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After Atlas Flame's disappearance, Fairy Tail celebrates their mission's success while Flare is welcomed back by the giants of Sun Village. Elsewhere, Minerva returns to the Succubus Eye guildhall to find her guildmates wiped out by Kyôka, one of the Nine Demon Gates.
Fairy Tail is an anime series adapted from the manga of the same title by Hiro Mashima.Produced by A-1 Pictures and Satelight, and directed by Shinji Ishihira, it was broadcast on TV Tokyo from 12 October 2009, to 30 March 2013. [1]
After Raven Tail disbands, Flare makes amends with Fairy Tail and assists them in saving the Village of the Sun (太陽の村, Taiyō no Mura), her adopted hometown populated by giants. Kurohebi (クロヘビ, lit. "Black Snake") Voiced by: Yoshimitsu Shimoyama (Japanese); Jessie James Grelle (English)
Natsu Dragneel, Lucy Heartfilia, and Happy travel to the city of Marguerite to visit Lamia Scale, which now includes Wendy Marvell and Carla.Wendy declines the trio's invitation to help reorganize Fairy Tail, thinking that leaving Lamia Scale would upset her friend and current partner Shelia Blendi, but is admonished by Shelia for staying out of pity.
The Fairy Tail wizards celebrate their success in saving the village and Flare's reunion with the giants while contemplating Atlas Flame's cryptic warnings. Meanwhile, Minerva finds the Succubus Eye wizards obliterated by Kyôka, a member of Tartaros, who captures her.
Fairy Tail (stylized in all caps) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Hiro Mashima.It was serialized in Kodansha's Weekly Shōnen Magazine from August 2006 to July 2017, with the individual chapters collected and published into 63 tankōbon volumes.
During their year-long training journey, Fairy Tail members Natsu Dragneel and Happy travel to Sirius Island to search for the grave of their first master, Mavis Vermillion, and discover the ruins of an abandoned village. In X679, a six-year-old Mavis lives in the village as a servant of the Red Lizard guild following the deaths of her parents.
Development on a sequel for Fairy Tail began prior to the release of the original manga's final tankōbon volume following its end of publication in July 2017. [3] Series creator and artist Hiro Mashima initially had no intention to continue the story himself, as the project's developers had decided that another artist would draw it.