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Read more. Featured Article Archive • Vote New Article! Featured Character Ryokan
Kurita (栗田 良寛, Kurita Ryōkan) is the largest and strongest player in the Deimon Devil Bats. Ryokan is a kind-hearted individual, and the only
thing bigger than his
body is his heart. Read more. Featured Article Archive • Vote New Article! Featured Character Ryokan Kurita (栗田 良寛, Kurita Ryōkan) is the largest and strongest player in the Deimon Devil Bats. Ryokan is a kind-hearted individual, and the only thing bigger than his body is his heart. Read more.
[85][86] Along with Yakitate!! Japan, the series won the 49th Shogakukan Manga Award for the shōnen category in 2004. [87] It won the public voting for Eagle Award's "Favourite Manga" in 2010 and 2011. [88][89] The series won the "Shonen Tournament 2009" by the editorial staff of the French website manga-news. [90] The manga
also received the 42nd Seiun Award for best science fiction comic in 2011. [91] Arakawa also received the New Artist Prize in the fifteenth Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prizes for the manga series in 2011. [92][93] Fullmetal Alchemist ranked third on the first annual Tsutaya Comic Awards' All-Time Best Section in 2017. [94] The manga was nominated for the Grand Prize of the 10th Sense of Gender Award in 2010. [95] In a survey from Oricon in 2009, Fullmetal Alchemist ranked ninth as the manga that fans wanted to be turned into a live-action film. [96] The series is also popular with amateur writers who produce dōjinshi (fan fiction) that borrows characters from the series. In the Japanese market Super Comic City, there have been over 1,100 dōjinshi based on Fullmetal Alchemist, some of which focused on romantic interactions between Edward Elric and Roy Mustang. [97] Anime News Network said the series had the same impact in Comiket 2004 as several female fans were
seen there writing dōjinshi.
Retrieved October 28, 2017. ^ a b c d e f Kovalsky, Justin (November 2001). "Animerica Feature: Yû Yû Hakusho". Animerica. Viz Media. 9 (10/11): 38–43. ISSN 1067-0831.
Archived from the original on April 7, 2004. ^ "《幽遊白書》-《YU YU HAKUSHO》". YouTube. Archived from the original on November 5, 2022.