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A paperback collecting chapters 1 through 141 was published by Zhejiang People's Fine Arts Publishing House on October 1, 2015, under the title SQ Begin W/Your Name!. The story follows the daily lives of Sun Jing and Qiu Tong, two teenagers attending different high schools, whose newly formed friendship slowly develops into something romantic.
The Girl Downstairs, known in South Korea as Lee Doo-na! (Korean: 이두나!; RR: Iduna!) (Chinese: 爱上她的理由; pinyin: Ài shàng tā de lǐyóu) is a South Korean manhwa released as a webtoon written and illustrated by Min Songa.
Nasa Yuzaki (由崎 星空, Yuzaki Nasa [a]) Voiced by: Junya Enoki, [5] Umeka Shōji (child) Ep. 1 credits (Japanese); Zach Aguilar [6] (English) An everyday genius, Nasa grew up ridiculed for his strange name, similar to the American space agency NASA, although his parents meant for his name to reference the starry sky.
Danmei (Chinese: 耽美; pinyin: dānměi; lit. 'indulging beauty') is a Chinese genre of literature and other fictional media that features romantic relationships between male characters. Danmei is typically created by and targeted towards female audiences, [ 1 ] but not necessarily straight women. [ 2 ]
She accidentally travels into the world of the novel and enters the body of a villainous supporting character named Lin Yu. In order to return to her original world, she must fulfill the missions assigned by the system. Mu Qingshi: The first heavenly demon catcher and ancestor of Mu family; Ding Yuxi as Mu Sheng / Mu Ziqi / Fu Zhou [2] [7]
This is a list of manhua, or Chinese comics, ordered by year then alphabetical order, and shown with region and author. It contains a collection of manhua magazines, pictorial collections as well as newspapers.
Nichijou (Japanese: 日常, Hepburn: Nichijō, lit. "Everyday Life") is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Keiichi Arawi.The manga began serialization in the December 2006 issue of Kadokawa Shoten's manga magazine Shōnen Ace, and was also serialized in Comptiq between the March 2007 and July 2008 issues.
A live action film adaptation of the same name was released on December 12, 2015. [6] An anime television adaptation started to air in July 2016. [7] A spin-off to the manga began serialization on March 25, 2016, in the Monthly Action magazine published by Futabasha. [8] An anime theatrical film, titled Orange: Future, premiered in Japan on ...