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Kōji Ishii (石井 康嗣, Ishii Kōji, real name Kōji Ishii (石井 浩司, Ishii Kōji) born July 1, 1960) is a Japanese voice actor.His major roles include: Koutaro Taiga in The King of Braves GaoGaiGar, Giovanni Bertuccio in Gankutsuou: The Count of Monte Cristo, Shigematsu in Toriko, and Prime Minister Honest in Akame ga Kill!.
Kenzo reveals the truth to both of them in the Great Mazinger series, first to Shiro, since Koji was away for a big part of the series, and their relationship would cause conflict with his adopted son Tetsuya, who was raised by Kenzo together with his best friend Jun and comes to feel intensely jealous of Kenzo's actual children, especially so ...
Koji Kabuto (Japanese: 兜甲児, Hepburn: Kabuto Kōji), also written Kouji Kabuto, is a fictional character featuring introduced Go Nagai's manga Mazinger Z.He is the main character and pilot of title super robot using its powers to defeat the forces from Dr. Hell.
During the game, fighting occurs on a 3D field, with characters allowed to move forwards, backward, and sidestep left and right. Most of the fighting is done with range-based attacks, but it is possible to attack a short-range and use grapple moves on your opponent. The fighting system only utilizes two main moves types: attack and guard.
Koki Uchiyama (内山 昂輝, Uchiyama Kōki, born August 16, 1990) is a Japanese actor who specializes in voice acting. [1] He is affiliated with Himawari Theatre Group. He won Best Male Rookie at 5th Seiyu Awards. [2] He also received one of Best Voice Actors at Tokyo Anime Award Festival in 2015. [3]
Battle Tycoon: Flash Hiders SFX (バトルタイクーン) [3] is a fighting video game developed and published by Right Stuff for the Super Famicom on May 19, 1995. It is a sequel to the original Flash Hiders. [4] Like its predecessor, Battle Tycoon: Flash Hiders SFX simulates the life of a fantasy martial arts prize fighter with an anime ...
This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards.The specific problem is: Outdated, with almost no citations to verify ANYTHING on this page.There's also no need to list programming from Animax's Asian, Korean, and international branches in the first place; especially now that they have been either sold off or shuttered.
Shogakukan collected its chapters in 52 tankōbon volumes, released from February 18, 2005, [1] to June 16, 2017. [2] In North America, the manga has been licensed for English release by Viz Media. The first volume was released on November 21, 2006. [3] As of September 19, 2023, 41 volumes have been released. [4]