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[121] Other media[edit] An encyclopedia titled Official Yū Yū Hakusho Who's Who Underworld Character Book (幽☆遊☆白書 公式キャラクターズブック 霊界紳士録, Yū Yū Hakusho Koushiki Kyarakutāzubukku Reikai Shinshiroku) was published by Shueisha on March 4, 2005. [122] It contains extensive character profiles, story summaries, and an exclusive interview with Yoshihiro Togashi. An art book, Yu Yu Hakusho Illustrations (幽☆遊☆白書 画集, Yū Yū Hakusho Gashū), was published by Shueisha on April 27, 2005. [123] It is composed of pieces of artwork from the series, including illustrations created for the kanzenban edition reprints and an index of print material where each image was first used. Shueisha has also released two volumes of a guide book titled Yū Yū Hakusho Perfect File (幽☆遊☆白書 パーフェクトファイル, Yū Yū Hakusho Pāfekutofairu) and books based on both films, each containing screenshots organized in manga-style panels. [124][125][126] In Japan, various collectibles such as trading figures, plush dolls, and gashapon toys also exist. [5][127][128][129][130] A collectible card game based on the franchise was released by Movic. [73] In North America, the series saw licensing for apparel from ODM, lines of action figures by IF Labs and Jakks Pacific,[131][132][133] a Skannerz electronic toy from Radica Games,[134][135] and an activities book from Scholastic. [136] Score Entertainment created the Yu Yu Hakusho Trading Card Game for release in the United States. [137] An English guidebook to the series titled Yu Yu Hakusho Uncovered: The Unofficial Guide was published by Cocoro Books on October 12, 2004. [138] A stage play adaptation produced by Office Endless was announced in May 2019.[7] The side-stories were serialized simultaneously in RunRun—another of Kodansha's manga magazines. [7] The 52 individual chapters were published in 18 tankōbon volumes by Kodansha from July 6, 1992, to April 4, 1997. [23][24] In 2003, the chapters were re-released in a collection of 12 shinzōban volumes to coincide with the release of the live-action series. [25] The manga was retitled Pretty Guardian Sailor Moon and included new cover art,[26] and revised dialogue and illustrations. The ten individual short stories were also released in two volumes. [27][28] In 2013, the chapters were once again re-released in 10 kanzenban volumes to commemorate the manga's 20th anniversary, which includes digitally remastered artwork, new covers and color artwork from its Nakayoshi run. [29] The books have been enlarged from the typical Japanese manga size to A5. [30][31] The short stories were republished in two volumes, with the order of the stories shuffled. Codename: Sailor V was also included in the third edition. [31] The Sailor Moon manga was initially licensed for an English release by Mixx (later Tokyopop) in North America. The manga was first published as a serial in MixxZine beginning in 1997, but was later removed from the magazine and made into a separate, low print monthly comic to finish the first, second and third arcs.
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