march comes in as a lion
Archived
from the original on May 18, 2007. Retrieved
December 20, 2009. ^ a b "Yu Yu Hakusho Back on Cartoon Network". ICv2. October 21, 2005. Archived from the original on October 3, 2012. Retrieved June 11, 2011. ^ "Hunter X Hunter: Vol. 1. (Brief Article)(Book Review)". Publishers Weekly.
136. [179] The streaming service Netflix released an American animated
series titled Castlevania as part of its original programming. [180] The show is being showrun by Adi Shankar,[181] who had previously teased plans for an animated mini-series based on Castlevania III: Dracula's Curse in 2015,[182][183] and is written by Warren Ellis. [184] Fred Seibert and Kevin Kolde co-produce. [181] The series is animated by Seibert's Frederator Studios and Powerhouse Animation Studios,[181] under Michael Hirsh's Wow Unlimited Media company. The show's first season released on July 7, 2017, and ran for four episodes, while the second season premiered on October 26, 2018, and ran for eight episodes. [185][186][187] By the time the second season became available in 2018, Castlevania had reportedly garnered nearly 30 million viewers
worldwide according to Netflix analytics, becoming one of the most successful original animated shows on Netflix. [188] A third season released on March 5, 2020, and ran for 10 episodes. [189] The fourth and final season was released on May 13, 2021,[190] and a new series set in the Castlevania universe is in the works. [191] It will focus on a descendant of Trevor, Richter Belmont, and Maria Renard in France during the French Revolution. [192] The franchise has its own toy line manufactured by NECA which consists of six figures of Simon Belmont, Alucard, Dracula (available in two variants with one variant with its mouth closed and another one with its mouth open showing Dracula's vampire fangs), Succubus and a Pixel Simon mini figure which was exclusively available as a promotional item at Comic-Con 2007 where the figures were first shown in full form.
Sama[edit] Okyaku-sama Sama (様, さま) is a more respectful version for individuals of a higher rank than oneself. Appropriate usages include divine entities, guests or customers (such as a sports venue announcer
addressing members of the audience), and sometimes towards people one greatly admires. It is the root word for -san. Deities such as native Shinto
kami and Jesus Christ are referred to as kami-sama, meaning "Revered spirit-sama". When used to refer to oneself, -sama expresses extreme arrogance (or self-effacing irony), as in praising oneself to be of a higher rank, as with ore-sama (俺様, "my esteemed self"). Sama customarily follows the addressee's name on all formal correspondence and postal services where the addressee is, or is interpreted as, a customer.