Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Saber (Japanese: セイバー, Hepburn: Seibā), whose real name is Artoria Pendragon (アルトリア・ペンドラゴン, Arutoria Pendoragon) (alternatively, Altria Pendragon), is a fictional character from the Japanese 2004 visual novel Fate/stay night by Type-Moon.
Upon hearing Artoria has fallen in love with Seiichi, Saria comes up with the idea of Seiichi taking both Saria and Artoria as wives. Because of her enormous strength, she requires no weapons and instead uses her fists. Artoria Gremm (アルトリア・グレム, Arutoria Guremu) Voiced by: Marina Inoue [4] (Japanese); Corey Pettit [2] (English)
Fate/stay night is a Japanese visual novel game developed by Type-Moon for Windows on January 30, 2004. Fate/stay night Réalta Nua (Irish for "new star"), was released on April 19, 2007, for the PlayStation 2, [2] which replaced the sexual content with alternate scenes, added an extended ending scene to the Fate storyline, and featured voice actors from the 2006 anime series.
This is a list of characters from Fate/Apocrypha, a Japanese light novel series based on the Fate/stay night franchise by Type-Moon. Fate/Apocrypha has an extensive cast of characters, both fictional and inspired by real mythology. Most of the cast is split into two factions, the Red faction and the Black faction, which compete to win the Holy ...
Lancelot would come to have another version summonable as the Saber-class in which he is sane, unlike his Berserker form. Artoria would also receive multiple versions of her character, notably a Lancer-class version wielding the spear Rhongomyniad, in addition to corrupted Alter forms and an alternate-universe male form known as "Proto-Saber".
Key visual for the series. Fate/Zero is an anime television series based on the prequel light novel series of the same name to Type-Moon's Fate/stay night visual novel game. The light novels are written by Gen Urobuchi, who is also known as the writer for the anime series Puella Magi Madoka Magica, and illustrated by Takashi Takeuchi, co-founder and head artist of Type-Moon.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
The movie made 1 billion yen at the Japanese box office in 11 days, reaching the milestone quicker than the first two films, and sold a total of 620,000 tickets in that time. [28] The film went on to earn more than 1.9 billion yen ($18 million) by October 15, 2020 in Japan, until December 31, it grossed 2 billion yen ($18.8 million) in Japan ...