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The Himalayan's engine was designed and produced by Royal Enfield 'from the ground up' and shares little to no parts with other contemporaries in the company's line-up. [10] The engine, named the LS410 indicating its long-stroke ratio, is a unit-construction 411 cc single-cylinder, oil-cooled 4-stroke SOHC engine.
The Shy manga and anime series features various characters created by Bukimi Miki. The series takes place in a fictional world where each country on Earth has its own superhero who is responsible for keeping peace in their respective homeland, while working together with the other heroes of the world to ward off the threat of the supervillain group, Amarariruku.
Encouragement of Climb (ヤマノススメ, Yama no Susume, lit. ' Recommendation of Mountaineering ') is a slice-of-life manga series written and illustrated by Shiro, which began serialization in Earth Star Entertainment's Comic Earth Star magazine in 2011.
The Climber (Japanese: 孤高の人, Hepburn: Kokō no Hito, lit. ' Solitary Person ') is a Japanese manga series written by Shin-ichi Sakamoto and Yoshirō Nabeda and illustrated by Sakamoto, based on a novel by Jirō Nitta.
Much of the anime-original material that was not featured in the manga was cut from Kai (ultimately abridging the 291 episodes of Dragon Ball Z down to 159 in Japan and 167 internationally). [ 6 ] The series would return in 2014, running for an additional 61 episodes in Japan, and 69 episodes internationally. [ 3 ]
Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba – The Movie: Mugen Train (Japanese: 劇場版 鬼滅の刃 無限列車編, Hepburn: Gekijō-ban Kimetsu no Yaiba Mugen Ressha-hen), also known simply as Demon Slayer: Mugen Train, is a 2020 Japanese animated dark fantasy action film [2] [3] based on the "Mugen Train" arc of the 2016–20 manga series Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba by Koyoharu Gotouge.
Iwa-Kakeru! Climbing Girls (Japanese: いわかける! -Climbing Girls-, lit. ' Rock Hanging ') is a Japanese manga series by Ryūdai Ishizaka. It was serialized online via Cygames' Cycomi manga app and website from December 2017 to May 2019 and has been collected in four tankōbon volumes by Kodansha and Shogakukan.
Rintaro (りんたろう, Rintarō, born January 22, 1941) is the pseudonym of Shigeyuki Hayashi (林 重行, Hayashi Shigeyuki), [1] [2] a well-known director of anime. [3] [4] [5] He works frequently with the animation studio Madhouse (which he co-founded), [6] though he is a freelance director not employed directly by any one studio. [1]