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The New Gate (stylized in all caps) is a Japanese light novel series written by Shinogi Kazanami. The series originated on the Shōsetsuka ni Narō website in 2013, until pulled by the author in August 2016, before being published in print by AlphaPolis with illustrations by Makai no Jūnin, KeG, and Akira Banpai beginning in December 2013.
Gate [3] (Japanese: ゲート 自衛隊 彼の地にて、斯く戦えり, Hepburn: Gēto: Jieitai Kano Chi nite, Kaku Tatakaeri, lit. Gate: Thus the Japanese Self-Defense Force Fought in Their Land), is a Japanese fantasy novel series written by Takumi Yanai and illustrated by Daisuke Izuka and Kurojishi.
The following month, it announced she was developing a new daytime soap opera that would follow the lives of a wealthy Black family. [15] It will be produced by a joint venture of CBS Studios and the NAACP, along with Procter & Gamble Studios. Val Jean will serve as head writer and showrunner, and will also executive produce alongside Sheila ...
A female 21-year-old Japanese police officer who gets involved in the Ginza Incident in Gate: Zero. While seen as strong-willed and dependable on the outside, she is actually clumsy, timid, and naive. Kokone (心寧, Kokone) A 5-year-old girl who gets entangled in the attack on Ginza in Gate: Zero. She is based on an original character - a ...
The appearance of the Gate and attack on Japanese civilians, dubbed the Ginza Incident, prompts the incumbent Prime Minister to take action by proclaiming that Japan will send a JSDF task force backed by the US to the "Special Region", the world beyond the Gate, to not only explore the new world but also capture and demand reparations from ...
Fans posing as SG teams at Dragon Con in 2008. Brad Wright used the term "Gaters" to refer to fans of Stargate SG-1 in 2001, [3] but the term was never fully adopted. Some fans believe that there was a real Stargate device under Cheyenne Mountain that inspired writers Joseph Mallozzi and Paul Mullie to come up with their own conspiracy story for season 4's "Point of No Return". [3]
A scene in Steins;Gate depicting the phone trigger system. The player can select a blue hyperlink to reply to the message. Steins;Gate ' s gameplay requires little interaction from the player as most of the duration of the game is spent reading the text that appears on the screen, which represents either the dialogue between the various characters or the thoughts of the protagonist.
Shura no Mon (修羅の門, lit. ' Asura's Gate ') is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Masatoshi Kawahara.The story follows a young Karate practitioner named Tsukumo Mutsu, 40th master of the deadly Mutsu Enmei Ryu style.