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A third game Kuroko's Basketball: Mirai e no Kizuna (黒子のバスケ 未来へのキズナ, Kuroko's Basketball: Bonds for the Future) was released on March 26, 2015, for the Nintendo 3DS. [40] Kuroko also appears as a support character in the Jump crossover fighting game J-Stars Victory VS .
Slam Dunk (stylized in all caps) is a Japanese sports manga series written and illustrated by Takehiko Inoue.It was serialized in Shueisha's shōnen manga magazine Weekly Shōnen Jump from October 1990 to June 1996, with the chapters collected into 31 tankōbon volumes.
Delivers the tension of a sports anime, offers just enough for long term fans." [52] Calum Marsh from The New York Times described the film as an excellent adaptation of the original manga series, written "The First Slam Dunk is a great basketball movie because it understands what’s great about basketball, this feels like real basketball ...
Kuroko's Basketball The Movie: Last Game (Japanese: 劇場版 黒子のバスケ LAST GAME, Hepburn: Gekijō-ban Kuroko no Basuke Rasuto Gēmu) is a 2017 Japanese animated sports film produced by Production I.G and distributed by Shochiku. This is the first film in the Kuroko's Basketball franchise, created by Tadatoshi Fujimaki.
The Shohoku High School basketball team along with other students from Shohoku, as seen at the end of the manga. The manga and anime series Slam Dunk features a cast of fictional characters created by Takehiko Inoue. The series takes place in Japan, with the main characters being high school basketball players from Kanagawa Prefecture.
In a Goo Ranking, Sakuragi and Rukawa were voted as the 4th-best pair of rivals in anime history. [42] When American-born basketball player J. R. Henderson became a naturalized Japanese citizen, he renamed himself to J. R. Sakuragi after the character. [43] Across the manga, Inoue draws parallels with the NBA.
Basketball in anime and manga (2 C, 20 P) B. Basketball Wives (17 P) N. NBA TV original programming (5 P) Pages in category "Basketball television series"
Dear Boys (stylized in all caps) is a Japanese sports manga series written and illustrated by Hiroki Yagami.It was serialized in Kodansha's shōnen manga magazine Monthly Shōnen Magazine from June 1989 to January 1997, with its chapters collected in 23 tankōbon volumes.