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5Music 4Reception Toggle Reception subsection 4. 1Manga 4. 2Anime 5References 6External links Toggle the table of contents Soul Eater 29 languages العربيةCatalàČeštinaDeutschEspañolEsperantoفارسیFrançais한국어ՀայերենHrvatskiBahasa IndonesiaItalianoעבריתMagyarBahasa Melayu日本語PolskiPortuguêsRomânăРусскийСрпски / srpskiSuomiไทยTürkçeУкраїнськаTiếng Việt粵語中文 Edit links ArticleTalk English ReadEditView history Tools Tools move to sidebar hide Actions ReadEditView history General What links hereRelated changesUpload fileSpecial pagesPermanent linkPage informationCite this pageGet shortened URLDownload QR codeWikidata item Print/export Download as PDFPrintable version In other projects Wikimedia CommonsWikiquote From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Japanese manga series For other uses, see Soul Eater (disambiguation). Soul EaterFirst tankōbon volume cover, featuring Maka (right), Soul (bottom-left) and Blair (top-left)ソウルイーター(Sōru Ītā)GenreAction[1][2]Dark comedy[3]Dark fantasy[4][5] MangaWritten byAtsushi OhkuboPublished bySquare EnixEnglish publisherNA: Yen PressSquare Enix (Perfect Edition)ImprintGangan ComicsMagazineMonthly Shōnen GanganEnglish magazineNA: Yen PlusDemographicShōnenOriginal runMay 12, 2004 – August 12, 2013Volumes25 (List of volumes) Anime television seriesDirected byTakuya IgarashiProduced byAya YoshinoTaihei YamanishiYoshihiro OyabuWritten byAkatsuki YamatoyaMusic byTaku IwasakiStudioBonesLicensed byAUS: Madman AnimeNA: CrunchyrollSEA: MedialinkUK: Crunchyroll UKOriginal networkTXN (TV Tokyo)English networkPH: ABS-CBN, Hero, Studio 23US: Funimation Channel, Adult Swim (Toonami), Crunchyroll ChannelOriginal run April 7, 2008 – March 30, 2009Episodes51 (List of episodes) Manga Soul Eater Not! (2011–14) Video games List of Soul Eater video games Soul Eater (Japanese: ソウルイーター, Hepburn: Sōru Ītā) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Atsushi Ohkubo. Set at the "Death Weapon Meister Academy", the series revolves around three teams, each consisting of a weapon meister and at least one human that can transform into a weapon. Trying to make the latter a "death scythe" and thus fit for use by the academy's headmaster Shinigami, the personification of death, they must collect the souls of 99 evil humans and one witch, in that order; otherwise, they will have to start all over again.
and a title theme by J-Pop band Puffy AmiYumi. Taking it even further, all the quirky "filler" episodes have the theme sung in Japanese. Teen Titans: Trouble in Tokyo, in which the Titans go to Tokyo, contains parodies and references to everything from Kodansha comics and weird Japanese commercials to Japanese art, and includes a sub-plot where Beast Boy sings the Japanese version of the theme song at a karaoke bar and gains a fanbase of Japanese schoolgirls. Even its spin-offs keep up the look; the DC Nation shorts resembled chibi omake chapters, and Teen Titans Go! is a Galaxy Angel-esque parody series that wouldn't look out of place in CoroCoro Comic. Young Justice (2010) : From character designs, action sequences, to overall animation. Unsurprisingly since overseas studios in Seoul, South Korea, work on it such as MOI Animation, Inc.
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