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His finishing move is Dark-Ray Schtrom (ダークレイ・シュトローム, Dāku Rei Shutorōmu), which had the same strength as Nexus Junis' Over-Ray Schtrom. [ 11 ] [ 17 ] After his seeming demise from the final battle with Himeya, Mizorogi regains the ability to transform into Mephisto by absorbing nearby lights, signifying his redemption ...
Ultraman Blazar (ウルトラマンブレーザー, Urutoraman Burēzā) is a Japanese tokusatsu drama produced by Tsuburaya Productions, released to coincide with the company's 60th anniversary. [3] It is the 35th entry to the Ultraman Series, the fifth installment in the Reiwa era and the first series to lean towards serious hard science ...
[99] According to Ueda, the crew also used photogrammetry to scan locations that would be used as computer-generated backdrops in the film's fight scenes, stating that "we [the visual effects crew] visited power plants in the provinces, walked around Tokyo, and went with the director [Shinji Higuchi] and film crew on location scouting trips to ...
His main finishing move is Laser Shot Andro Melos (レーザーショットアンドロメロス, Rēzā Shotto Andoro Merosu). As with all male characters in the 2015 animated adaptation of The Ultraman , Melos is voiced by Kōichi Yamadera ( 山寺 宏一 , Yamadera Kōichi ) .
Ultraman (Japanese: ウルトラマン, Hepburn: Urutoraman) [a] is a Japanese tokusatsu science fiction television series created by Eiji Tsuburaya.Produced by Tsuburaya Productions, it is a follow-up to Ultra Q, though not technically a sequel or spin-off.
Episode 6 of Ultraman Z & Ultraman Zero Voice Drama revealed that he created the Z Riser to fight against the Devil Splinter cases and named it after Ultraman Z when he volunteered to be a tester. In Ultraman Z, Hikari (through Pega) gave Riku a Z Riser and three Ultra Medals as alternatives while fixing the damaged Geed Riser.
This page is the character list of the 2001 Ultra Series, Ultraman Cosmos.The series coincided with a prequel movie Ultraman Cosmos: The First Contact in 2001, later on succeeded with spin-off movies Ultraman Cosmos 2: The Blue Planet (2002) and Ultraman Cosmos vs. Ultraman Justice: The Final Battle (2003).
Ultraman Powered was developed by Tose and published by Bandai, the latter of which was the official licensor of the long-running Japanese Ultraman media franchise from Tsuburaya Productions. The game is specifically adapted from the 1993 home video series Ultraman: The Ultimate Hero, also known in Japan as Ultraman Powered.