bleach vs naruto vs one piece vs dragon ball apk
8 million volumes sold, second only to Eiichiro Oda's One Piece, with 12. 7 million volumes sold in the same period. [147] Nevertheless, the series ranked first in 2019 Oricon's annual
manga ranking chart, with over 12 million copies sold, while One Piece ranked at second, with over 10. 1 million copies sold, making Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba the best-selling manga of 2019. [b][148] Oda wrote a message regarding Gotouge's manga achievement. [149] Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba was the first series to take all top 10 positions of Oricon's weekly manga chart. [150] The manga
occupied the entire top 10 for a full month, and it was also the first series in Oricon's history to occupy the entire top 19 weekly rank. [151][152] In
October 2020, the twenty-two volumes, at the time, of the series occupied the top 22 spots of Oricon's weekly manga chart. [134] It was the best-selling manga for the first half of 2020, with 45,297,633 copies sold,[153] and its twenty volumes (including a special edition of volume 20) at the time, were among the top 25 best-selling manga volumes of 2020. [154] Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba's first twenty-two volumes were the best-selling manga volumes of 2020,[155] making the series as well the best-selling manga series in 2020, with 82,345,447 copies sold. [156] In North America, the volumes of Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba were ranked on NPD BookScan's monthly top 20 adult graphic novels list since September 2019.
[58] By January 2014, the
manga had sold around 2. 6 million copies. [59][60][61] It was the fourth best-selling manga series in Japan in 2014, with 6. 9 million copies sold. [62] The whole original series sold over 12 million copies. [63] The sequel series, Tokyo Ghoul:re sold over 3. 7 million copies in Japan during its debut year in 2015,[64] and 4. 3 million copies in 2016. [65] It was the fifth best-selling manga series in 2017 with sales of over 5. 3 million copies. [66] It was the tenth best-selling manga series in
2018 with 3.
[3] He said
that his editor was adamant that the series would not do well, and tried to stop him from creating it. [3] The Japanese medical industry was strongly influenced by the professional practices in Germany, thus it seemed natural to the author to set Monster in Germany. Post-war Germany was chosen so that the neo-Nazi movement could be included in the story. [4] When he started the semimonthly Monster at the end of 1994, Urasawa was already writing Happy! weekly and continued to serialize both at the
same time. When Happy! ended in 1999, he began the weekly 20th Century Boys. Writing both Monster and 20th Century Boys at the same time caused him to be briefly hospitalized for exhaustion.