sousou_no_frieren
[80] According to Video Research,
Entertainment District Arc averaged 18. 43
million viewers, with 25. 5 million for episode 10 and 25. 97 million for episode 11. [81] The Swordsmith Village Arc's final episode averaged 22. 87 million viewers, while the
double feature special of the anime's Entertainment District Arc drew 22. 51 million after their broadcast. [82] The Swordsmith Village Arc also became the most-watched anime in 2023, garnering 15. 4 million viewers in Japan. [83] Gadget Tsūshin listed both the breathing techniques suffix and "Ah! The era, the era changed again!" on their 2019 anime buzzwords list. [84] On Tumblr's Year in Review, which highlights the largest communities, fandoms, and trends on the platform throughout the year, Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba ranked seventh on the Top Anime & Manga Shows category in 2019 and 2020.
Archived from the original on April 2, 2014. Retrieved
January 2, 2014. ^ "One
Piece Manga #67 Gets Record 4. 05-Million Print Run". Anime News Network. January 1, 2012. Archived from the original on March 28, 2015. Retrieved March 30, 2015. ^ 『One Piece』初版300万部が10年続き驚きの声「化け物」 『鬼滅の刃』と比べ人気改めて実感. Oricon (in Japanese). June 24, 2020.
In addition to adding new enemies and weapons, it was also significantly harder than Metal Slug 2. Metal Slug: 1st Mission (1999, NeoGeo Pocket Color)
If you take away the gigantic bosses and insane background animation from Metal Slug, what's left over is a fairly fun side-scrolling action game for the NGPC. There were plenty of enemy soldiers to shoot, and just like in the arcade game, you could hop into the tank and submarine for vehicular
battles. Replay value was deepened by the ability to choose different level paths and by the S-continue mode, which allowed you to start a new game with the life bar from the previous game. Samurai Shodown: Warriors Rage (1999, PlayStation)
Warriors Rage is usually regarded as the worst game
that SNK has ever created, bar none. There isn't much to say about this game that would be positive, as the graphics and the controls were very shoddy, even by PlayStation standards. Well, at least the character portraits were nicely drawn. SNK vs. Capcom: Card Fighter's Clash (1999, NeoGeo Pocket Color)
Before card battle games like Yu-Gi-Oh! became popular, SNK produced a card battle game for the NeoGeo Pocket Color using the combined rosters of SNK and Capcom. The game was sold in two flavors: one with a majority of SNK's cards and the other with a majority of Capcom's cards. The single-player mode was centered around an RPG-style quest that had you trying to gather all 300 individual cards and become the Card Clash World Champ.