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Kemono Friends is a television anime series produced by Kadokawa, based on the mobile video game created by Nexon.The series revolves around Friends, anthropomorphised versions of various animals, as they go about their lives while occasionally fighting against monsters known as Ceruleans.
To the Abandoned Sacred Beasts is an anime series adapted from the manga of the same title by Maybe. The series is directed by Jun Shishido at MAPPA, with Shigeru Murakoshi written the scripts, Daisuke Niinuma designed the characters, and Yoshihiro Ike composed the music. [1] [2] It aired from 1 July to 16 September 2019 on Tokyo MX, BS11, and MBS.
The Beast Player (獣の奏者, Kemono no Sōja) [a] is a Japanese novel series written by Nahoko Uehashi and published by Kodansha between 2006 and 2009. It focuses on a girl who can control the greatest of beasts as she gets involved in a war between two territories of one kingdom.
To the Abandoned Sacred Beasts (Japanese: かつて神だった獣たちへ, Hepburn: Katsute Kami Datta Kemono-tachi e, lit. ' To the Beasts That Were Once Gods ') is a Japanese dark fantasy manga series written and illustrated by Maybe.
Sacrificial Princess and the King of Beasts (贄姫と獣の王, Niehime to Kemono no Ō) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Yū Tomofuji. It was serialized in Hakusensha's shōjo manga magazine Hana to Yume from November 2015 to October 2020.
This list comprises anime titles that have been made available in the United States concurrently with its Japanese release, usually via online streaming, along with the source of the release. The list is in chronological order by season, and alphabetical order within each season.
The 50-episode Erin (獣の奏者エリン, Kemono no Sōja Erin) [1] anime aired on NHK from January 10 to December 26, 2009. The series was based on The Beast Player novel series by Nahoko Uehashi and was directed by Takayuki Hamana. [2]
Kemonā (Japanese: ケモナー) is a Japanese subcultural term used to describe people who are fond of anthropomorphic animal characters, which are referred to as kemono (Japanese: ケモノ). These terms emerged during the late 1990s within the manga doujin culture, [ 1 ] and they are sometimes claimed to have gained popularity when the term ...