ͅt͚̟͚ ̸̺T̜̖̖̺͎̱ͅo̭̪̰̼̥̜ ̼͍̟̝R̝̹̮̭ͅͅe̡̗͇a͍̘̤͉͘d̼̜ ⚢
As opposed to Ano Hana.