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"[104] The anime series has been considered as one of the best anime of the 2010s. Polygon's Austen Goslin wrote that "Few shows over the last 10 years have so clearly or unabashedly made fights their focus, and absolutely none of them have done it as well as Demon Slayer". [105] Crunchyroll listed it in their "Top 25 best anime of the 2010s", with reviewer Daniel Dockery commenting, "From the top-notch action choreography to the understated (and sometimes not so understated) emotional moments, to the infinitely meme-able Inosuke, Demon Slayer can be a wonder to behold". [106][107] Writing for Comic Book Resources, Sage Ashford ranked it second on his list, praising its animation and protagonists, whom he called "the most likable male and female leads of the decade". [108] IGN
also listed Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba among the best anime series of the 2010s. [109] Japan Web Magazine ranked the series first on its list of "30
Best Anime of All Time". [110] Accolades[edit] In 2019, Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba won in the anime category of the Yahoo! Japan Search Awards, based on the number of searches for a particular term compared to the year before;[111] the series won the award for the second consecutive year in 2020;[112] it was third in 2021,[113] and its Swordsmith Village Arc was fifth in 2023. [114] Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba won "Animation of the Decade" at the Funimation's Decade of Anime poll, where the fans voted for their favorite anime across multiple categories. [115] In the other fan poll, Tanjiro and Nezuko Kamado were chosen as one of the "Best Boys" and "Best Girls" honorees, respectively. [116] In the February 2020 issue of Animedia magazine, it was revealed that the series received eleven awards for its characters at the "Animedia Character Awards 2019". Having won the most awards in a single year in animedia history.
"Blue Exorcist vol. 1". Otaku USA. Sovereign Media. Archived
from the original on
December 15, 2016. Retrieved December 19, 2022. ^ ジョジョの奇妙な冒険 集英社文庫(コミック版) (in Japanese). Shueisha. Archived from the original on June 4, 2020. Retrieved May 29, 2020. ^ ジョジョの奇妙な冒険 集英社文庫(コミック版) (in Japanese).
"[136] The Simpsons has parodied Death Note in both comic books and animation with the 2008 comic book story "Murder, He Wrote" in The Simpsons Treehouse of Horror #14,[137][138] where Bart receives the notebook from the Ryuk-ified ghost of Krusty the Clown, and the "Death Tome" segment of the 2022 television episode "Treehouse of Horror XXXIII", with Lisa receiving the titular book. [139] Bans and attempted bans[edit] Early in 2005, school officials in Shenyang, the capital of Liaoning (People's Republic of China), banned Death Note. [140] The immediate cause was
that students had
been altering notebooks to resemble Death Notes and then writing the names of acquaintances, enemies, and teachers in the books. [141][142] The ban was designed to protect the "physical and mental health"[143] of students from horror material that "misleads innocent children and distorts their mind and spirit". [144] Jonathan Clements has suggested that the Chinese authorities acted partly against "superstition", but also against illegal, pirate publishers of Death Note. [145] The ban has been extended to other Chinese cities including Beijing,[146][147] Shanghai and Lanzhou in Gansu Province. [148] Legally published Chinese-language versions of Death Note are published in Hong Kong. [145] On June 12, 2015, the Chinese Ministry of Culture listed Death Note among 38 anime and manga titles banned in China. [149] In 2007, the education bureau in Pingtung County, Taiwan asked teachers to pay attention to any negative influence on elementary school students reading the manga. [150] In May 2010, the Albuquerque Public Schools in New Mexico held a hearing to ban the Death Note manga from their district's schools; it was unanimously voted down. [151] After volumes of Death Note were found at the February 2013 suicide of a 15-year-old girl in Yekaterinburg, Russia, a local parents' group began campaigning to regulate all media based on the series, saying that it had an adverse effect on the minds of children.