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ICV2.
April 12, 2011. Retrieved 2011-05-10. ↑ "3位は『NARUTO』、平成元年以降連載「漫画発行部数」TOP10". Live Door.
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Archived from the original on April 1, 2019. Retrieved April 1, 2019. ^ USJ『HUNTER×HUNTER』と初コラボ決定、アトラクション登場 念能力など世界観再現で来年3月から期間限定開催. Oricon News (in Japanese).
November 29, 2021.
[26] Manga[edit] See also: List of Mushoku Tensei volumes § Manga In the May 2014 issue of Monthly Comic Flapper, it was announced that the manga adaptation of Mushoku Tensei by Yuka Fujikawa would premiere in the June issue;[27][28] though Yuka is the author of the manga series, character designs are credited to SiroTaka. [29] Media Works collected the individual chapters into tankōbon volumes; the first volume was released in October 2014. [29] In January 2015, Seven Seas Entertainment announced its licensing of the manga series for localization in North America under the title Mushoku Tensei: Jobless Reincarnation. [30] A second manga series illustrated by Kazusa Yoneda, titled Mushoku Tensei: Isekai Ittara Honki Dasu - Shitsui no Majutsushi-hen (無職転生 ~異世界行ったら本気だす~ 失意の魔術師編, lit. "Jobless Reincarnation: Giving His Best When Transferred to Another World - Depressed Magician Arc") began serialization on NTT Solmare's Comic Cmoa website on December 20, 2021. It adapts the light novel's seventh volume. [31] Spin-offs[edit] A spin-off manga illustrated by Shoko Iwami, titled Mushoku Tensei: Roxy
Gets Serious (無職転生 ~ロキシーだって本気です~, Mushoku Tensei: Rokishī Datte Honki Desu), was serialized online in Kadokawa Shoten's ComicWalker website from December 21, 2017,[32] to July 14, 2023. [33] Twelve tankōbon volumes were published from March 22, 2018,[34] to August 23, 2023. [35] Seven Seas Entertainment licensed the manga in September 2019 for print and digital release. [36] A second spin-off manga illustrated by
Kaede Nogiwa, titled Mushoku Tensei: 4-koma ni Natte mo Honki Dasu (無職転生 ~4コマになっても本気だす~, lit. "Jobless Reincarnation: I'll Be Serious Even in 4-koma"), was serialized in ASCII Media Works' Comic Dengeki Daioh "g" magazine from October 25, 2018,[37] to August 27, 2020.
Due to the diminishment of the emperor’s dominance over the country, the warrior class sought to fill the power void that culminated in the creation of the shogunate (a military government). With political power and military might on their side, . the samurai were poised to seize control of the country.
After the Genpei War of 1180 to 1185, in which the Minamoto clan prevailed over the Taira clan, the Kamakura Shogunate was formed, leaving the emperors and court nobility as mere figureheads, while the real power was wielded by the samurai who
served the Daimyo (a vassal of the Shogun). Samurai without a lord or master were considered rōnin — also known as a “drifter” or “wanderer” — who resorted to a life of crime to maintain their ruthless aura and keep themselves from starving. Because of a general lack of knowledge, romanticizing samurai (particularly rōnin) in fictional works has become rather common in recent decades. Hence, why Osamu Tezuka — the mangaka of Dororo — decided to amalgamate the samurai heritage with surrealistic demons to create an interesting narrative about a boy (Hyakkimaru) who roams the
countryside to recover the limbs that were “stolen” from him, due to his father’s plead for power.
In this regard, the story follows a predictable pattern of presenting new demons/monsters to be defeated by the accomplished samurai (Hyakkimaru) and the cunning orphan (Dororo). Biwamaru — an old, blind man — also swoops in from time to time to help the two when the circumstances seem too dire (a fine example of plot-armor).