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This is a list of manhua, or Chinese comics, ordered by year then alphabetical order, and shown with region and author. It contains a collection of manhua magazines, pictorial collections as well as newspapers.
A video game based on the manhua was produced by Acebrock. The game was initially scheduled to be released in both Chinese and English on the PC platform. Although the game shared the same English title as the film, it remained faithful to the original story, as opposed to the changes introduced in the film. As of 2007, Acebrock fell through ...
Surviving the Game as a Barbarian Jung Yoon-kang(Story), MIDNIGHT STUDIO(Art) Webtoon: Doctor Elise: The Royal Lady With the Lamp: Yuin, mini: Tappytoon: Dokebi Bride [6] [18] Marley: Net Comics: Dorothy of Oz Korean: 도로시: Son Hee-joon: UDON: Dragon Hunter Korean: 용잡이: Hong Seock-seo: Tokyopop: Emperor's Castle: Kim Sung-mo: Net ...
Sakura Taisen (manga) Sands of Destruction; School Days (video game) Seisen Cerberus; Senran Kagura; Shachibato! President, It's Time for Battle! Shinkyoku Sōkai Polyphonica; Show by Rock!! Shuffle! SINoALICE; Smile of the Arsnotoria; Snack World; Snow (2003 video game) Splatoon (manga) Star Ocean: The Second Story (manga) Steins;Gate (manga)
No Game No Life [2] No Game No Life: Zero; No Longer Allowed in Another World [67] Now and Then, Here and There [53] Now I'm a Demon Lord! Happily Ever After with Monster Girls in My Dungeon; Oblivion Island: Haruka and the Magic Mirror; Offense and Defense in Daites [44] Onegai My Melody; The Ones Within; Only I Know That This World Is a Game
Manga (漫画, IPA: ⓘ) are comics created in Japan, or by Japanese creators in the Japanese language, conforming to a style developed in Japan in the late 19th century. [1] The term is also now used for a variety of other works in the style of or influenced by the Japanese comics.
The word manhua was originally an 18th-century term used in Chinese literati painting.It became popular in Japan as manga in the late 19th century. Feng Zikai reintroduced the word to Chinese, in the modern sense, with his 1925 series of political cartoons entitled Zikai Manhua in the Wenxue Zhoubao (Literature Weekly).
Oriental Heroes is a popular Hong Kong–based manhua created by Tony Wong Yuk-long, a writer/artist responsible for also creating a number of other popular manhua titles.. It was created in 1970, and it continues to be published to