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Slump by Akira Toriyama (1981) Miyuki and Touch by Mitsuru Adachi (1982) Kisshō Tennyo by Akimi Yoshida (1983) Yume no Ishibumi by Toshie Kihara (1984) Zenryaku Milk House by Yumiko Kawahara (1985) Purple Eyes in the Dark by Chie Shinohara (1986) Boyfriend by Fuyumi Soryo (1987) Fancy Dance by Reiko Okano (1988) Papa Told Me by Nanae Haruno (1989) 1990s Crest of the Royal Family by Chieko Hosokawa and Hajime-chan ga Ichiban! by Taeko Watanabe (1990) Makoto Call! by Kazuko Fujita (1991) Basara by Yumi Tamura (1992) Bara no Tame ni by Akemi Yoshimura (1993) Baby and Me by Marimo Ragawa (1994) Boys Over Flowers by Yoko Kamio (1995) Kanon by Chiho Saito (1996) Ceres, Celestial Legend by Yuu Watase (1997) Angel Lip by Kiyoko Arai (1998) Barairo no Ashita by Ryo Ikuemi (1999) 2000s Red River by Chie Shinohara (2000) Kaguyahime by Reiko Shimizu and Yasha by Akimi Yoshida (2001) Nana by Ai Yazawa and Kaze Hikaru by Taeko Watanabe (2002) Love Com by Aya Nakahara (2003) Sand Chronicles by Hinako Ashihara and We Were There by Yūki Obata (2004) Sonnanja neyo by Kaneyoshi Izumi (2005) 7 Seeds by Yumi Tamura (2006) Boku no Hatsukoi o
Kimi ni Sasagu by Kotomi Aoki (2007) Black Bird by Kanoko Sakurakoji (2008) Machi de Uwasa no Tengu no Ko by Nao Iwamoto (2009) 2010s Ōoku: The Inner Chambers by Fumi Yoshinaga (2010) Pin to Kona by Ako Shimaki (2011) Piece – Kanojo no Kioku by Hinako Ashihara (2012) Kanojo wa Uso o Aishisugiteru by Kotomi Aoki (2013) Joō no Hana by Kaneyoshi Izumi (2014) My Love Story!! by Kazune Kawahara and Aruko (2015) 37. 5°C no Namida by Chika Shiina (2016) Love Me, Love Me Not by Io Sakisaka (2017) Suteki na Kareshi by Kazune Kawahara (2018) Nagi no Oitoma by Misato Konari (2019) 2020s The
Yuzuki Family's Four Sons by Shizuki Fujisawa (2020) My Love Mix-Up! by Wataru Hinekure and Aruko (2021) Tomorrow, I'll Be Someone's Girlfriend by Hinao Wono (2022) Categories (until 2022):GeneralShōnenShōjoChildren2023– vteShogakukan Manga Award – Shōnen1970s The Poe Clan and They Were Eleven by Moto Hagio (1975) Captain and Play Ball by Akio Chiba and Ganbare Genki by Yū Koyama (1976) Galaxy Express 999 and Senjo Manga series by Leiji Matsumoto (1977) Dame Oyaji by Mitsutoshi Furuya (1978) Toward the Terra and Kaze to Ki no Uta by Keiko Takemiya (1979) 1980s Urusei Yatsura by Rumiko Takahashi (1980) Dr. Slump by Akira Toriyama (1981) Miyuki and Touch by Mitsuru Adachi (1982) Musashi no Ken by Motoka Murakami (1983) Futari Daka and Area 88 by Kaoru Shintani (1984) Hatsukoi Scandal and Tobe! Jinrui II by Akira Oze (1985) Silver Fang by Yoshihiro Takahashi (1986) Just Meet and Fuyu Monogatari by Hidenori Hara (1987) B. B. by Osamu Ishiwata (1988) Ucchare Goshogawara by Tsuyoshi Nakaima (1989) 1990s Mobile Police Patlabor by Masami Yuki (1990) Ushio & Tora by Kazuhiro Fujita (1991) Ghost Sweeper Mikami by Takashi Shiina and Yaiba by Gosho Aoyama (1992) YuYu Hakusho by Yoshihiro Togashi (1993) Slam Dunk by Takehiko Inoue (1994) Major by Takuya Mitsuda (1995) Firefighter! Daigo of Fire Company M by Masahito Soda (1996) Ganba! Fly High by Shinji Morisue and Hiroyuki Kikuta (1997) Project ARMS by Kyoichi Nanatsuki and Ryōji Minagawa (1998) Monkey Turn by Katsutoshi Kawai and Hikaru no Go by Yumi Hotta and Takeshi Obata (1999) 2000s Case Closed by Gosho Aoyama and Cheeky Angel by Hiroyuki Nishimori (2000) Inuyasha by Rumiko Takahashi (2001) Zatch Bell! by Makoto Raiku (2002) Yakitate!! Japan by Takashi Hashiguchi and Fullmetal Alchemist by Hiromu Arakawa (2003) Bleach by Tite Kubo (2004) Wild Life by Masato Fujisaki (2005) Kekkaishi by Yellow
Tanabe (2006) Ace of Diamond by Yuji Terajima (2007) Cross Game by Mitsuru Adachi (2008) Sket Dance by Kenta Shinohara (2009) 2010s King Golf by Ken Sasaki (2010) Nobunaga Concerto by Ayumi Ishii (2011) Silver Spoon by Hiromu Arakawa (2012) Magi: The Labyrinth of Magic by Shinobu Ohtaka (2013) Be Blues! - Ao ni Nare by Motoyuki Tanaka (2014) Haikyu!! by Haruichi Furudate (2015) Mob Psycho 100 by One (2016) The Promised Neverland by Kaiu Shirai and Posuka Demizu (2017) Dr. Stone by Riichiro Inagaki and Boichi (2018) Maiko-san chi no Makanai-san by Aiko Koyama (2019) 2020s Teasing Master Takagi-san by Sōichirō Yamamoto and Chainsaw Man by Tatsuki Fujimoto (2020) Komi Can't Communicate by Tomohito Oda (2021) Call of the Night by Kotoyama and Ao no Orchestra by Makoto Akui (2022) Categories (until 2022):GeneralShōnenShōjoChildren2023– vteMagic BusTelevision series Wonder Beat Scramble (1986) Kiko-chan's Smile (1996–1997) Burn-Up Excess (1997–1998) Sexy Commando Gaiden (1998) Weiß Kreuz (1998) Go! Go! Itsutsugo Land (2001–2002) Demon Lord Dante (2002) Cinderella Boy (2003) Damekko Dōbutsu (2005) Patalliro Saiyuki! (2005) Play Ball (2005) Play Ball 2nd (2006) Cobra the Animation (2010) Papa Datte, Shitai (2019) Yo-kai Watch! (2019) Shoot! Goal to the Future (2022) The Aristocrat's Otherworldly Adventure: Serving Gods Who Go Too Far (2023) OVA/ONAs Wounded Man (1986–1988) Urusei Yatsura (#3–7, 1987–1989) Mahjong Hishō-den: Naki no Ryū (1988–1990) Cipher (1989) Riki-Oh (1989–1990) Carol (1990) Burning Blood (1990–1991) Mad Bull 34 (1990–1992) Sword for Truth (1990) Yūkan Club (1991) Boyfriend (1992) Legend of the Galactic Heroes (1996–1997, #89, 92, 95, 98, 101, 104, 107, 110) Dragoon (1997) Legend of the Galactic Heroes: A Hundred Billion Stars, A Hundred Billion Lights (1998, #1–4, 13–14, 20, 24) Legend of the Galactic Heroes: Spiral Labyrinth (1999–2000, #1–14, 16–17, 19–23, 27–28) Cobra the Animation (2008–2009) Films They Were Eleven (1986) Urusei Yatsura: The Final Chapter (1988) Legend of the Galactic Heroes: Golden Wings (1992) Big Wars (1993) Legend of the Galactic Heroes: Overture to a New War (1993) Inochi no Chikyū: Dioxin no Natsu (2001) Glass no Usagi (2005) Category Retrieved from "https://en. wikipedia. org/w/index. php?title=They_Were_Eleven&oldid=1179602152" Categories: Manga series1977 filmsJapanese television specials1986 films1975 manga1986 anime filmsCentral Park MediaJapanese drama television seriesMagic Bus (studio)Moto HagioNHK original programmingScience fiction anime and mangaShogakukan franchisesShogakukan mangaShōjo mangaSuspense anime and mangaViz Media mangaWinners of the Shogakukan Manga Award for shōjo mangaWinners of the Shogakukan Manga Award for shōnen mangaHidden categories: CS1 uses Japanese-language script (ja)CS1 Japanese-language sources (ja)CS1 Spanish-language sources (es)CS1 Polish-language sources (pl)Articles with short descriptionShort description is different from WikidataUse mdy dates from December 2019Articles containing Japanese-language textAnime and manga articles with malformed first and last infobox parametersTemplate film date with 1 release dateIMDb title ID not in Wikidata This page was last edited on 11 October 2023, at 06:04 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4. 0; additional terms may apply.
2Anime 3.
3Video game 4Reception Toggle Reception subsection 4. 1Manga 4. 2Anime 5References 6External links Toggle the table of contents Dr. Stone 23 languages العربيةCatalàDeutschEspañolفارسیFrançais한국어ՀայերենBahasa IndonesiaItalianoעבריתBahasa MelayuМонгол日本語PolskiPortuguêsРусскийکوردیไทยTürkçeУкраїнськаTiếng Việt中文 Edit links
ArticleTalk English ReadEditView history Tools Tools move to sidebar hide Actions ReadEditView history General What links hereRelated changesUpload fileSpecial pagesPermanent linkPage informationCite this pageGet shortened URLDownload QR codeWikidata item Print/export Download as PDFPrintable version From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Japanese manga series and its franchise Dr. StoneFirst tankōbon volume cover, featuring Senku IshigamiGenreAdventure[1]Post-apocalyptic[2]Science fiction[1] MangaWritten byRiichiro InagakiIllustrated byBoichiPublished byShueishaEnglish publisherNA: Viz MediaImprintJump ComicsMagazineWeekly Shōnen JumpEnglish magazineNA: Weekly Shonen JumpDemographicShōnenOriginal runMarch 6, 2017 – March 7, 2022Volumes26 (List of volumes) Anime television seriesDirected byShinya Iino (S1–2)Shūhei Matsushita (S3)Written byYuichiro KidoMusic byTatsuya KatoHiroaki TsutsumiYuki KanesakaStudio TMS Entertainment 8PAN (S1–2)Die4Studio (S3) Licensed byCrunchyroll SEA: MedialinkOriginal networkTokyo MX, KBS, SUN, BS11, TVh, TBC, TVA, TVQEnglish networkUS: Adult Swim (Toonami)Original run July 5, 2019 – presentEpisodes57 (List of episodes) MangaDr. Stone Reboot: ByakuyaWritten byBoichiPublished byShueishaEnglish publisherNA: Viz MediaImprintJump ComicsMagazineWeekly Shōnen JumpDemographicShōnenOriginal runOctober 28, 2019 – December 23, 2019Volumes1 Anime television filmDr. Stone: RyusuiDirected byShūhei MatsushitaWritten byYuichiro KidoMusic byTatsuya KatoHiroaki TsutsumiYuki KanesakaStudioTMS / Die4StudioLicensed byCrunchyrollOriginal networkTokyo MX, BS11ReleasedJuly 10, 2022Runtime54 minutes GameDr. Stone: Battle CraftDeveloperPoppin Games JapanPublisherPoppin Games JapanGenreStrategyPlatformAndroid, iOSReleasedJP: September 1, 2021NA: November 28, 2023 Anime and manga portal Dr. Stone (stylized as Dr. STONE) is a Japanese manga series written by Riichiro Inagaki and illustrated by the South Korean artist Boichi.
7% of tourists from China and 6. 1% of tourists from South Korea said they were motivated to visit Japan because of
Japanese popular culture. [188] In a 2021 survey held by Crunchyroll market research, 94% of Gen-Z's and 73% of the general population said that they are familiar with anime. [189][190] Fan response See also: Anime and manga fandom, ACG (subculture), and List of anime conventions Cosplay of Madoka Kaname and Kyubey from Puella Magi Madoka Magica during Tracon 2013 event at the Tampere Hall in Tampere, Finland A replica of the German Army's Panzer 4, made by an enthusiastic fan, and a motorcycle with illustrations of characters from the anime "Girls und Panzer" were photographed in Ōarai, Ibaraki , where the anime is set. Anime clubs gave rise to anime conventions in the 1990s with the "anime boom", a period marked by anime's increased global popularity. [191] These conventions are dedicated to anime and manga and
include elements like cosplay contests and industry talk panels. [192] Cosplay, a portmanteau of "costume play", is not unique to anime and has become popular in contests and masquerades at anime conventions. [193] Japanese culture and words have entered English usage through the popularity of the medium, including otaku, an unflattering Japanese term commonly used in English to denote an obsessive fan of anime and/or manga. [194] Another word that has arisen describing obsessive fans in the United States is wapanese meaning 'white individuals who want to be Japanese', or later known as weeaboo or weeb, individuals who demonstrate an obsession with Japanese anime subculture, a term that originated from abusive content posted on the website 4chan. org. [195] While originally derogatory, the terms "Otaku" and "Weeb" have been reappropriated by the anime fandom overtime and today are used by some fans to refer to themselves in a comedic and more positive way.