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Square Enix. Retrieved 2021-02-05. ^ "The Girl I Like Forgot Her Glasses, Volume 6". Square Enix. Retrieved February 14, 2023. ^ 好きな子がめがねを忘れた 7 (in Japanese).

09. [124][125] This was followed by another collaboration in the February 2013 issue of Spur with "Jolyne, Fly High with Gucci",[n] starring Jolyne Cujoh from Part 6. [126][127] A free English translation of the latter was previously available on Gucci's Facebook page. Again, Araki's artwork was featured in Gucci's storefront displays around the world. [128][129] 25th anniversary There were several art exhibitions in 2012 in Japan for the manga's 25th anniversary. The first was in Sendai, Araki's birthplace, where a Lawson store was remodeled to look like the "Owson" store that appears in Diamond Is Unbreakable and JoJolion. [130][131][132][133] The store was opened from July 28 to September 30, and contained exclusive goods with the Owson name. The second exhibition was held in Tokyo from October 6 to November 4 and hangouts were held on Google Plus to allow fans to view the gallery at night through the lens of Remote Romance[o], an original "Stand" Araki and his team created for the event. [134][135] The exhibit was taken to Italy from June 28 to July 14, 2013, and shown at the Gucci showroom in Florence. [134][136] The October 2012 issue of Ultra Jump contained a special booklet titled 25 Years With JoJo that also celebrated the anniversary; it featured messages and tribute art from well-known manga artists such as Akira Toriyama, Yoshihiro Togashi, Eiichiro Oda, Clamp, and 18 others. [137][138] During the 25th anniversary celebrations, a special smartphone with a JoJo's Bizarre Adventure-inspired UI was released.

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[23] As of November 9, 2023, eighteen tankōbon volumes have been released. [24] A manga adaptation of the KonoSuba Fantastic Days smartphone game by Kasumi Morino began serialization in Media Factory's Monthly Comic Alive magazine on March 26, 2022. [25] Yen Press announced its acquisition of the manga adaptation at the same time that it licensed the original light novels. [20] Anime[edit] See also: List of KonoSuba episodes and Isekai Quartet An anime television series adaptation produced by Studio Deen[26] aired on Tokyo MX between January 14, 2016, and March 16, 2016;[27] later broadcasting on eight other networks and several video on demand streaming networks. [27] The series was simulcast by Crunchyroll in several regions such as North America,[28] and by AnimeLab in Australia. [29] The series was directed by Takaomi Kanasaki and written by Makoto Uezu with character designs by Koichi Kikuta. [26] An original video animation (OVA) was bundled with the ninth light novel of KonoSuba in June 2016. [30] The anime's opening theme is "Fantastic Dreamer" by Machico while the ending theme is "Chīsana Bōken-sha"[Jp. 6] performed by Aqua (Sora Amamiya), Megumin (Rie Takahashi), and Darkness (Ai Kayano). [31] On January 7, 2019, Crunchyroll announced that the series would receive an English dub. [32] The first season's dub made its debut on January 25, 2019,[33] with the second season's dub being released on February 25, 2020. A third season has been announced. The novels and all three manga adaptations are published in North America by Yen Press. The anime adaptation has been licensed by Crunchyroll outside Asia, which released the anime on home video through Funimation in the United States and Anime Limited in the United Kingdom. In Southeast Asia and South Asia, the series is licensed by Muse Communication. The overall series (light novel and manga volumes) had over 13 million copies in circulation by March 2023 (including digital versions), while the anime series has sold more than 70,000 copies on home video. The light novels have been praised for their fresh take on the "another world" concept, fleshed-out characters, complex world and lore, and thought-provoking topics and themes.
The boys are incarcerated in the Prison Block together and Kiyoshi is overwhelmed by the discovery that all the other boys are masochists that revel in the punishments handed to them by their attractive but vicious supervisors. Characters[edit] Main characters[edit] Kiyoshi Fujino (藤野 清志, Fujino Kiyoshi) Voiced by: Hiroshi Kamiya[2] (Japanese); Austin Tindle[3] (English) Portrayed by: Taishi Nakagawa[4] Kiyoshi enrolled from the same middle school as Shingo. He is the first boy in Hachimitsu Academy to make contact with a girl when he befriends Chiyo, whom he develops feelings for. Although not very bright, he often comes up with successful plans when placed under high amounts of pressure. Due to several embarrassing mishaps, he becomes a regular target of Hana's affections while in prison. So far, he is the only one of the five boys to have been sent to prison more than once.