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3Novel 4Reception 5See also 6Notes 7References 8External links Toggle the table of contents Dead Mount Death Play 10 languages DeutschEspañolFrançaisBahasa IndonesiaItaliano日本語PolskiไทยTiếng Việt中文 Edit links ArticleTalk English ReadEditView history Tools Tools move to sidebar hide
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series Dead Mount Death PlayFirst tankōbon volume coverデッドマウント・デスプレイ
(Deddomaunto Desupurei)GenreAction[1]Dark fantasy[1]Reverse isekai[1] MangaWritten byRyohgo NaritaIllustrated byShinta FujimotoPublished bySquare EnixEnglish publisherNA: Yen PressMagazineYoung GanganDemographicSeinenOriginal runOctober 20, 2017 – presentVolumes12 Anime television seriesDirected byManabu Ono (#1–12)Yoshihiro Satsuma (#13–24)Written byManabu OnoYukie SugawaraYoriko TomitaMusic byF. M. FStudioGeek ToysLicensed byCrunchyroll SA/SEA: MedialinkOriginal networkTokyo MX, BS11, SUN, KBS Kyoto, AT-X, HTBOriginal run April 11, 2023 – December 26, 2023Episodes24 Dead Mount Death Play (Japanese: デッドマウント・デスプレイ, Hepburn: Deddomaunto Desupurei) is a Japanese manga series written by Ryohgo Narita and illustrated by Shinta Fujimoto. It began serialization in Square Enix's Young Gangan in October 2017. An anime television series adaptation produced by Geek Toys aired in two cours, with the first cour airing from April to June 2023 and the second cour airing from October to December 2023. Plot[edit] In another world, a hero named Sir Shagrua Edith Lugrid is about to finish off a powerful necromancer known as the Corpse God. However, the Corpse God uses a unique magic skill to reincarnate himself into another world, and ends up in modern-day Shinjuku, in the body of a boy named Polka Shinoyama who just had his throat
slit by an assassin. Thinking that this new world could provide the peaceful life he desired in the previous one, the Corpse God
takes on Polka's identity and soon integrates himself in the Shinjuku underworld with assistance from a woman named Clarissa and her subordinates. Characters[edit] Polka Shinoyama (四乃山 ポルカ, Shinoyama Poruka) Voiced by: Yuki Sakakihara[2] (Japanese); Morgan Berry[3] (English) A 16 year old boy who was murdered by a hitman who turned out to be Misaki. His body now hosts an otherworldly necromancer known as the Corpse God, who seeks the peaceful life he was denied in his previous world. Though there are fewer sources of magic in this world, the Corpse God can use Polka's body to summon skeletons of varying size, speak with dead spirits, and revive a corpse as a zombie with enough preparation.
Archived from the original on
March 7, 2024. Retrieved March 7, 2024. ^ Anderson, Erik (
December 18, 2023). "International Press Academy Satellite Awards Nominations: Oppenheimer, Succession Lead". AwardsWatch. Archived from the original on December 19, 2023.
[126][127][128] The anime adaptation was also featured several times in Japanese television rankings,[129][130] with the first episode having a 7. 5 percent television viewership rating. [131] In 2006, Japanese television network TV Asahi conducted a poll for the top hundred anime, and
Eyeshield 21 was placed 47th. [132] Moreover, Eyeshield 21's series is credited with increasing the number of Japanese teenagers playing American football. [133][134] However, commenting on its genre's lack of popularity in the United States, Jason Thompson wrote in Anime News Network that "Even Eyeshield 21, a sports manga which is practically made for Americans, wasn't a big hit here". [135] Reviews[edit] Critics have generally given the Eyeshield 21 manga positive reviews. Deb Aoki from About. com wrote that tying with Bleach, Eyeshield 21 was the best continuing shōnen manga of 2007, because it "has well-written characters, dynamic artwork, nail-biting cliffhangers, plus a winning mix of comedy,
action and drama". [136] On the 2008 list, Aoki listed Eyeshield 21 as the best continuing shōnen, as it was able to "[come] into its own" from other shōnen series. [137] In that same year, Pop Culture Shock's Sam Kusek elected it the best continuing manga series. [138] Chris Zimmerman of Comic Book Bin was positive on his review of the volumes 30–33; he affirmed it is "one of the best shonen titles out there" and described it as "a superb series, with well developed characters, intense action, and touching humor".