Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Demon Lord 2099 (Japanese: 魔王2099, Hepburn: Maō 2099) is a Japanese light novel series written by Daigo Murasaki and illustrated by Kureta. The series began publication by Fujimi Shobo under their Fujimi Fantasia Bunko imprint in January 2021.
A manga adaptation with art by Amaru Minotake has been serialized via Futabasha's digital publication Web Comic Action since October 2017. [10] It was collected in five tankōbon volumes in December 2019. [33] J-Novel Club has licensed the manga. [2] Amaru Minotake continued the "re-vamped" manga under the title Demon Lord, Retry!
Demon Lord 2099; Demon Lord, Retry! [9] Der Werwolf: The Annals of Veight; The Devil Is a Part-Timer! The Diary of a Middle-Aged Sage's Carefree Life in Another World; Did I Seriously Just Get Reincarnated as My Gag Character?! Didn't I Say to Make My Abilities Average in the Next Life?! [10] The Dirty Way to Destroy the Goddess's Heroes
D. Dahlia in Bloom; The Daily Life of a Middle-Aged Online Shopper in Another World; The Dark History of the Reincarnated Villainess; Death March to the Parallel World Rhapsody
[3] [4] The manga started in Weekly Shōnen Sunday on May 8, 2019. [5] [6] [7] A two-part interview between Takahashi and Satoru Noda, author of Golden Kamuy, was published in Weekly Shōnen Sunday and Shueisha's Weekly Young Jump to celebrate the then upcoming first volume of Mao and the new volume of Golden Kamuy in September 2019.
Maoh: Juvenile Remix (Japanese: 魔王 ~JUVENILE REMIX~, Hepburn: Maō Jubunairu Rimikkusu, lit. ' Demon King ') is a Japanese manga series written by Kōtarō Isaka and illustrated by Megumi Ōsuga, both adapting and serving as a continuation of Isaka's 2004 novel 3 Assassins (Grasshopper), the first novel in his Hitman novel trilogy, and his 2005 short story collection Maō.
The Devil Is a Part-Timer! (Japanese: はたらく魔王さま!, Hepburn: Hataraku Maō-sama!, lit. ' Working Demon King! ' or ' Demon Lord at Work! ') is a Japanese light novel series written by Satoshi Wagahara, with illustrations by Oniku (written as 029).
It includes Japanese manga, American comic books, and European comics. This list includes comic books that have sold at least 100 million copies. There are three separate lists, for three different comic book publication formats: collected comic book volumes, periodical single-issue floppy comics , and comic magazines .