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Arale Norimaki (Japanese: 則巻アラレ, Hepburn: Norimaki Arare) is a fictional character and the protagonist of the Dr. Slump manga series, created by Akira Toriyama. She is a humanoid robot built by Senbei Norimaki who looks like a young girl. She is known for her naïveté, energetic personality, lack of common sense, and amazing strength.
Tank Tankuro (タンクタンクロー, Tanku tankurō) is a 1934 manga written and drawn by Gajō Sakamoto. The comic features the eponymous character, a robot-like character with a round iron body who could transform into various shapes and produce anything he wanted from the hole in his belly. He fights his archenemy, Kuro Kabuto (Black ...
A genre of manga and anime in which childlike female characters are depicted in an erotic manner. [22] mecha (メカ, meka): anime and manga that feature robots in battle. Series that feature mecha are divided into two subgenres: "super robots", where the mecha have unrealistic powers and the focus is more on the fighting and robots themselves ...
Like Alpha Hatsuseno, Director Alpha acquired her given name because she is the initial model, or "alpha-type", of a robot series. She is the director of a stratospheric aircraft called Taapon that circles the Earth without landing, observing the world's changes from above without ever being able to leave.
In Mazinger series, the main female robots characters are Aphrodite A, Venus A, [41] Diana A and Minerva X. They have more prominence in Mazinger Angels (2004-2006) manga; Kazamori Sasa, from Un-Go, is a Real Artificial Intelligence program that takes the body of a girl; Mecha Rinrin, from the bishōjo manga Sister Princess (2001–2002)
Tesla, the Clockwork Girl: (protagonist) is a young robot girl learning how to live in a world of adults. She looks at strangers like a kid in a candy store and wants to know everything about this new world around her. The character's name was inspired by inventor Nikola Tesla, and Kevin Hanna's earlier zine "Clockwork Girls hate Electronic ...
After discussing this with his editor, he ultimately settled on a young girl and a robot as the main protagonists in order to have two separate viewpoints to write from. [4] When writing the robots in the series, Takaki recalled being fascinated with the human-like robots from the 1982 American film Android , so he used them as a model when ...
A manga adaptation by Hakaru Takagi began serialization in Media Factory's Monthly Comic Alive magazine in its June 2010 issue, published on April 27, 2010. Its first tankōbon volume was released on November 22, 2010, and there have been nine volumes published as of March 23, 2016. [ 25 ]