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Zoro, Narrator [6] Frieren: Beyond Journey's End: Dunste [6] Spice and Wolf: Merchant Meets the Wise Wolf: Marlheit [6] Fairy Tail: 100 Years Quest: Elfman Strauss [43] I'll Become a Villainess Who Goes Down in History: Luke Seeker [44] 2025 Dragon Ball Daima: Vegeta, Yamcha, Shenron [45]
[ch. 81, 82] Her experiences lead her to join Fairy Tail and become a serious-minded but compassionate disciplinarian who temporarily becomes the guild's seventh master in Makarov Dreyar's absence when the guild is reformed one year after Tartaros's demise. Over the course of Fairy Tail, Erza grows fond of her friends during their adventures.
Fairy Tail (stylized in all caps) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Hiro Mashima.It was serialized in Kodansha's Weekly Shōnen Magazine from August 2006 to July 2017, with the individual chapters collected and published into 63 tankōbon volumes.
Fairy Tail S: Tales from Fairy Tail (フェアリーテイルS, Fearī Teiru Esu) is a collection of omake manga by Hiro Mashima created across the main series' run. Two tankōbon volumes were released in Japan on September 16, 2016, and in North America on October 24, 2017 and April 17, 2018.
An adaptation of Fairy Tail Zero was announced for the Fairy Tail anime television series on the jacket bands of Fairy Tail volume 52 and on the single collected volume of the series. [12] [13] The adaptation premiered on January 9, 2016. [12] Funimation simulcasted the series as part of the anime's eighth season with a broadcast dub in North ...
Fairy Tail: 100 Years Quest [c] (stylized in all caps) is a Japanese manga series written and storyboarded by Hiro Mashima, and illustrated by Atsuo Ueda. It is a sequel to Mashima's previous series, Fairy Tail .
From July 17, 2014, to July 17, 2015, Fairy Tail had its own monthly magazine titled Monthly Fairy Tail Magazine, which included a prequel manga by Mashima himself titled Fairy Tail Zero. [13] [14] In 2014, three spin-offs were started: Fairy Tail: Ice Trail by Yūsuke Shirato; Fairy Tail Blue Mistral by Rui Watanabe; and Fairy Girls by Boku.
The characters utilize designs inspired by classic fairy tale characters. [3] Each character has an associated color, and it is the first letters of these colors, red, white, black, and yellow, that give the series its name. [4]