Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A first English dub of the anime series aired on the Southeast Asian TV channel Animax Asia in 2008, with the title Sergeant Keroro; Funimation Entertainment released a second 78-episode English dubbed version in North America in 2009, which aired as Sgt. Frog on Crunchyroll, Funimation and later on Netflix, as well as on DVD sets.
She is first seen in chapter 54 of the manga and episode 13 of the anime, where she is seen taking a shower, while singing, unknowingly being watched by a Moku Alien. She is then "saved" by a mysterious figure, despite not caring or even noticing the Moku Alien's appearance. She likes all kinds of jokes, even the boring ones.
"Meet the Sergeant!": Sergeant Keroro is a frog-like alien from the planet Keron sent to invade planet Earth (or Pekopon, as his race calls it). He is instead kept as a pet and forced to do chores for the Hinata family, which consists of paranormal maniac Fuyuki, his ill-tempered older sister Natsumi, and their manga-editing mother Aki.
Nick Jr. TeamTO Youku Kids Frog Box Rai Ragazzi Maga Animation Studio: Alien TV: 2019–2021: 9Go! Netflix: Pop Family Entertainment Snowball Studios: My Little Pony: Pony Life: 2020–2021: Discovery Family Treehouse TV: Boulder Media: Transformers: War for Cybertron Trilogy: Netflix: Rooster Teeth Studios Polygon Pictures: Continued from ...
The five main frog-like aliens in the first opening of the series. From left to right: Tamama, Dororo, Kururu, Giroro and Keroro. Sgt. Frog, also known as Sergeant Keroro and originally titled as Keroro Gunso, is a Japanese television series produced and animated by Sunrise Inc.
The third season of the Sgt. Frog anime series consists of the fifty-one episodes after episode one-hundred-and-three from the series, which first aired in Japan from April 7, 2006, to March 30, 2007, on TV Tokyo. Season 3 uses 5 songs: 2 Openings and 3 Endings.
The chapters of the Japanese manga series Sgt. Frog are written and illustrated by Mine Yoshizaki and are serialized in the manga magazine Shōnen Ace. The individual chapters are then collected into tankōbon volumes by Kadokawa Shoten , who released the first volume on November 29, 1999, [ 1 ] and volume 34 on August 26, 2024. [ 2 ]
The fifth season of the Sgt. Frog anime series consists of the fifty-one episodes after episode two-hundred-and-five from the series, which first aired in Japan from April 5, 2008 to March 28, 2009 on TV Tokyo. Season 5 uses 5 songs: 2 Openings and 3 Endings.