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The Blue Wolves of Mibu (Japanese: 青のミブロ, Hepburn: Ao no Miburo) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Tsuyoshi Yasuda.It has been serialized in Kodansha's shōnen manga magazine Weekly Shōnen Magazine since October 2021; its first part finished in April 2024 and the second part, Shinsengumi Arc, started in the same month.
The Shinsengumi feature heavily in the plot of the 2014 video game Ryū ga Gotoku Ishin!. In this game, main protagonist Sakamoto Ryoma, a 19th-century doppelgänger of main series protagonist Kazuma Kiryu, becomes the group's third unit captain under the alias of Saito Hajime. The Shinsengumi appears in the app "Bakumatu Hanafuda".
Dawn of the Shinsengumi is a prequel to the first two seasons of the anime series Hakuoki. It focuses on a boy named Ryunosuke Ibuki, who is saved and made into a servant by the leader of the Roshigumi, Kamo Serizawa. Serizawa's recklessness and abuse of authority causes a bad reputation for the Roshigumi.
Being a fan of the Shinsengumi, Watsuki created Saitō as an anti-heroic and a foil to Himura Kenshin, the main character of the story, while basing him on the real life Shinsengumi member of the same name. Set during a fictional version of Japan in the Meiji period, Saitō, known as the "Mibu no Okami" (壬生の狼, lit.
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; Ao no Miburo
Inoue is featured in Kaze Hikaru (manga), Getsumei Seiki (manga), Studio Deen's Hakuōki: Shinsengumi Kitan (anime), and The Blue Wolves of Mibu (manga and anime.) He is also depicted in the 1999 film Gohatto and NHK's drama series Shinsengumi!, as well as in the Sega video game Ryu ga Gotoku: Ishin! and its remastered edition Like a Dragon: Ishin!, where he is the equivalent of Osamu Kashiwagi.
Together with the rest of the Shinsengumi, he became a hatamoto in June 1867. [ 1 ] On December 13, 1867, Nagakura was involved with Harada Sanosuke and several other Shinsengumi members during the Aburanokōji incident with the ambush of Itō Kashitarō 's Goryō Eji Kōdai-ji faction, which consisted of a small group of Shinsengumi defectors.
On August 18, 1863, the Mibu Rōshigumi was renamed the Shinsengumi (新選組, "New Selected Group") by Emperor Kōmei. [ 3 ] In response, a Tokugawa official made spies out of former Rōshigumi members Tomouchi Yoshio and Iesato Jiro, forced them to stay in Kyoto, and to join Serizawa and Kondo's group in order to keep an eye on them.