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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. At the same time, the fourth and fifth arcs were printed in a secondary magazine called Smile. [32] Pages from the Tokyopop version of the manga ran daily in the
Japanimation Station, a service accessible to users of America Online. [33] The series was later collected into a three-part graphic novel series spanning eighteen volumes, which were published from December 1, 1998, to September 18, 2001. [34][35] In May 2005, Tokyopop's license to the Sailor Moon manga expired, and its edition went out of print. [36] In 2011, Kodansha Comics announced they had acquired the license for the Sailor Moon manga and its lead-in series Codename: Sailor V in English. [37] They published the twelve volumes of Sailor Moon simultaneously with the two-volume edition of Codename Sailor V from September 2011 to July 2013. [38][39][40] The first of the two related short story volumes was published on September 10, 2013;[41] the second was published on November 26, 2013. [42] At Anime Expo 2017, Kodansha Comics announced plans to re-release Sailor Moon in an "Eternal Edition", featuring a new English translation, new cover artwork by Takeuchi, and color pages from the manga's original run, printed on extra-large premium paper. [43][44] The first Eternal Edition volume was published on September 11, 2018;[45] the tenth and final volume was published on October 20, 2020. [46] On July 1, 2019, Kondasha Comics began releasing the Eternal Editions digitally,[47]
following an announcement the day before about the series being released digitally in ten different languages.
[23] It was later published in the region by Funimation on DVD in 2009 and on Blu-ray in 2019. [24][25] The series was published by MVM Entertainment the United Kingdom, originally in seven volumes September 5, 2005, and October 16, 2006, then as a complete collection on September 3, 2007. [26] In Australia, a complete for Blu-ray was published by Madman Entertainment on June 15, 2011. [27] Episode list[edit] No. TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date [28]English air date [29]1"Tempestuous Temperaments"
Transliteration: "Storm and Stress / Shippū Dotō" (Japanese: 疾風怒涛)Shinichirō Watanabe[30]Shinji Obara[30]May 20, 2004 (2004-05-20)May 14, 2005 Fuu, a waitress in a tea house, enrages the son of the town's magistrate when she spills tea on him. The outlaw Mugen enters the tea house and offers to dispatch the magistrate's son and his entourage for Fuu in exchange for food. Meanwhile, the ronin Jin fights and kills the magistrate's bodyguards to stop their execution of an innocent peasant on behalf of the cruel magistrate. Jin then stumbles upon Mugen battling the magistrate's son's entourage, and Mugen challenges him to a fight. Their fight ends up destroying the teahouse, and Fuu decides to quit working as a waitress and search for a samurai who smells of sunflowers, whom she has long sought. Mugen and Jin are captured and sentenced to death, but Fuu saves
them by bombing the castle with fireworks. Mugen and Jin attempt to
restart their battle, but Fuu persuades them to agree to a coin toss: if it lands on heads then the pair can continue their battle, but if it lands on tails they postpone their battle to help her find the samurai who smells of sunflowers.
[verification needed] ^ "Funimation to Relaunch One
Piece Simulcast on August 29". Anime News Network. August 18, 2009. Archived from the
original on August 20, 2009. Retrieved August 18, 2009. [verification needed] ^ Zahed, Ramin (February 12, 2013). "Toei and Manga Ent. Take 'One Piece' to U. K. " Animation Magazine. Archived from the original on August 30, 2017.