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The border captain offers Mugen a chance to save his friends; get a criminal's head through a bandit-filled forest and return by nightfall. Mugen evades the "bandits", warrior monks wearing
Tengu masks, but falls ino a trap. One border patrol sends out a man named Yamane to tag Mugen, and frees him. During the chaos, Yamane
sets fire to the monk's herb store as a distraction, the fire spreading into their field and releasing hallucinogenic gasses. The fumes reach the border post, saving Fuu and Jin as the guards become docile, and the three reunite when Fuu and Jin come across Mugen partying with the warrior priests. 10"Lethal Lunacy"
Transliteration: "Fighting Fire with Fire / Idoku Seidoku" (Japanese: 以毒制毒)Akira Yoshimura[39]Touko Machida[39]July 29, 2004 (2004-07-29)July 16, 2005 The three are offered food by a priest if they clean his dojo. When Fuu is doing errands she hears about the murders of several kills samurai, with a large bounty offered for the killer's capture. Mugen is the only one interested, and while going to a bar to drink, a man named Shoryu talks to him about the mystery killer. Mugen realizes Shoryu is the killer, and attacks. During the battle, Mugen is briefly overwhelmed by Shoryu's non-contact attacks before the police arrive, with Shoryu promising to fight Mugen on the next full moon. The priest reveals that he was Shoryu's teacher; Shoryu learned the secret techniques surrounding qi after being shipwrecked in China, and his violent ways caused the two to split.
Ultimately, Baki wins the fight,
showing his offensive superiority over Kanou. After the battle, Baki
meets Tokugawa for the first time and asks him for permission to join the arena. Tokugawa agrees to his request. Underground Arena Saga[] Baki fighting Atsushi Suedou. The saga starts with the Shinshinkai Karate tournament at the Tokyo Budokan arena. Baki is 17 years old now.
20. [72][74] It was collected into two volumes in 1998, the first one in May and the second one in September. [75][76] The second manga
series, simply titled Cowboy Bebop and illustrated by Yutaka Nanten [ja], was serialized from November issue 1998 to March issue 2000. [73][74] It was collected into three volumes, the first two in April and October 1999 and the third one in April 2000. [77][78][79] Both manga series were licensed by Tokyopop for release in North America. [80][81] Video games[edit] Main articles: Cowboy Bebop (PlayStation game) and Cowboy Bebop: Tsuioku no Serenade A Cowboy Bebop video game, developed and published by Bandai,[82] was released in Japan for the PlayStation on May 14, 1998. [83] A PlayStation 2 video game, Cowboy Bebop: Tsuioku no Serenade, was released in Japan on August 25, 2005,[84] and an English version had been set for release in North America. However, in January 2007, IGN reported
that the release had likely been cancelled, speculating that it did not survive Bandai's merger with Namco to Bandai Namco Games. [85] Main article: Super Robot Wars T In 2022, Cowboy Bebop made its debut in the Bandai Namco crossover game Super Robot Wars T, which is traditionally focused on turn based mecha combat. [86] Film[edit] Main article: Cowboy Bebop: Knockin' on Heaven's Door An anime film titled Cowboy Bebop: Knockin' on Heaven's Door, (カウボーイビバップ 天国の扉, Kaubōi Bibappu: Tengoku no Tobira) known in English as Cowboy Bebop: The Movie, was released in Japan in September 2001 and in the United States in August 2002. On July 22, 2008, If published an article on its website regarding a rumor of a live-action Cowboy Bebop movie in development by 20th Century Fox.