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99/mthMax Monthly Ad-Free$15. 99/mthMax Monthly Ultimate Ad-Free$19. 99/mthVisit Siteat Max - United StatesReasons to buy+Award-winning original programming+Top-tier movies+Original news programmingReasons to avoid-4K costs extra-Last Chance section is practically hiddenMax has everything HBO Max had, and then some, just like how HBO Max enhanced HBO. Now, the most popular Discovery Plus content is added in, so Logan Roy and Guy Fieri sit side by side in the Series section, in a situation nobody ever imagined. All for the same $15. 99 that HBO Max cost. But there are minor headaches, such as all the shows and movies beginning with "the" are grouped together in alphabetical sorting under T. Which can get confusing. You need to pay more for 4K, too. Fortunately, existing HBO Max subscribers keep 4K and other perks for the first six months of Max's existence. Oh, and the Last Chance section no longer has the dates for when stuff's leaving, and it's hidden in the New & Notable section.[21] According to Bandai America, the company in charge of Sailor Moon merchandise in the western hemisphere, the approach to advertising Sailor Moon was to make the show and super-heroine "'culturally appropriate' for the American market". [22] Media[edit] Manga[edit] Main article: List of Sailor Moon chapters Written and illustrated by Naoko Takeuchi, Sailor Moon was serialized in the monthly manga anthology Nakayoshi from December 28, 1991, to February 3, 1997. [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.
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