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Zou is about the day-to-day life and adventures of a young anthropomorphic zebra, Zou (Bizou), and his family and friends. Most episodes contain Zou's name in the title and usually take place at Zou's house or in his backyard. Zou lives with his mother, father, grandparents, and great-grandmother.
Platinum End is a Japanese anime television series based on the manga series of the same name written by Tsugumi Ohba and illustrated by Takeshi Obata.On December 2, 2020, Pony Canyon registered the "Anime-PlatinumEnd.com" domain name, [1] and on December 19, 2020, at the Jump Festa '21 online event, it was announced that the series would receive an anime television series adaptation by Signal.MD.
Miyuki does her best to modify the rundown car, customizing it to Natsumi's needs. Miyuki unveils the revamped car to Natsumi, recognizing the hybrid features with that of a motorcycle. Natsumi and Miyuki track down the pseudo salesperson, as he tries to escape. The two catch up with him after he crashes on the bridge.
The thirteen episode series premiered between April 4 and June 27, 2013 on Tokyo MX and was later aired on KBS, SUN, BS Nittele, TV Aichi and AT-X. [4] Pony Canyon released the series in Japan on six Blu-ray and DVD volumes starting on July 3, 2013. [ 5 ]
Rima then gets attacked by the X Eggs, but Nagihiko guards her. Rima realizes that they need Nagihiko's help, so they all cooperate, with Amu purifying the X Eggs at the end. Nagihiko ends up falling in a hole himself, and in a show of humor, pulls Rima down the hole with him. Even at the end of the episode, Amu is still trying to make Rima laugh.
The series aired on TV Tokyo between January 8 and July 2, 2011. However, the broadcast of episode 11 and afterward was affected by the 2011 TÅhoku earthquake and tsunami. [2] The series was simulcast by Crunchyroll with English subtitles. [3] The opening theme is "Destin Histoire" by Risa Yoshiki and was released on March 2, 2011. [4]
The series was announced at the end of the 139th and final chapter of the manga in February 2021. [1] It was later confirmed to be a 25-episode television series. [2] The series was produced by OLM and directed by Ayumu Watanabe, with Hiroshi Seko overseeing the series' scripts, Miki Matsumoto designing the characters, and Kusanagi handling the ...
The third season, a five-episode OVA series titled Maria-sama ga Miteru, was released on DVD from November 29, 2006, to July 25, 2007; each episode is approximately 50 minutes long. [ 17 ] [ 18 ] It covered the story from the original light novels up to the seventeenth volume.