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Dropout Idol Fruit Tart: Difference between revisions

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Line 27: Line 27:
| studio          = [[Feel (animation studio)|Feel]]
| studio          = [[Feel (animation studio)|Feel]]
| network        = [[AT-X (TV network)|AT-X]], [[Tokyo MX]], [[Sun Television|SUN]], [[Kyoto Broadcasting System|KBS]], [[Nippon TV|BS-NTV]]
| network        = [[AT-X (TV network)|AT-X]], [[Tokyo MX]], [[Sun Television|SUN]], [[Kyoto Broadcasting System|KBS]], [[Nippon TV|BS-NTV]]
| licensee        = [[Crunchyroll]]
| licensee        = [[Crunchyroll, LLC|Crunchyroll]]
| first          = October 12, 2020  
| first          = October 12, 2020  
| last            = December 28, 2020
| last            = December 28, 2020

Latest revision as of 20:58, 15 December 2024

Template:Short description Template:Infobox animanga/Header Template:Infobox animanga/Print Template:Infobox animanga/Video Template:Infobox animanga/Footer Template:Nihongo is a Japanese four-panel manga series by Sou Hamayumiba, serialized in Houbunsha's seinen manga magazine Manga Time Kirara Carat since May 2015. It has been collected in seven Template:Transliteration volumes. An anime television series adaptation by Feel aired from October to December 2020.

Plot

Ino Sakura, a girl from Okayama Prefecture, decides to head to Tokyo in order to realize her dream of becoming an idol. Once she arrives there, she moves into a dormitory called Mouse House where she meets Roko Sekino, a former child actor, Hayu Nukui, a musician, and Nina Maehara, a model. When their manager, Hoho Kajino, informs them that Mouse House has been threatened to be demolished, the girls quickly form a new idol group called Fruit Tart in order to save their home.

Characters

Fruit Tart

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A girl from Okayama Prefecture who moves to Tokyo to become an idol. She idolized Roko as a child and is surprised to learn that she is also a member of Fruit Tart.
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A former child actor who gained fame for singing a promotional song about broccoli, a gig that she now regrets. She has a complex about her small size, amplified by how much taller her sister Chiko is despite being younger.
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A musician and Ino's classmate. She is from a rich family and ran away from home as pursuing a singing career was against her family's wishes, although they later agree to sponsor Fruit Tart's show.
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A model who is Roko's childhood friend. Roko and Hayu have a complex about her large breasts.
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A newcomer idol who transfers to Rat Productions and becomes Fruit Tart's fifth member.

Cream Anmitsu

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The leader of Cream Anmitsu and Roko's younger sister. She appears to have a sister complex for Roko and is a fan of Fruit Tart's online show.
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Rua's twin sister.
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Nua's twin sister.

Other characters

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Fruit Tart's manager. Though she works with shady motives from time to time, she pulls through somehow as manager.
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Ino and Hayu's classmate who is a fan of Fruit Tart. She later becomes an assistant for the group.
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A childhood friend of Hoho's who works as the producer of Cream Anmitsu.
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The acting president of Cat Productions.

Media

Manga

Dropout Idol Fruit Tart is written and illustrated by Sou Hamayumiba. It debuted as a guest series in the January to March 2015 issues of Houbunsha's Manga Time Kirara Carat magazine, which were released from November 28, 2014 to January 28, 2015.[1][2] The series then began serialization in the July 2015 issue, which was released on May 28, 2015.[1] It has been compiled into seven Template:Transliteration volumes as of July 27, 2023.[3] Houbunsha published an anthology of the series on October 27, 2020.[4]

Volumes

Template:Graphic novel list/header

Anime

The 12-episode anime television series adaptation was announced in the May issue of Manga Time Kirara Carat on March 28, 2019.[5] The series was animated by Feel and directed by Keiichiro Kawaguchi, with Kawaguchi and Tatsuya Takahashi handling series composition, and Sumie Kinoshita designing the characters. Monaca composed the series' music.[6] It was set to premiere in July 2020,[7] but it was delayed until October 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[8] Hiyori Nitta, Risa Kubota, Haruka Shiraishi, Reina Kondō, and Kyōka Moriya performed the opening theme song "Kibō Darake no Everyday!", as well as the ending theme song "Wonder!" as their characters.[9] The series aired from October 12 to December 28, 2020 on AT-X and other channels.[9]

Funimation acquired the series and streamed it on its website in North America and the British Isles, and on AnimeLab in Australia and New Zealand.[10] On October 17, 2021, Funimation announced that the series would receive an English dub, which premiered the following day.[11]

Episodes

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Video game

Characters from the series appear alongside other Manga Time Kirara characters in the 2020 mobile RPG, Kirara Fantasia.[12]

See also

Notes

Template:Notelist

References

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External links

Template:Manga Time Kirara Carat Template:Feel

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