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Approximately 35,000 circles (a term for groups or individuals who create doujin) participate in each edition of Comiket. [4] Different circles exhibit on each day of Comiket; circles producing works on a common subject, such as a particular media franchise or manga genre , are typically grouped on the same day. [ 5 ]
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DLsite (ディーエルサイト), operated by the Japanese company EISYS, Inc. (株式会社エイシス), is an ecommerce storefront website and digital distribution service for downloading and selling a mixture of all-ages and adults-only doujinshi, doujin games, digital manga, light novel e-books, software, computer games, Android apps, and similar goods.
A doujinshi convention is a type of event dedicated to the sale of doujinshi, or self-published books (typically manga, collections of illustrations, or novels). These events are known in Japanese as doujin sokubaikai ( 同人即売会 , 'doujin sale event') or doujinshi sokubaikai ( 同人誌即売会 , 'doujinshi sale event').
Doujinshi (同人誌), also romanized as dōjinshi, is the Japanese term for self-published print works, such as magazines, manga, and novels.Part of a wider category of doujin (self-published) works, doujinshi are often derivative of existing works and created by amateurs, though some professional artists participate in order to publish material outside the regular industry.
Tokyo Revengers (Japanese: 東京卍リベンジャーズ [a], Hepburn: Tōkyō Ribenjāzu) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Ken Wakui.It was serialized in Kodansha's shōnen manga magazine Weekly Shōnen Magazine from March 2017 to November 2022, with its chapters collected in 31 tankōbon volumes.
Doujin soft (同人ソフト, dōjin sofuto) is software created by Japanese hobbyists or hobbyist groups (referred to as "circles"), more for fun than for profit. The term includes digital doujin games (同人ゲーム), which are essentially the Japanese equivalent of independent video games or fangames (the term "doujin game" also includes things like doujin-made board games and card games).
The Pokémon doujinshi incident (ポケモン同人誌事件) refers to the incident where a Japanese doujinshi artist who sold erotic manga of Pokémon in 1999 was arrested on suspicion of violating Japan's copyright laws, [1] [2] creating a media furor as well as an academic analysis in Japan of the copyright issues around doujinshi. [3]