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Noticing that Nina is searching for love, Koume decides to try and find her a soulmate using pendulum divination. As the girls follow Koume's pendulum around town, Saku, worried about what they are up to, disguises herself to follow them, getting mistaken for a handsome man.
The series has received three anime adaptions by Studio Deen, titled Rilu Rilu Fairilu: Yōsei no Door, [6] Rilu Rilu Fairilu: Mahō no Kagami, [7] and Oshiete Mahō no Pendulum: Rilu Rilu Fairilu. [ 8 ]
Voiced by: Mayumi Iizuka (anime), Aki Takeda (film) (Japanese); Venus Terzo (Bandai dub), Colleen Clinkenbeard (Funimation dub) (English) Millerna Aston, the third princess of the kingdom of Asturia who is in love with Allen Schezar, though she is betrothed to the merchant prince Dryden Fassa. Millerna's ambition was once to become a doctor ...
Yume Tsukai (夢使い, trans. Dream Users) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Riichi Ueshiba. The series is a spin-off of Ueshiba's earlier manga, Discommunication. It was adapted into an anime television series produced by Madhouse that aired on some UHF stations and ABC Television.
Yoake Mae yori Ruriiro na is a romance visual novel in which the player assumes the role of Tatsuya Asagiri. Its gameplay requires little player interaction as much of the game's duration is spent on reading the text that appears on the screen, which represents the story's narrative and dialogue.
The group is ambushed by a threat no one sees coming. After a hard-fought battle at Baratie, Sanji finally follows his dreams, while another crew member shows their true colors. Anime episodes: 25 ...
The Many Dream Journeys of Meme (ミームいろいろ夢の旅, Miimu Iro Iro Yume no Tabi, also translated as Mimu, the Traveller of Many Dreams and Discoveries Unlimited) is a Japanese anime television series created by Nippon Animation. The show originally aired from 1983 to 1985 and was primarily educational.
The story is divided in two storylines with one involving the characters Maru and Kiruko as they travel across a post-apocalyptic world, while another story focuses on a group of children who live in a school. Mori and the production side had to think about the overall structure, so Ishiguro had to tell them the story to the end.