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That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime: The Movie – Scarlet Bond: Yasuhito Kikuchi Eight Bit: Crunchyroll: PG-13 53% [322] January 22, 2023 [323] Uta no Prince-sama: Maji Love ST☆RISH Tours: Chika Nagaoka A-1 Pictures: Sentai Filmworks — — February 3, 2023 [324] Sword Art Online Progressive: Scherzo of Deep Night: Ayako Kōno A-1 Pictures
Bleach: Thousand-Year Blood War ended its second cour in September 2023 - here's what we know about part 3's release date, plot and manga spoilers.
Bleach: Thousand-Year Blood War (BLEACH 千年血戦篇, Burīchi: Sennen Kessen-hen), also known as Bleach: The Blood Warfare, is a Japanese anime television series based on the Bleach manga series by Tite Kubo and a direct sequel to the Bleach anime series that ran from 2004 until 2012.
In North America, the manga was licensed for English release by Viz Media in 2004. They have released the collected volumes and published its chapters in their Shonen Jump magazine from November 2007 until the magazine's final issue in April 2012. Bleach received the 50th Shogakukan Manga Award for the shōnen category in 2005.
Bleach TYBW Ichigo. Studio Pierrot and Tite Kubo shocked the anime world when it was announced that, after a decade of silence, Bleach’s final manga arc would be adapted into an anime.
Cover of the first tankōbon for Bleach, released in Japan by Shueisha on January 5, 2002. Bleach is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Tite Kubo.The plot starts with Ichigo Kurosaki, a teenager who accidentally steals the powers of the Soul Reaper Rukia Kuchiki and subsequently assumes her duties while she convalesces.
Bleach: Fade to Black (Japanese: 劇場版BLEACH Fade to Black 君の名を呼ぶ, Hepburn: Gekijō-ban Burīchi: Feido to~u Burakku Kimi no Na o Yobu, lit. "Theatrical Feature Bleach: Fade to Black, I Call Your Name") is the third animated film adaptation of the anime and manga series Bleach. In the film, Ichigo Kurosaki enters the Soul ...
Manga has proved so popular that it has led to other companies such as Antarctic Press, Oni Press, Seven Seas Entertainment and Tokyopop, as well as long-established publishers like Marvel and Archie Comics, to release their own manga-inspired works that apply the same artistic stylings and story pacing commonly seen in Japanese manga.