code geass: fukkatsu no lelouch picture drama chinese sub
[38] The opening theme is "Roar" performed by
Ulma Sound Junction,[5] while the ending theme is "Rinkaku" (鱗角) performed by Watashi Kobayashi. [38] The second cour's opening theme is "Kannōsei Liberation" (感脳性リベレーション, Cerebral Liberation) performed by saji,[39] and the ending theme is "Sora ni Shirube yū" (空に標結う), again performed by Watashi Kobayashi. [40] At Anime Expo 2022, Sentai Filmworks announced that they licensed the series outside of Asia. [41] Muse Communication has licensed the series for South Asia and Southeast Asia. [42] Episodes[edit] No. Title [43][44]Directed by [b]Written by [b]Storyboarded by [b]Original air date [45][a]1"The Day the Reaper Was Born"
Transliteration: "Shinigami ga Umareta Hi" (Japanese: 死神が生まれた日)Ken TakahashiDeko AkaoKen TakahashiOctober 1,
2023 (2023-10-01) Dragons terrorize humanity, giving rise to hunters who slay dragons with Silverine weapons. Two hunters in Lese Kingdom are Leonica and her unskilled partner Ragna, who functions more as her caretaker than a hunter. Ragna believes he is cursed; dragons seem drawn to him yet he always survives while others are slaughtered. Ragna dreams of an old man predicting Leonica’s death. A dragon horde destroys Donapierru, a city that has famously not suffered a dragon attack in 10 years. The dragon horde then attacks every city in the kingdom, including Leonica and Ragna’s home in Ronabera City.
Despite knowing what would happen, Dargis wrote that it was "still such a delight to relive it again" and concluded; "It's a really great story and appeals to a wide variety of interests. "[176] Nobuyuki Izumi of Real Sound compared the series' premise, setting, and structure to Hirohiko Araki's JoJo's Bizarre Adventure's first two parts, Phantom Blood and Battle Tendency, and to Kazuhiro Fujita's Ushio & Tora. [177] Accolades Year Award Category Result Ref. 2017 1st Tsutaya Comic Awards Anime Hope Division 3rd place [178] 2018 Da Vinci 18th Annual
Book of the Year Book of the Year 30th place [179] 2019 Da Vinci
19th Annual Book of the Year Book of the Year 10th place [180] 2020 BookWalker Awards Grand Prize Won [181] Piccoma Awards Luna Category [182] Da Vinci 20th Annual Book of the Year Book of the Year [183] 24th Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize Cultural Prize Nominated [184] 2021 25th Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize [185] Special Prize Won [186] 50th Japan Cartoonists Association Award Grand Prize [187] Ridibooks Comic Award Grand Prix [188] Da Vinci 21st Annual Book of the Year Book of the Year [189] 52nd Seiun Awards Best Comic Nominated [190] Light novels and other print books In 2019, Demon Slayer: Flower of Happiness had about 210,966 copies sold, and Demon Slayer: One-Winged Butterfly had about 196,674 copies sold. Both novels ranked third and fourth respectively in Oricon's overall bunko ranking chart. [191] Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba overall novelization was the tenth best-selling light novel in 2019, with 407,640 copies sold. [192] In February 2020, after a planned reprint collectively 1. 16 million copies were in circulation, making the books the fastest franchise novel in Shueisha's "Jump J-Books" label to reach 1 million copies in circulation. [193] The two light novels were the best-selling novels of the first half of 2020, collectively selling a total of 1,199,863 copies. [194][195] The Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba overall novelization was the best-selling light novel of 2020, with 2,752,593 copies sold. [196] The Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba overall novelization was the best-selling novel series in the first half of 2021, collectively selling a total of 651,358 copies,[197] while the three novels and the Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba the Movie: Mugen Train novelization (and its "Mirai bunko" edition), were among the best-selling-novel volumes in the first half of 2021.
"[151] Nick Creamer held similar sentiments, writing "the show's fantastic aesthetics elevate it above almost everything out there – in direction, in sound design, in pacing, in animation, in basically every relevant aesthetic metric, Hunter × Hunter triumphs. That it's been maintaining this level of quality for
well over a hundred episodes is nothing short of astonishing. "[152] Trivia From its debut (issue 14, 1998) to the present day (issue 22, 2019), Hunter × Hunter has been absent from Weekly Shonen Jump 627 times. The Chimera Ant arc lasted 134 chapters over 402 issues of Jump; that averages out to one-third of a chapter per week. The longest hiatus remains 80 issues missed (2014 - 2016). The series record for absences in a calendar year is 2015 when it missed 49 of 49 issues. There have been 1019 issues of Weekly Shonen Jump since Hunter × Hunter began; Yoshihiro Togashi has missed 627 of them, 61. 5%. Translations around the World Language Name Arabic هانتر × هانتر (Hantir Hantir) Chinese 猎人/獵人* (Lièrén, lit. "Hunter")
全职猎人/全職獵人* (Quánzhí Lièrén, lit. "Full time Hunter") [in Hong Kong animation] Hebrew האנטר האנטר Korean 헌터 × 헌터 (Heonteo × Heonteo) Russian ханта: ханта: (Khanta: Khanta:) [Hunt Hunt]
Охотник x Охотник (Okhotnik x Okhotnik)
Охотник на Охотника (Okhotnik na Okhotnika) Spanish Cazador X ("Hunter X") Thai ฮันเตอร์ x ฮันเตอร์ (Ḥạn texr̒ x Ḥạn texr̒) Ukrainian Мисливець × Мисливець (Myslyvetsʹ × Myslyvetsʹ) External Links Official Viz Media Hunter × Hunter site Official English manga website (in English) Official Nippon Television Hunter × Hunter (2011) anime site (in Japanese) Official VAP Hunter x Hunter (2011) anime site (in Japanese) Official Adult Swim website (2011 series) Hunter × Hunter (manga) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia Unofficial Links and Sources hunter.