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The Doraemon airings on Boing offer a choice between Spanish and Japanese audio, and also offer Spanish teletext closed captioning. Doraemon is translated into four languages including Basque, Catalan (including a Valencian version since the early 1990s and a Balearic one since the mid-2000s) and Galician in addition to Spanish. The first ...
The 2005 and 2006 surveys conducted by TV Asahi found the Doraemon anime ranked fifth and third, respectively, among the 100 most favorite anime series of all time. [ 217 ] [ 218 ] In 2010, a survey conducted by researchers of Tokyo Polytechnic University found that most responders considered Doraemon , along with Dragon Ball franchise, to be ...
List of Doraemon (2005 anime series) episodes. List of Doraemon (2005–2009) episodes; List of Doraemon (2010–2014) episodes; List of Doraemon (2015–2019) episodes; List of Doraemon (2020–2024) episodes; List of Doraemon (English dub) episodes
Since its premiere in 2005, Doraemon has aired 837 episodes, multiple holiday specials, and 19 feature films. This Doraemon anime series is referred to in Asia as the Mizuta Edition (水田版), after Wasabi Mizuta, the voice actress who voices Doraemon in this series. [3] Over the course of its run, the show has had two English dubs.
One day, Nobita spotted a mysterious human-like object inside of his room and is close to eating Doraemon's Dorayaki, but Doraemon arrived and grabbed the food from the object. He then explained that the human-like object is actually a "Nendoroid," which moves like a person when sticking it from the hair.
Doraemon (ドラえもん, Doraemon) is a Japanese anime television series based on Fujiko F. Fujio's manga of the same name and is the first adaptation in the media franchise. The series, produced by Nippon TeleMovie Productions , originally aired in Japan on NNS from April 1 to September 30, 1973.
The Doraemons (ザ☆ドラえもんズ, Za Doraemonzu) is a Japanese manga series that is a spin-off of the long-running Doraemon series. [1]The subseries includes two versions of the manga by Michiaki Tanaka (田中 道明, Tanaka Michiaki) and Yukihiro Mitani (三谷 幸広, Mitani Yukihiro) [2] from 1995 to 2003, as well as a series of animated short films from 1996 to 2002.
Transliteration: "Obake de risaikuru" (Japanese: おばけでリサイクル) July 29, 2016 () 792 "Substitution on Television to the South Island" Transliteration: "Migawariterebi de minami no shima e" (Japanese: 身代わりテレビで南の島へ) August 5, 2016 () 793 "Catch the Wind" Transliteration: "Kaze o ayatsure!