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Retrieved 2011-05-15. ↑ 52. 0 52. 1 "Archived copy" 再放送情報 [Repeat Information] (in Japanese). Nippon Animation. Archived from the original on 2015-09-24.

Viz Media. Archived from the original on October 29, 2017. Retrieved October 28, 2017. ^ Inoue, Takehiko (1996). "Afterword". Slam Dunk, Volume 31. Shueisha. ISBN 4-08-871839-9. ^ Aoki, Deb. "Interview: Takehiko Inoue". About.

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com. au" (Tweet). Retrieved March 21, 2019 – via Twitter. ^ 大人気アニメを全集中・一挙放送!"序章"と"神回"を2週連続で地上波GP帯初放送! (in Japanese). Fuji TV. September 7, 2020. Archived from the original on October 5, 2020. Retrieved October 31, 2020. ^ Pineda, Rafael Antonio (December 10, 2020). "Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Anime Episodes 22-26 Also Get Recompilation Airing". Anime News Network. VideoGamer. com. Archived from the original on March 24, 2012. Retrieved August 11, 2010. ^ Kurt Kalata (July 26, 2006). "Tales from the Crypt: Castlevania's 20th Anniversary Blow-out".
SNK introduced the MVS into arcades in 1989. The NeoGeo MVS (short for Multi-Video System) made its debut in 1989 and allowed arcade operators to display one, two, four, or six separate games in a single cabinet. In order to swap in a new game, all the operator had to do was remove one cartridge and exchange it for another. Changing the title cards and cabinet artwork for a new game took minutes, thanks to the custom cabinet designed by Neal Zook, an experienced industrial designer who also served a brief stint as SNK Corp. of America's operations director during the late 1980s. Magician Lord was one of the first games for the NeoGeo. The MVS was an immediate success. Arcade operators loved it because the setup time required for each game was nearly nonexistent, the floor space required was minimal, and the cost outlay for new cartridges was barely $500--less than half of what a traditional arcade unit cost at the time. Arcade-goers fell in love with the MVS as well. The first four games--NAM-1975, Baseball Stars Professional, Top Player's Golf, and Magician Lord--took familiar genres and reinvigorated them with the kind of colorful 16-bit graphics and huge character sprites that players had been wanting to see in arcade games for some time. NAM-1975 spoke to the shoot-'em-up crowd, Baseball Stars and Top Player's Golf attracted sports fans, and Magician Lord is widely regarded as one of the defining side-scrolling adventure games of the 1980s.