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Samurai Champloo (Japanese: サムライチャンプルー, Hepburn: Samurai Chanpurū) is a Japanese animated television series which aired 26 episodes between May 2004 and March 2005. [1] [2] [3] Set during Japan's Edo period, the story follows three characters – tea waitress Fuu, vagrant outlaw Mugen, and ronin Jin – as they travel the ...
Samurai Champloo (Japanese: サムライチャンプルー, Hepburn: Samurai Chanpurū) is a 2004 Japanese historical adventure anime television series. The debut television production of studio Manglobe , the 26-episode series aired from May 2004 to March 2005.
From his masquerading as a weak and feeble samurai and lying to Jin about the sunflower samurai we see that his main tactic is deception. At any rate, I’m still waiting to see if Antrophica has any suggestions other than the complete removal of my edit. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Siddhartha21 (talk • contribs)
Steve Kariya (born 1977), ice hockey player Kariya Jin , a character in the Japanese anime series Bleach Kariya Kagetoki, a fictional elite samurai featured in the Japanese anime Samurai Champloo
In the 2004 anime series Samurai Champloo, one of the protagonists is the rōnin Jin. Along with the vagrant swordsman Mugen, he accompanies a young girl named Fuu on a quest to find the "samurai who smells of sunflowers".
This page lists articles on the anime series Samurai Champloo. Subcategories. This category has only the following subcategory. ...
Ginpei Sato (佐藤 銀平, Satō Ginpei, born October 19, 1977) is a Japanese voice actor in numerous anime and non-anime works. He is most known for his role as Saïx of Organization XIII (Kingdom Hearts II) and as Jin (Samurai Champloo), who are both voiced by Kirk Thornton in their respective English dubs.
The comic book Usagi Yojimbo stars a rabbit samurai inspired by Musashi. [5] In Steve Perry's Matador book series and novel The Musashi Flex, the "Musashi Flex" is an illegal underground martial arts competition named after Musashi. Musashi was the subject of Sword of the Samurai, a book in the Time Machine series by Michael Reaves and Steve Perry.