Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The story focuses on Kenichi Shirahama, a 15-year-old high school student and a long-time victim of bullying.At the beginning of the story, he befriends transfer student Miu Fūrinji; and desires to become stronger, he follows her to Ryōzanpaku, a dojo housing several masters of diverse martial arts, led by her grandfather, the undefeated martial artist Hayato Fūrinji.
Mukala (ムカラ, Mukara), also known as Mukala of the Sun, is an African warrior who appears in the OVA The Legend of the Inferno Armor. A warrior of the Taulagi tribe and Naria's fiancée, he wields a boomerang and wears the Black Inferno Armor (黒い輝煌帝, Kuroi Kikōtei, lit. Black Robes of the Sun Emperor).
The five elite warriors of Gunkan's forces (who occasionally number in six), all of them remain hidden under cloaks and masks until the moment each one goes into battle. When Bo-bobo's team infiltrate the Pomade Ring, they must fight each one one-on-one based on the warp panel chosen (though Gasser almost fights all six at once at one point).
This was followed by the first African-American superhero in mainstream comics, the Falcon, introduced in Captain America #117 (Sept. 1969). DC's first African-American superhero was Sgt. Willie Walker, a.k.a. Black Racer of the New Gods, introduced in writer-artist Jack Kirby's New Gods #3 (July 1971).
Tenkaichi: The Greatest Warrior Under the Rising Sun (テンカイチ 日本最強武芸者決定戦, Tenkaichi: Nihon Saikyō Bugeisha Ketteisen) is a Japanese manga series written by Yōsuke Nakamaru and illustrated by Kyōtarō Azuma. It began serialization on Kodansha's Young Magazine the 3rd manga magazine in January
This is a list of the series that have run in the Shueisha manga anthology book Weekly Shōnen Jump. This list is organized by decade and year of each series' first publication, and lists every single notable series run in the manga magazine, along with the author of each series and the series' finishing date if applicable.
Yasuke is an original net animation (ONA) series loosely based on the historical figure of the same name, an African warrior who served under Japanese daimyo Oda Nobunaga during the Sengoku period of samurai conflict in 16th century Japan.
Fictional warrior characters who are engaged in a martial lifestyle, but are typically not official members of a regular military organization; instead either being independent combatants who fight for themselves, or are only affiliated with their family, clan, tribe, etc.