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[19] The Singapore edition is licensed to be imported to Australia and New Zealand by Madman Entertainment. [20] All 23 English-language volumes have been released in North America and Singapore. In addition, Tokyopop released a box set containing the first four volumes in October 2007, and started re-releasing earlier volumes in "Ultimate Editions" combining two sequential volumes in a single larger hard-cover volume
with new cover art. The first Ultimate Edition release met with mixed reviews, however, because they exactly reproduce the first two volumes without correcting changed page numbers or prior errors. [21] As of June 2008, six Ultimate Editions have been released, covering the first twelve volumes of the series. After Tokyopop ceased publication, the series was re-licensed by Yen Press, with
plans to release it as twelve omnibus editions corresponding Hakusensha's collector's editions. [22] Starting in June 2016, Fruits Basket: Collector's Edition was released in English by Yen Press. [23] Spin-offs[edit] See also: Fruits Basket Another On 4 September 2015, a new series, Fruits Basket Another (フルーツバスケットanother, Furūtsu Basuketto Anazā), began serialization in HanaLaLaOnline. [24][25] In August 2017, it was transferred to Manga Park. [26] Originally, it was
announced that Fruits Basket another would be finished on 3 December 2018,[27][28] however, in March 2020, it was announced that the series would return with "chapter 13" (split in three parts) on 20 April 2020 (originally scheduled for 6 April). [28][29] The second part of "chapter 13" was published on 4 May 2020[28] and the third part of "chapter 13" was published in September 2020, and Takaya announced that this would be "tentatively" the last chapter of the manga.
And yet it manages to reach a high point that makes you feel like you can do anything. You probably wouldn’t even see the depth of the show coming at first, as the
very bright colors and
chipper atmosphere of the first few episodes really lull you into a sense of an optimistic rom-com. But then BOOM, the curtains drop and we see real people, with some messed up histories, in the process of healing. Music is also a carrying theme in the show, which makes the whole thing very serene. 1. Clannad (2007) Clannad is known as one of the best tear-jerkers around.
[4][18][19] As with his previous series, YuYu Hakusho, Togashi used drafting ink and Kabura pens for his
illustrations but began using an eMac to color them. [20] Togashi uses few or no assistants in the manga's production;[21] however, fellow manga artist and future wife Naoko Takeuchi assisted Togashi in adding screentone to single-color pages for the first volume. [22][23] With the birth of their first son early in its publication, Togashi felt that this personal aspect of his life would be a great influence on his work, particularly the manga's theme of a young boy searching for his father. [20] There have been several instances in which Togashi has apologized to readers in Shueisha's Weekly Shōnen Jump for low-quality artwork and promised to redraw portions of the chapters for their tankōbon (collected volume) releases. [24][25][26] In addition, the publication history of the Hunter × Hunter manga has been plagued with hiatuses since 2006, in which serialized chapters would be separated by extended periods of time. [27][28][29][30] After
returning from a two-year-long hiatus in June 2014,[31] and joining the English-language Weekly Shonen Jump lineup, the manga went on another just two months later. [32] The series returned from this hiatus on April 18, 2016,[33] however, just over two months later, Hunter × Hunter began another hiatus on June 4, 2016. [34] It came back on June 26, 2017,[35] and just over two months later, on August 31, the series went on hiatus again, planning to return by the end of that year. [36] The series came back on January 29, 2018,[37] before going on hiatus again on April 9 of the same year. [38] After a five-month hiatus, the manga resumed publication from September 22 to November 26, 2018, before entering another hiatus for four years, its longest one to date. [39][40][41] In May 2022, Togashi created a Twitter account where he teased that the series would resume publication.