Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ringo is a sweet and adventurous girl with a curly and short pink hair with a red headband, red eyes, she wears a white shirt long sleeves with a pink vest with a red bow, a red skirt and dark yellow boots (in summer she wears a white shirt short sleeves with a red bow, a pink and light pink skirt and a cream and red sandals). She dreams of ...
I Dream of Mimi, known as Buttobi!!CPU (ぶっとび!!CPU, Buttobi!! Shī Pī Yū, "Blasting Off!!CPU") in Japan, is a Japanese series written and illustrated by Kaoru Shintani.
Girls Bravo (Japanese: GIRLSブラボー, Hepburn: Gārusu Burabō) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Mario Kaneda and serialized from 2000 to 2005 in Shōnen Ace by Kadokawa Shoten. The story focuses on a high school boy who is allergic to girls who is transported to a mysterious world with a mostly female population; when ...
Go! Princess Pretty Cure (Go!プリンセスプリキュア, Gō! Purinsesu Purikyua), also known simply as Go! Princess PreCure, is a 2015 Japanese magical girl anime series produced by Toei Animation, and the twelfth installment to Izumi Todo's Pretty Cure metaseries, featuring the tenth generation of Cures. [1]
When a girl gets her Heart princess identity, she receives a peony mark somewhere on her body in her signature color. Haruka Hani (羽仁 はるか, Hani Haruka) / Pink Princess. Haruka is a cheerful and peppy young girl, and she has her pink hair into pigtails. The virtue she represents is Jin and her peony mark is on her chest.
Magical girl (魔法少女, mahō shōjo) is a subgenre of Japanese fantasy media centered around young girls who use magic, often through an alter ego into which they can transform. Since the genre's emergence in the 1960s, media including anime , manga , OVAs , ONAs , films, and live-action series have been produced.
Target shoppers say the store’s new holiday ad campaign is appealing to its target demographic, and they’re here for it.. This November, the company dropped a “sleigh-ful” of new ads in ...
Anime enthusiasts have produced fan fiction and fan art, including computer wallpapers, and anime music videos (AMVs). [206] Many fans visit sites depicted in anime, games, manga and other forms of otaku culture. This behavior is known as "Anime pilgrimage". [207]