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Since the 2010s, many anime fans have begun widely using social media platforms like YouTube, Facebook, Reddit [47] and Twitter (which has added an entire "anime and manga" category of topics) [48] [49] to discuss and follow the latest news of their favorite anime and manga series.
This list contains the top 50 accounts with the most followers on the social media platform X, formerly and commonly known as Twitter. Notable figures such as Elon Musk, Barack Obama, Cristiano Ronaldo, Justin Bieber, Rihanna, Katy Perry, and Narendra Modi, are at the top of the list, each with over 100 million followers. As of November 2024 ...
Tomo-chan Is a Girl! (Japanese: トモちゃんは女の子!, Hepburn: Tomo-chan wa Onnanoko!) is a Japanese four-panel manga series written and illustrated by Fumita Yanagida. It was serialized on the Twi4 Twitter account and Saizensen website, usually as a single-page four-panel strip, from April 2015 to July 2019.
Wikipe-tan, a combination of the Japanese word for Wikipedia and the friendly suffix for children, -tan, [1] is a moe anthropomorph of Wikipedia.. Moe anthropomorphism (Japanese: 萌え擬人化, Hepburn: moe gijinka) is a form of anthropomorphism in anime, manga, and games where moe qualities are given to non-human beings (such as animals, plants, supernatural entities and fantastical ...
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Shōjo manga originated from Japanese girls' culture at the turn of the twentieth century, primarily shōjo shōsetsu (girls' prose novels) and jojōga (lyrical paintings). The earliest shōjo manga was published in general magazines aimed at teenagers in the early 1900s and began a period of creative development in the 1950s as it began to ...
Female stock characters in anime and manga (1 C, 17 P) Pages in category "Female characters in anime and manga" The following 115 pages are in this category, out of 115 total.
Nakamori was particularly critical of "manga maniacs" drawn to cute girl characters, [13] and explained his label otaku as the term of address used between junior high school kids at manga and anime conventions. [14] In 1989, the case of Tsutomu Miyazaki, "The Otaku Murderer", brought the fandom, very negatively, to national attention. [15]