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3The Brotherhood of the Forgotten/The Siblings 1. 3. 4Other 2Episodes 3Reception 4Netflix streaming 5Kickstarter campaigns 6References 7External links Toggle the table of contents Wakfu (TV series) 10 languages EspañolFrançaisItalianoNederlandsOccitanPolskiPortuguêsРусскийСрпски / srpskiУкраїнська Edit links ArticleTalk English ReadEditView history Tools Tools move to sidebar hide Actions ReadEditView history General What links hereRelated changesUpload fileSpecial pagesPermanent linkPage informationCite this pageGet shortened URLDownload QR codeWikidata item Print/export Download as PDFPrintable version From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
French animated TV series WakfuGenre Animated Action Fantasy Comedy-Drama
Adventure Created byAnthony RouxBased onWakfuDeveloped byAnkama Animations
France Televisions
Frakas Productions
PictanovoDirected byAnthony Roux [fr]
Fabrice NzinziVoices of French cast: Fanny Bloc Adeline Chetail Thomas Guitard Patrick Bethune Geneviève Doang Dorothée Pousseo Jeremy Prevost English cast: Jules de Jongh Jessica Bell Ross Grant Keir Stewart Hugo Chandor Joanna Ruiz Arthur Bostrom Erika Harlacher Christine Marie Cabanos Kira Buckland Kyle McCarley Doug Erholtz Keith Silverstein Todd Haberkorn Theme music composerGuillaume HouzéComposerGuillaume HouzéCountry of originFranceOriginal languageFrenchNo. of seasons4No. of episodes65 (+ 4 specials & 3 OVAs) (list of episodes)ProductionProducersAnthony RouxEmanuel DarrasRunning time22-25 minutesProduction companiesAnkama
France Télévisions
Frakas Productions
PictanovoOriginal releaseNetworkFrance 3
France 4ReleaseOctober 30, 2008 (2008-10-30) - present Wakfu: The Animated Series is an anime-influenced French animated television series produced by Ankama Animation, based on the video game Dofus. The first season of 26 episodes began airing on 30 October 2008, and new episodes would
continue to air into January 2010 on France 3. The show is animated with Adobe Flash software; all the production is done in France except the special episodes "Noximilien l'Horloger" and "Ogrest, la Légende", both produced in
Japan. The series is directed by Anthony "Tot" Roux, and character design is directed by Xavier "Xa" Houssin and Kim "Tcho" Etinoff. [1] A spin-off called Mini-Wakfu, which features humorous shorts with characters depicted in chibi style has aired since September 2009. The special episode "Noximilien l'Horloger", the origin story of the main antagonist, Nox, was produced in Japan and features a radically different art style made by the same team of animators who worked on Kaiba and Kemonozume. The episode was directed by Eunyoung Choi with Masaaki Yuasa on character design.
Retrieved November 16, 2022. ^ 夢見る男子は現実主義者 3 (in Japanese). Hobby Japan. Retrieved November 16, 2022. ^ 夢見る男子は現実主義者 4 (in Japanese). Hobby Japan.
From that point on, new games would come out for the CD unit just a couple of months after the corresponding MVS/AES versions. The only difference in the software was the loading times that came along as a result of the slower CD-based medium, a shortcoming that soon became the common complaint among many
NeoGeo CD owners. The benefit of the cartridge medium is that data can be moved from ROM chip to system memory in just milliseconds, which means that the transition from one scene to the next appears instantaneous to the player. The loading time in between stages in a typical NeoGeo CD game, such as King of Fighters '94, was 20 to 30 seconds--a nearly unbearable amount of time to wait between matches in a fighting game. It didn't help that the "Now Loading" message that popped up during these transitions came in the form of a goofy-looking monkey banging on a pair of conga drums. Ask any NeoGeo CD owner, and they'll tell you they absolutely hate that monkey. Initially,
Samurai Spirits RPG was released exclusively for the NeoGeo CD. PlayStation and Saturn versions followed, but the game was never produced for North America or Europe. To solve the problem of lengthy load times, SNK released a version of the NeoGeo CD in early 1995 that used faster cache RAM. The new system, called the NeoGeo CDZ, ran all of the same software as the NeoGeo CD, but did so with half the load time. In Japan, SNK marketed the NeoGeo CD aggressively.