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[19] An English dub produced by Aniplex of America and Bang Zoom! Entertainment[20] premiered on Adult Swim's Toonami programming block on October 13, 2019. [21][22][c] Funimation began streaming the English dub on December 8, 2020. [24][20] Season 2 and anime shorts[edit] Main article: Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba (season 2) The second season ran for two consecutive cours, beginning with a seven-episode television
series adaptation of the "Mugen Train" story arc, broad
cast from October 10 to November 28, 2021. [25][26] It included an original first episode, as well as new animation cuts and background music that differ from the film adaptation. [27][28] Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba – Entertainment
District Arc (鬼滅の刃 遊郭編, Kimetsu no Yaiba – Yūkaku-hen) premiered on December 5, 2021, with a one-hour special,[29][27] and finished with its 11th episode on February 13, 2022. [30] The main staff and cast members from the first season returned to reprise their roles. [31][32] The series was broadcast on 30 stations and channels, including Fuji TV and Tokyo MX, covering most of Japan. [33] According to Jason DeMarco, Adult Swim executive producer who oversees the block, the success of the Mugen Train film initially made further seasons of the series too expensive to acquire for broadcast. [34] Two years later in October 2023, Adult Swim announced that the English dub for Mugen Train Arc would broadcast on its Toonami block beginning on November 12 of the same year. [35] A month later, it was confirmed that Entertainment District Arc would also air beginning on January 14, 2024. [36] Funimation streams Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba – Entertainment District Arc.
4M Add to My List Kill la Kill 1712278 8. 03 20131004 Kill la Kill TV, 2013Finished 24 eps, 24 min Action Comedy Fantasy Ecchi Kill la Kill After the murder of her father,
Ryuuko Matoi has been wandering the land in search of his killer. Following her only lead—the missing half of his invention, the Scissor Blade—she arrives at the prestigious Honnouji Academy, a high school unlike any other. The academy is ruled by the imposing and cold-hearted student council president Satsuki Kiryuuin alongside her powerful underlings, the Elite Four. In the school's brutally competitive hierarchy, Satsuki bestows upon those at the top special clothes called "Goku Uniforms," which grant the wearer unique superhuman abilities. Thoroughly beaten in a fight against one of the students in uniform, Ryuuko retreats to her razed home where she stumbles
across Senketsu, a rare and sentient "Kamui," or God Clothes. After coming into contact with Ryuuko's blood, Senketsu awakens, latching onto her and providing her with immense power. Now, armed with Senketsu and the Scissor Blade, Ryuuko makes a stand against the Elite Four, hoping to reach Satsuki and uncover the culprit behind her father's murder once and for all. [Written by MAL Rewrite] StudioTrigger SourceOriginal ThemesSchoolSuper Power 8. 03 1. 7M Add to My List Shokugeki no Souma 1632914 8.
"[12][216] A large contingent of anime and manga is also notable for deliberately forgoing any identification of its characters with real-world ethnicities or nationalities, termed in criticism as mukokuseki (statelessness). Mukokuseki characters may be depicted with culturally neutral features and can significantly impact the reception of a property outside of Japan. [217][218] A U. A. E. -Filipino produced TV series called Torkaizer is dubbed as the "Middle East's First Anime Show", and is currently in production[219] and looking for funding. [220] Netflix has produced multiple anime series in
collaboration with Japanese animation studios,[221] and in doing so, has offered a more accessible channel for distribution to
Western markets. [222] Similar initiatives have been enacted by the US-based streaming service Crunchyroll,[223] producing titles such as High Guardian Spice and an adaptation of Tower of God. The web-based series RWBY, produced by Texas-based company Rooster Teeth, is produced using an anime art style, and the series has been described as "anime" by multiple sources. For example, Adweek, in the headline to one of its articles, described the series as "American-made anime",[224] and in another headline, The Huffington Post described it as simply "anime", without referencing its country of origin. [225] In 2013, Monty Oum, the creator of RWBY, said "Some believe just like Scotch needs to be made in Scotland, an American company can't make anime.