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When they both realize the person behind their current predicament was a wealthy foreigner with an "M" printed on his cane, they leave Japan for Europe and try to track him down. While trying to locate Aya's missing body and hopefully their target with it, the trio take on supernatural mysteries across Europe with Tsugaru taking on the persona of "The Cage User" for the birdcage he carries with Aya's head inside. Characters[edit] The Cage User[edit] Aya Rindo (輪堂 鴉夜, Rindō Aya) Voiced by: Tomoyo Kurosawa[2] A young Heian era woman and a yōkai, who is beheaded by an unknown half-demon assailant from Britain and has her headless body taken away. Since she is a demon, she cannot die (though being decapitated by a half-demon means she cannot heal herself) and thus her head continues to live on, ultimately seeking support from Tsugaru to get her body back and take revenge on the man who left her like this. Tsugaru Shinuchi (真打 津軽, Shin'uchi Tsugaru) Voiced by: Taku Yashiro[2] A former member of a special oni extermination squad charged with slaughtering monsters across Japan during the Meiji Restoration. At some point, he was injected with oni blood by the same man who beheaded Aya and turned into a half-oni himself. Though the power allows him to kill oni and other supernatural beings with his bare hands, he knows that at some point in the future the oni blood will overcome his human personality and he will be put down by a similar hunter. In the meantime, he supports himself by fighting other demons in cage matches as a circus act called the Oni Slayer. Shizuku Hasei (馳井 静句, Hasei Shizuku) Voiced by: Makoto Koichi[2] A stern maid who serves under Aya. She wields a rifle with an attached bayonet that fires silver rounds. Parisians[edit] Annie Kerber (アニー・ケルベル, Anī Keruberu) Voiced by: Sayumi Suzushiro[3] A young Parisian journalist girl who follows the exploits of The Cage User and the various supernatural cases they run into around Europe.[50] By November 2019, it had over 96 million copies in circulation. [51] By July 2023, it had over 100 million copies in circulation. [52] Anime Academy gave the first anime series a glowing response; all five reviewers rated it above 90%, with one referring to the series as "the cream of the crop" of the sports genre in anime, and another stating that "fighting and character development have never tangoed so well together". [53] Gia Manry of Fanboy. com listed the series as one of their "Top Ten Underrated Manga". [54] IGN listed Hajime no Ippo: Rising among the best anime series of the 2010s. [55] See also[edit] List of boxing films Portal: Sports References[edit] ^ a b c Marshall, Dallas (January 8, 2013). "Fighting Spirit". THEM Anime Reviews. Archived from the original on January 15, 2013. Retrieved July 13, 2018.
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