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[263][264] The stylized mecha design that would later earn praise for Evangelion was initially criticized by certain toy companies as being too difficult to manufacture,[265] with some expressing concern that models of the Evangelion mecha "would never sell. "[266] Eventually, Sega agreed to license all toy and video game sales. [107] At the time of the release of the Japanese film Death & Rebirth and The End of Evangelion, estimated sales of Evangelion merchandise topped $300 million,[262] of which 70% derived from sales of video and laser discs,[267] soundtrack CDs, single CDs, computer software and the three-volume manga. [262][268] Multiple merchandising products were released during the
Renewal Project, such as CDs, video games, cel-art illustrations and collectible models. [124] The commercial exploitation of the
series for the home video market achieved record sales and remained strong over a decade later. [269] The fame of the show has grown through home video sales, which exceeded two or three times the sales of other contemporary anime series and films. [270] According to anime critic Guido Tavassi, the series contributed significantly to the spread of the DVD format in Japan and generated a considerable impact on the Japanese economy, calculated in
billions of yen. [270] In 2006, Matt Greenfield stated that the franchise had earned over $2 billion. [271] A 2007 estimate placed total sales of 6,000 related goods at over ¥150 billion. [272][273] By 2015, more than two million Evangelion pachinko and pachislot machines had been sold, generating ¥700 billion in revenue. [274] References[edit] Citations[edit] ^ Creamer, Nick (July 10, 2019).
^ a b "Yu Yu Hakusho Back on Cartoon Network". ICv2.
October 21, 2005. Archived from the original on October 3, 2012. Retrieved
September 6, 2009. ^ Ball, Ryan (September 7, 2006). "FUNimation Doubles the FUN". Animation Magazine. Archived from the original on April 11, 2012. Retrieved September 6, 2009. ^ Funimation Channel (July 6, 2011).
[3] The series is streamed by Crunchyroll worldwide outside of Asia,[4] and Funimation produced a simuldub. [5] The English dub of the anime began airing on
Adult Swim's Toonami programming block on August 25, 2019. [6] A second
season of the anime series was announced after the first season's finale. The second season focused on the story of the "Stone Wars" arc from the manga series. [7] Titled Dr. Stone: Stone Wars, the second season aired from January 14 to March 25, 2021 and ran for 11 episodes.