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March 2008. ISSN 1320-7458. ^ Chapman, Jacob Hope (January 30, 2010). "Death Note Relight 2". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on September 19, 2014. Retrieved November 29, 2014. ^ Sparrow, A. E. (April 8, 2008). "Death Note – Another Note: The Los Angeles BB Murder Cases Review".

Mr. and Mrs. Uruma Shun's parents who were killed by the bullies. Meiseki High (明関高校 Meiseki Kōkō)[edit] Kaname Shirakawa (白川 要, Shirakawa Kaname) The younger twin sister of Jun and childhood friend of Uruma. A classmate of Uruma, she always had a crush on him ever since he save her from the same group of bullies who would switch their target from her to Uruma, causing her to feel indebted to her childhood friend. Although she nearly performed in the play Romeo and Juliet with Uruma, unfortunately she was raped by Hiro Madoka, causing her to be traumatized before Uruma murdered Madoka in retaliation for his attack on Kaname. At some point, she and Uruma had sex after going to an amusement park, causing an unaware Jun to eventually think that Uruma raped his sister, which led to his betrayal of his former childhood friend. During the Rock, Paper, Scissors match, she was kidnapped by the Revolution Club before dying at the hands of Momoki Sanae, the Revolution Club member who sliced off her right arm and her left leg, as a result of her brother having lost two matches to Uruma. Her death would be the catalyst for a series of botched surgeries performed by her brother on multiple women with the same hiragana characters in her name during the Jun arc. Jun Shirakawa (白川 純, Shirakawa Jun) The older twin brother of Kaname, he is very protective of her and is also a childhood friend of Shun. At some point in the story, when his younger sister gets raped, he mistakenly believes that Uruma was responsible for his younger sister's rape, causing him to join Kyou's cult just so he could inflict suffering on Uruma before realizing his mistake and later switching sides to make up for the suffering he caused him.

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The aftermath of Musashi's solo battle, has him his return to wandering despite being offered the position of mentor. Meanwhile, Matahachi's mother passes away, leaving his son to tell the story of the manga. Musashi's new wandering leads him meet the orphan Iori, whom he decides to raise while dealing with a village with poor fields. Musashi, Iori and Toyozaemon's journey to the retirement estate of Yūsai Hosokawa, Otsū and Jōtarō's situation living with the Yagyū, while Kojirō deals with the Hosokawa. Production[edit] While borrowing content from the Musashi novel, Takehiko Inoue took liberties when writing Vagabond, most notably the fight between the protagonist and the 70 Yoshioka which was one of the hardest to draw. After finishing the basketball manga Slam Dunk, Takehiko Inoue wanted to write something more realistic. He did not find differences between the basketball players and samurais since he claimed that none of them like losing. In retrospect, Inoue's experience with changing demographies feels obligatory as he believes manga authors should challenge themselves. [6] He called Vagabond as an experiment about complex writing. [7] Inoue started Vagabond having wondered what the character was like when he read Musashi. Having come off of drawing a sports manga, he wanted to create a series about more basic concepts, such as "life and death, the human condition, etc. HLJ. Archived from the original on October 10, 2010. Retrieved July 6, 2020. ^ "HUNTER×HUNTER グッズネット" [Hunter × Hunter goods net] (in Japanese). Nippon Animation. Archived from the original on August 18, 2010.
"Hatsune Miku Colorful Stage Cancels Revival My Dream Event After Racial Allegations". GamerBraves. Archived from the original on September 25, 2022. Retrieved October 2, 2022. ^ セカイシンフォニー2021. Sekai Symphony official website (in Japanese). Retrieved January 1, 2024. ^ "プロジェクトセカイ COLORFUL LIVE 1st - Link -". プロジェクトセカイ COLORFUL LIVE 1st - Link - (in Japanese). Archived from the original on August 11, 2022. Retrieved August 27, 2022.