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[148] In the long run, all of the trials and tribulations Ippo confronted may have been the setup to an immense payoff, in the form of a weapon even stronger than the Dempsey Roll that would also conquer all of its weaknesses. In Other Media Video Games Main Article: List of Hajime no Ippo gamesBeing the main character of the Hajime no Ippo series, Ippo is playable in every video game from Hajime no Ippo on the Playstation, to Hajime no Ippo: Fighting Souls on mobile devices. Ippo has also appeared as a character in games outside of the series, such as Sunday x Magazine Hot Fight! Dream Nine, Sunday & Magazine WHITE COMIC, and Sunday vs Magazine: Shūketsu! Chōjō Daikessen. He also appears in as a special event character in mobile games and apps such as "Kōshien Pocket", "Puzzles & Dragons", "aruku&", and "Bousou Retsuden - Tansha no Tora". Real Fighting Hajime no Ippo: The Glorious Stage!! Main Article: Real Fighting Hajime no Ippo: The Glorious Stage!!
Gotō Kyōji plays as Ippo in this stage play adaption. Creation and Concept Ippo's design in an early draft.
Then, it gets a little tricky. Series protagonist Shinji then becomes part of a major event that technically takes place during episodes 25 and 26 and also the End of Evangelion movie. If you want to go super in-depth and granular with the chronological order, you can watch episodes 1-24, the first hour of End of Evangelion, then episodes 25 and 26 for a more introspective look at the main characters during a significant plot beat. Then you’re free to finish up End of Evangelion before moving on to the Rebuild movies. We’d recommend just sticking with the main order above – but the option is here if you want it. At the very least, it gives greater context to the utterly bewildering final two episodes of a series that, famously, ran out of steam (and budget) during its original run. Neon Genesis Evangelion order – should I watch Evangelion: Death(True)2? (Image credit: Netflix/Gainax)The only skippable piece of mainline Evangelion media is a curiosity that can also be found on Netflix called Evangelion: Death(True)2, otherwise known as Evangelion: Death and Rebirth. The ‘Death’ portion of the movie is a recap of the entire series with some newly-drawn scenes, as well as some larger world-building that's covered in the series' director cut episodes. The ‘Rebirth’ section is just the first third of End of Evangelion – and was released as a teaser for Japanese audiences in 1997. Our advice? Skip it. You’re not missing out on anything important, but it does technically come after episode 26 and before End of Evangelion in terms of release dates if you're in a completionist mood.
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