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Aishiteruze Baby (愛してるぜ ベイベ★★, Aishiteruze Beibe★★, also known as I Love You, Baby) is a Japanese romance manga series written and illustrated by Yoko Maki. It was serialized by Shueisha in Ribon from April 2002 and January 2005 and collected in seven bound volumes .
Anime television series Manga, anime films [15] Revolutionary Girl Utena: 1996 Be-Papas: Manga Anime television series, anime film [38] Sailor Moon: 1991 Naoko Takeuchi: Manga Anime television series, anime films, live-action television series [9] Sailor Moon Crystal: 2014 Naoko Takeuchi: Manga ONA, Anime television series [53] Saint Seiya ...
Mitsuboshi Colors (三ツ星カラーズ, Mitsuboshi Karāzu, lit."Three Star Colors") is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Katsuwo. The manga was serialized in ASCII Media Works' Monthly Comic Dengeki Daioh magazine from 2014 to June 27, 2020.
Sweet Blue Flowers (Japanese: 青い花, Hepburn: Aoi Hana, lit."Blue Flower") is a Japanese yuri manga series written and illustrated by Takako Shimura.It was serialized between November 2004 and July 2013 in Ohta Publishing's manga magazine Manga Erotics F, with its chapters collected in eight tankōbon volumes.
The series was adapted into a fifty-two episode anime series produced by TV Aichi, We've Inc. & Tokyu Agency and animated by Pierrot. The anime aired in Japan from April 6, 2002, to March 29, 2003 on TXN affiliates. A two-volume sequel to the manga, Tokyo Mew Mew à la Mode, was serialized in Nakayoshi from April 2003 to February 2004. The ...
Yumeria (ゆめりあ) is a Japanese anime series and a PlayStation 2 video game created by Namco.The video game and anime were both initially released in Japan in 2003. Studio Deen produced a 12-episode anime television series broadcast on TBS in Japan in 2004.
The Hanasaku Iroha 26-episode anime television series is produced by P.A. Works and directed by Masahiro Andō. The series aired in Japan between April 3 [10] and September 25, 2011 on Tokyo MX. [11] The screenplay was written by Mari Okada, and chief animator Kanami Sekiguchi based the character design used in the anime on Mel Kishida's
Fancy Lala, known in Japan as Fancy Lala, the Magic Stage [2] (魔法のステージ・ファンシーララ, Mahō no Sutēji Fanshī Rara), is a magical girl anime series produced by Studio Pierrot in 1998, following an OVA released in 1988.