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Anime News Network. Archived from the original on 25 August 2013. Retrieved 28 July 2013. External links[edit] Monster official anime website at Nippon TV (in Japanese) Monster official manga website at Viz Media Monster (manga) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia Monster at IMDb vteMonster by Naoki Urasawa Chapters Episodes Characters Links to related articles vteNaoki Urasawa1980s Pineapple Army (1985–1988) Yawara! (1986–1993) Master Keaton (1988–1994) 1990s Happy! (1993–1999) Monster (1994–2001) 20th Century Boys (1999–2006) 2000s Pluto (2003–2009) 21st Century Boys (2006–2007) Billy Bat (2008–2016) 2010s Master Keaton Remaster (2012–2014) Mujirushi: The Sign of Dreams (2017–2018) Asadora! (2018–present) Sneeze: Naoki Urasawa Story Collection (2019) vteBig Comic Original seriesCurrent Sunset on Third Street (1974) Tsuribaka Nisshi (1979) Shin'ya Shokudō (2007) Shōwa Tennō Monogatari (2017) 1970s Abu-san (1973–2014) Haguregumo (1973–2017) 1980s Human Crossing (1980–1990) Pineapple Army (1985–1998) Master Keaton (1988–1994) 1990s Kaze no Daichi (1990–2022) Okami-san (1990–1999) Jinbē (1992–1997) Monster (1994–2001) 2000s The Legend of the Strongest, Kurosawa! (2002–2006) Bengoshi no Kuzu (2003–2010) Pluto (2003–2009) Gaku: Minna no Yama (2003–2012) Dr. Kotō Shinryōjo [on hiatus] (2008–2010) 2010s Bengoshi no Kuzu Dai-2 Shin (2010–2014) Master Keaton Remaster (2012–2014) Fuichin Tsaichen! (2013–2017) Shin Kurosawa: Saikyō Densetsu (2013–2020) Guardians of the Louvre (2014) Cats of the Louvre (2016–2017) No Longer Human (2017–2018) Akagari: The Red Rat in Hollywood (2017–2021) Mujirushi: The Sign of Dreams (2017–2018) Zōkan [ja] Benkei in New York (1991–1996) Shin'ya Shokudō (2006–2007) Tokyo These Days (2019–2023) Big ComicBig Comic OriginalWeekly Big Comic SpiritsBig Comic SuperiorMonthly Big Comic SpiritsYawaraka Spirits vteShogakukan Manga Award – General1950s Būtan by Noboru Baba (1955) Oyama no Kaba-chan by Eijo Ishida (1956) Manga Seminar on Biology and Biiko-chan by Osamu Tezuka (1957) Little Black Sambo and Shiawase no Ōji by Tarō Senba (1958) Korisu no Pokko by Jirō Ōta and Bonko-chan and Fuichin-san by Toshiko Ueda (1959) 1960s Science-kun no Sekai Ryokō by Reiji Aki (1961) Susume Roboketto and Tebukuro Tecchan by Fujiko Fujio (1962) Fight Sensei and Stop! Nii-chan by Hisashi Sekitani (1963) Osomatsu-kun by Fujio Akatsuka (1964) Paki-chan to Ganta by Kazuo Maekawa (1965) Sabu to Ichi Torimono Hikae by Shotaro Ishinomori (1967) Animal 1 and Inakappe Taishō by Noboru Kawasaki (1968) Fire! by Hideko Mizuno (1969) 1970s Glass no Shiro by Masako Watanabe and Gag Ojisan and Oya Baka Tengoku by Ryuzan Aki (1970) Hana Ichimonme by Shinji Nagashima and Minashigo Hutch by Tatsuo Yoshida (1971) Tōchan no Kawaii Oyome-san and Hashire! Boro by Hiroshi Asuna (1972) Otoko Doahō Kōshien and Deba to Batto by Shinji Mizushima (1973) The Drifting Classroom by Kazuo Umezu (1974) Golgo 13 by Takao Saito (1975) Abu-san by Shinji Mizushima (1976) Notari Matsutarō by Tetsuya Chiba (1977) Haguregumo by George Akiyama (1978) Tosa no Ippon Tsuri by Yūsuke Aoyagi (1979) 1980s Hakatakko Junjō and Gangaragan by Hōsei Hasegawa and Jarinko Chie by Etsumi Haruki (1980) Sunset on Third Street by Ryōhei Saigan (1981) Tsuribaka Nisshi by Jūzō Yamasaki and Ken'ichi Kitami (1982) Hidamari no Ki by Osamu Tezuka (1983) Human Crossing by Masao Yajima and Kenshi Hirokane (1984) Bokkemon by Takashi Iwashige (1985) Oishinbo by Tetsu Kariya and Akira Hanasaki (1986) Hotel and Manga Nihon Keizai Nyumon by Shotaro Ishinomori (1987) Genji Monogatari by Miyako Maki (1988) Yawara! by Naoki Urasawa (1989) 1990s F by Noboru Rokuda (1990) Kazoku no Shokutaku and Asunaro Hakusho by Fumi Saimon (1991) Okami-san by Ichimaru and Miyamoto kara Kimi e by Hideki Arai (1992) Kaze no Daichi by Nobuhiro Sakata and Eiji Kazama (1993) Bokkō by Hideki Mori (1994) Ron by Motoka Murakami and Gallery Fake and Tarō by Fujihiko Hosono (1995) Gekka no Kishi by Junichi Nōjō (1996) Azumi by Yū Koyama (1997) Aji Ichi Monme by Zenta Abe and Yoshimi Kurata (1998) 2000s Monster by Naoki Urasawa (2000) Heat by Buronson and Ryoichi Ikegami (2001) 20th Century Boys by Naoki Urasawa (2002) Dr. Kotō Shinryōjo by Takatoshi Yamada (2003) Iryū by Tarō Nogizaka and Akira Nagai (2004) A Spirit of the Sun by Kaiji Kawaguchi and Rainbow: Nisha Rokubō no Shichinin by George Abe and Masasumi Kakizaki (2005) Bengoshi no Kuzu by Hideo Iura (2006) Bambino! by Tetsuji Sekiya and Kurosagi by Takeshi Natsuhara and Kuromaru (2007) Gaku: Minna no Yama by Shin'ichi Ishizuka (2008) Shinya Shokudō by Yarō Abe (2009) 2010s Ushijima the Loan Shark by Manabe Shōhei and Space Brothers by Chūya Koyama (2010) Kids on the Slope by Yuki Kodama (2011) I Am a Hero by Kengo Hanazawa (2012) Mogura no Uta by Noboru Takahashi (2013) Asahinagu by Ai Kozaki and Aoi Honō by Kazuhiko Shimamoto (2014) Umimachi Diary by Akimi Yoshida and Sunny by Taiyo Matsumoto (2015) Blue Giant by Shinichi Ishizuka and Jūhan Shuttai! by Naoko Matsuda (2016) After the Rain by Jun Mayuzuki and Kūbo Ibuki by Kaiji Kawaguchi (2017) Hibiki: Shōsetsuka ni Naru Hōhō by Mitsuharu Yanamoto and Kenkō de Bunkateki na Saitei Gendo no Seikatsu by Haruko Kashiwagi (2018) Aoashi by Yūgo Kobayashi and Kaguya-sama: Love Is War by Aka Akasaka (2019) 2020s Dead Dead Demon's Dededede Destruction by Inio Asano and Police in a Pod by Miko Yasu (2020) Nigatsu no Shōsha by Shiho Takase and Don't Call It Mystery by Yumi Tamura (2021) Medalist by Tsurumaikada (2022) Categories (until 2022):GeneralShōnenShōjoChildren2023– vteTezuka Osamu Cultural PrizeGrand Prize1990s Fujiko Fujio for Doraemon (1997) Jiro Taniguchi and Natsuo Sekikawa for the trilogy Bocchan No Jidai (1998) Naoki Urasawa for Monster (1999) 2000s Daijiro Morohoshi for Saiyū Yōenden (2000) Reiko Okano and Baku Yumemakura for Onmyōji (2001) Takehiko Inoue for Vagabond (2002) Fumiko Takano for The Yellow Book: A Friend Named Jacques Thibault (2003) Kyoko Okazaki for Helter Skelter (2004) Naoki Urasawa for Pluto (2005) Hideo Azuma for Disappearance Diary (2006) Ryoko Yamagishi for Terpsichora (2007) Masayuki Ishikawa for Moyashimon (2008) Fumi Yoshinaga for Ōoku: The Inner Chambers and Yoshihiro Tatsumi for A Drifting Life (2009) 2010s Yoshihiro Yamada for Hyouge Mono (2010) Motoka Murakami for Jin and Issei Eifuku and Taiyō Matsumoto for Takemitsuzamurai (2011) Hitoshi Iwaaki for Historie (2012) Yasuhisa Hara for Kingdom (2013) Chica Umino for March Comes in like a Lion (2014) Yoiko Hoshi for Aisawa Riku (2015) Kei Ichinoseki for Hanagami Sharaku and Kiyohiko Azuma for Yotsuba&! (2016) Fusako Kuramochi for Hana ni Somu (2017) Satoru Noda for Golden Kamuy (2018) Shinobu Arima for Jitterbug The Forties (2019) 2020s Kan Takahama for Nyx no Lantern (2020) Kazumi Yamashita for Land (2021) Uoto for Orb: On the Movements of the Earth (2022) Kiwa Irie for Yuria-sensei no Akai Ito (2023) Special
Award1990s Toshio Naiki (1997) Shotaro Ishinomori (1998) Fusanosuke Natsume (1999) 2000s Frederik L. Schodt (2000) Akira Maruyuma (2001) Shigeru Mizuki (2003) Tarō Minamoto (2004) Kawasaki City Museum (2005) Kousei Ono (2006) International Institute for Children's Literature, Osaka Prefecture (2008) 2010s Yoshihiro Yonezawa (2010) Weekly Shōnen Jump (2012) Fujiko Fujio (A) (2014) Chikako Mitsuhashi for Chiisana Koi no Monogatari (2015) Kyoto International Manga Museum (2016) Osamu Akimoto for Kochira Katsushika-ku Kameari Kōen-mae Hashutsujo (2017) Tetsuya Chiba for Ashita no Joe (2018) Takao Saito for Golgo 13 (2019) 2020s Machiko Hasegawa for Sazae-san (2020) Koyoharu Gotouge for Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba (2021) Kazuo Umezu for Zoku Shingo: Chiisana Robot Shingo Bijutsukan (2023) Award for
Excellence Moto Hagio for A Cruel God Reigns (1997) Yūji Aoki for Naniwa Kin'yūdō (1998) Akira Sasō for Shindō (1999) Minetarō Mochizuki for Dragon Head (2000) Kotobuki Shiriagari for Yajikita in Deep (2001) Kentaro Miura for Berserk (2002) Creative
Award Yumi Hotta and Takeshi Obata for Hikaru no Go (2003) Takashi Morimoto for Naniwadora ihon (2004) Fumiyo Kōno for Town of Evening Calm, Country of Cherry Blossoms (2005) Asa Higuchi for Big Windup! (2006) Nobuhisa Nozoe, Kazuhisa Iwata and Kyojin Ōnishi for Shinsei Kigeki (2007) Toranosuke Shimada for Träumerei (2008) New Artist
Prize Suehiro Maruo for The Strange Tale of Panorama Island (2009) Haruko Ichikawa for Mushi to Uta (2010) Hiromu Arakawa for Fullmetal Alchemist (2011) Yu Itō for Shut Hell (2012) Miki Yamamoto for Sunny Sunny Ann! (2013) Machiko Kyō for Mitsuami no Kami-sama (2014) Yoshitoki Ōima for A Silent Voice (2015) Yuki Andō for Machida-kun no Sekai (2016) Haruko Kumota for Descending Stories: Showa Genroku Rakugo Shinju (2017) Paru Itagaki for Beastars (2018) Sansuke Yamada for Areyo Hoshikuzu (2019) Rettō Tajima for Mizu wa Umi ni Mukatte Nagareru (2020) Kanehito Yamada and Tsukasa Abe for Frieren (2021) Natsuko Taniguchi for Kyōshitsu no Katasumi de Seishun wa Hajimaru and Konya Sukiyaki da yo (2022) Ganpu for Danchōtei Nichijō (2023) Short Story
Award Hisaichi Ishii for Gendai Shisō no Sōnanshātachi (2003) Risu Akizuki for OL Shinkaron (2004) Rieko Saibara for Jōkyō Monogatari and Mainichi Kaasan (2005) Risa Itō for One Woman, Two Cats, Hey Pitan!, Onna no Mado (2006) Hiromi Morishita for Ōsaka Hamlet (2007) Yumiko Ōshima for Cher Gou-Gou. mon petit chat, mon petit ami (2008) Hikaru Nakamura for Saint Young Men (2009) Mari Yamazaki for Thermae Romae (2010) Keisuke Yamashina for C-kyū Salaryman Kōza, Papa wa Nanda ka Wakaranai (2011) Roswell Hosoki for Sake no Hosomichi (2012) Yoshiie Gōda for Love of Machine (2013) Yuki Shikawa for Onnoji (2014) Sensha Yoshida (2015) Tatsuya Nakazaki for Jimihen (2016) Kahoru Fukaya for Yomawari Neko (2017) Taro Yabe for Oya-san to Boku (2018) Ken Koyama for Little Miss P (2019) Yama Wayama for Captivated, by You (2020) Hiroko Nobara for Kieta Mama Tomo and Tsuma wa Kuchi o Kiite Kuremasen (2021) Izumi Okaya for Ii Toshi o and Hakumokuren wa Kirei ni Chiranai (2022) Ebine Yamaji for Onna no Ko ga Iru Basho wa (2023) vteWorks directed by Masayuki KojimaAnimated series Moomin (1990–1991) Azuki-chan (1995–1998) Master Keaton (1998–1999) Magical Shopping Arcade Abenobashi (2002) Hanada Shōnen Shi (2002–2003) Monster (2004–2005) A Spirit of the Sun (2006) Oshiri Kajiri Mushi (2012–2014) Black Bullet (2014) Made in Abyss (2017–2022) Animated films DNA Sights 999. 9 (1998) Leave It to Kero! Theatrical Version (2000) Piano no Mori (2007) The Tibetan Dog (2011) Made in Abyss: Journey's Dawn (2019) Made in Abyss: Wandering Twilight (2019) Made in Abyss: Dawn of the Deep Soul (2020) OVA/ONAs Master Keaton (1999–2000) Busou Shinki: Moon Angel (2011–2012) vteMadhouse television seriesPre-2000s Gamba no Bouken (1975) Jetter Mars (1977) Nobody's Boy: Remi (1977–1978) Treasure Island (1978–1979) Galactic Patrol Lensman (1984–1985) Yawara! (1989–1992) DNA2 (1994) Azuki-chan (1995–1998) Trigun (1998) Cardcaptor Sakura (1998–2000) Master Keaton (1998–2000) Bomberman B-Daman Bakugaiden (1998–1999) Super Doll Licca-chan (1998–1999) Pet Shop of Horrors (1999) Jubei-chan: The Secret of the Lovely Eyepatch (1999) Di Gi Charat (1999–2001) Reign: The Conqueror (1999) Magic User's Club (1999) Bomberman B-Daman Bakugaiden V (1999–2000) 2000–2005 Boogiepop Phantom (2000) Carried by the Wind: Tsukikage Ran (2000) Hidamari no Ki (2000) Sakura Wars (2000) Hajime no Ippo: The Fighting! (2000–2002) Beyblade (2001) Galaxy Angel (2001–2004) Shingu: Secret of the Stellar Wars (2001) Chance Pop Session (2001) Magical Meow Meow Taruto (2001) X (2001–2002) Aquarian Age: Sign for Evolution (2002) Chobits (2002) Magical Shopping Arcade Abenobashi (2002) Pita-Ten (2002) Dragon Drive (2002–2003) Hanada Shōnen Shi (2002–2003) Panyo Panyo Di Gi Charat (2002) Rizelmine (2002) Mirage of Blaze (2002) Ninja Scroll: The Series (2003) Texhnolyze (2003) Gungrave (2003–2004) Gunslinger Girl (2003–2004) Uninhabited Planet Survive! (2003–2004) Di Gi Charat Nyo! (2003–2004) Gokusen (2004) Jubei-chan: The Counter Attack of Siberia Yagyu (2004) Paranoia Agent (2004) Tenjho Tenge (2004) Monster (2004–2005) BECK: Mongolian Chop Squad (2004–2005) Sweet Valerian (2004) Strawberry 100% (2005) Akagi (2005–2006) Paradise Kiss (2005) Oku-sama wa Joshi Kōsei (2005) 2006–2010 Kiba (2006–2007) Strawberry Panic! (2006) Nana (2006–2007) The Story of Saiunkoku (2006–2008) Black Lagoon (2006) Yume Tsukai (2006) Otogi-Jūshi Akazukin (2006–2007) Kemonozume (2006) A Spirit of the Sun (2006) Death Note (2006–2007) Tokyo Tribe 2 (2006–2007) Claymore (2007) Oh! Edo Rocket (2007) Princess Resurrection (2007) Dennō Coil (2007) Devil May Cry (2007) Shigurui (2007) Kaiji: Ultimate Survivor (2007–2008) Neuro: Supernatural Detective (2007–2008) Mokke (2007–2008) MapleStory (2007–2008) Ani*Kuri15 (2007–2008, animated sequence) Chi's Sweet Home (2008–2009) Allison & Lillia (2008) Kamen no Maid Guy (2008) Top Secret ~The Revelation~ (2008) Kaiba (2008) Ultraviolet: Code 044 (2008) Casshern Sins (2008–2009) Kurozuka (2008) Mōryō no Hako (2008) One Outs (2008–2009) Stitch! (2008–2010) Chaos;Head (2008) Hajime no Ippo: New Challenger (2009) Rideback (2009) Sōten Kōro (2009) Needless (2009) Kobato (2009–2010) Aoi Bungaku (2009) 2010s Rainbow: Nisha Rokubō no Shichinin (2010) The Tatami Galaxy (2010) Highschool of the Dead (2010) Marvel Anime (2010–2011) Kaiji: Against All Rules (2011) Hunter × Hunter (2011–2014) Chihayafuru (2011–2020) The Ambition of Oda Nobuna (2012) Btooom! (2012) Photo Kano (2013) Sunday Without God (2013) Hajime no Ippo: Rising (2013–2014) Ace of Diamond (2013–2016) Magical Warfare (2014) The Irregular at Magic High School (2014) No Game No Life (2014) Hanayamata (2014) Parasyte -the maxim- (2014–2015) Death Parade (2015) My Love Story!! (2015) Overlord (2015–2022) One-Punch Man (2015) Prince of Stride: Alternative (2016) Alderamin on the Sky (2016) All Out!! (2016–2017) ACCA: 13-Territory Inspection Dept.

A group of Aruze's shareholders, primarily those that owned stock in SNK Corporation, filed suit against Aruze in 2000, accusing the company of being directly responsible for SNK's operating losses, which totaled nearly 27 billion yen (roughly $260 million). Between the lawsuit and SNK's growing debts, Aruze decided to put SNK into bankruptcy. Ironically, during the process, Aruze sold the intellectual property rights for King of Fighters and other SNK franchises to BrezzaSoft--the company partially owned by SNK's former founder, Eikichi Kawasaki. SNK ceased to be on October 22, 2001. After SNK closed, Mega Enterprise went on to develop and publish Metal Slug 4, which is regarded as the weakest entry in the series. BrezzaSoft would ultimately publish King of Fighters 2001 and 2002, which were developed by South Korean developer Eolith, another company partially funded by Kawasaki. The only other SNK-related franchise to see the light of day after the company's departure was Metal Slug. South Korean publisher and developer Mega Enterprise published Metal Slug 4 in 2002. Sadly, most fans regard Metal Slug 4 as the weakest installment in the series. Nevertheless, SNK is a company known for its ability to adapt. Past hardships resulted in NES development, the NeoGeo MVS/AES systems, and the NeoGeo Pocket.

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, legend of the NeoGeo community, for providing this image. ) Compared to the other home consoles of the time, the NeoGeo AES was a beast. Under the hood, the AES featured two CPUs: a 16-bit Motorola 68000 main processor running at 12MHz and a Zilog Z-80A backup processor running at 4MHz. Even though the system's main CPU was "just" 50 percent faster than the 68000 processor found in Sega's Genesis console, the NeoGeo AES also had the benefit of specialized audio and video chipsets. A custom video chipset allowed the system to display 4,096 colors and 380 individual sprites onscreen simultaneously--compared to 64 simultaneous colors and 80 individual sprites for the Genesis --while the onboard Yamaha 2610 sound chip gave the system 15 channels of CD-quality sound. Seven of those channels were reserved specifically for digital sound effects. Comparison Chart: NeoGeo vs. Other Consoles NeoGeo MVS/AESSega GenesisSuper NESSony PlayStation CPUMotorola 16-bit 68000, 12MHzMotorola 16-bit 68000, 7. 67MHzWDC 16-bit 65c816, 3. 58MHzLSI 32-bit R3000A, 33. 8MHz Memory64KB Work RAM, 68KB Video RAM64KB Work RAM, 64KB Video RAM128KB Work RAM, 64KB Video RAM2MB Work RAM, 1MB Video RAM Video Resolution320x224320x224256x224, 512x440 possible256x224, 740x480 possible Colors65,536 possible, 4,096 simultaneous512 possible, 64 simultaneous32,768 possible, 256 simultaneous16. Archived from the original on November 28, 2016. Retrieved November 28, 2016. ^ Loo, Egan (December 17, 2016). "Shinkai's 'your name. ' Becomes #1 Japanese Film in China of All Time". Anime News Network. May 14, 2013. Archived from the original on February 23, 2022. Retrieved May 15, 2013. ^ 「黒子のバスケ」「暗殺教室」が初版100万部突破! ジャンプ史上初の同時達成 (in Japanese). Yahoo!.
Also, he tells her that some people do not grow out of this dream and that's why many people fight each other to death in places like the Underground Arena. When it's time for Kiyosumi Katou to fight, it turns out that his opponent is Yasha-Zaru Jr, the son of Yasha-Zaru. Baki states that Yasha-Zaru Jr should not be used as a competitor in the tournament. In Baki opinion, the ape agreed to come to this place only to fight against Baki, because he defeated his father. That's why Baki enters the fight and interrupts Katou, who by the way has no chance against the ape. At some point even Baki is beaten up by Yasha and then Katsumi Orochi, the adopted son of Doppo, appears. Katsumi knocks out the ape and almost kills it, but Baki interrupts. That's when a somewhat hostile relationship arises between Baki and Katsumi. Then the knocked out ape is taken to the doctor. Later in the tournament, Baki meets Hanayama and wishes him luck in his fight, but the Yakuza rejects his politeness and says he treats the tournament as a war. Later, when Katsumi brutally defeats Roland Istaz, Baki meets him again and says he doesn't like the way he deals with things.