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Manga series Author(s) Publisher Demographic No. of collected volumes Serialized Approximate sales One Piece: Eiichiro Oda: Shueisha: Shōnen: 110: 1997–present
One Piece is the best-selling manga series in history; in 2012, Oricon, a Japanese company that began its own annual manga sales ranking chart in year 2008, reported that the series was the first to sell 100 million copies (the company does not report on sales figures before April 2008). [112]
One Piece is a Japanese media franchise created by Eiichirō Oda in 1997. The initial manga, written and illustrated by Eiichirō Oda, has been serialized in Shueisha's Weekly Shōnen Jump magazine since July 22, 1997, and has been collected into 110 tankōbon volumes.
Viz Media also introduced an aggressive release schedule for One Piece in 2010, releasing five volumes per month between January and June to bring the volume count of the English release from 24 to 53. [18] On two separate occasions, five One Piece volumes (39–43 in week 15 and 44–48 in week 19) debuted on the Best Seller list ...
Some of the numbers reported here may also include sales of trade paperback volumes, which account for a small portion of American comic sales. According to the most recently available data, the best-selling American single-issue comic of all time was X-Men #1, which was published in 1991 and has since sold almost 8.2 million copies.
Retail sales – $11 billion [ax] Box office – $3.273 billion [203] VHS sales – $290 million [46] DVD & Blu-ray sales – $250 million [204] Animated film Pixar John Lasseter: The Walt Disney Company Peanuts: 1950 $14.4 billion: Retail sales – $14.19 billion [ay] Box office – $250 million [209] DVD & Blu-ray sales – $35 million [209 ...
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A product's average price is the result of dividing the product's total sales revenue by the total units sold. When one product is sold in variants, such as bottle sizes, managers must define "comparable" units. Average prices can be calculated by weighting different unit selling prices by the percentage of unit sales (mix) for each product ...