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Template:Nihongo is a Japanese dark fantasy manga series written by Takaya Kagami and illustrated by Yamato Yamamoto, with storyboards by Daisuke Furuya. The series is set in a world that allegedly comes to an end at the hands of a "human-made" virus, ravaging the global populace and leaving only children under the age of thirteen untouched. It is at this time that vampires emerge from the recesses of the earth, likely followed by age-old horrors of the dark thought only to be myth. A young man named Yūichirō Hyakuya joins a vampire extermination unit to avenge the deaths of his orphaned family and reclaim his childhood best friend Mikaela Hyakuya from the vampires. It started publishing in Shueisha's Jump SQ in September 2012.
An anime television series adaptation produced by Wit Studio was broadcast in two cours. The first cour aired from April to June 2015. The second cour aired from October to December 2015. A series of light novels focused on Yu's superior, Guren Ichinose, has been written by Kagami and illustrated by Yamamoto. In North America, Viz Media licensed the series for an English language release, and it ran in Weekly Shonen Jump. The anime series was licensed by Funimation. It was later broadcast in the United Kingdom on Viceland in February 2018.
By October 2021, the Seraph of the End manga had over 13 million copies in circulation.
Plot
In 2012, the world allegedly comes to an end at the hands of a "man-made" virus, ravaging the global populace and leaving only children under the age of thirteen untouched. At the same time, the vampires emerge from the recesses of the earth, likely followed by age-old horrors of the dark thought to be only myth. They sweep the earth and claim it in a single violent stroke, subjugating the remnants of humanity and leading them beneath the surface to safety. This "protection" comes at the price of "donating" blood to their captors, not knowing that they are vampires. At the age of twelve, Yūichirō and his friend and fellow orphan Mikaela plotted to escape along with the children in Hyakuya Orphanage. This plan was brought into action by Mikaela, who was willingly giving his blood to the Seventh Progenitor Ferid Bathory every night and who stole Ferid's map and gun. However, this plan resulted in every last person besides Yuichiro dying at the hand of Ferid, and Mikaela sacrificing himself in order for Yūichirō to escape and be saved by members of the Moon Demon Company, an extermination unit of the Japanese Imperial Demon Army. Four years later, Yūichirō dedicates his life to destroy vampires and seek revenge against them for killing his "family." At the same time, it is revealed that Mikaela survived thanks to Third Progenitor and Vampire Queen Krul Tepes, who gave him some of her blood to turn him into a vampire. Mikaela does become a vampire soldier right under Ferid Bathory, and plans to find Yūichirō.
Media
Manga
Template:Main Seraph of the End is written by Takaya Kagami and illustrated by Yamato Yamamoto. It has been serialized by Shueisha's monthly magazine Jump Square since September 4, 2012.[1] A voice comic (vomic) was also produced and published by Shueisha, and its first episode was featured by Sakiyomi Jum-Bang! on February 1, 2013.[2] Shueisha has compiled its chapters into individual tankōbon volumes. The first volume was released on January 4, 2013.[3] As of October 4, 2024, thirty-three volumes have been published.[4] The manga is licensed in North America by Viz Media, who added it to its Weekly Shonen Jump digital magazine lineup.[5]
A spin-off gag manga to commemorate the anime adaptation, titled Template:Nihongo, was serialized in the 17th and 18th issues of Jump SQ.19 from December 19, 2014, to February 19, 2015,[6][7][8] and later serialized in Jump Square from April 4 to December 4, 2015.[9][10] It also has been published on the Seraph of the End official website.[11]
A manga adapting the Guren Ichinose light novel series was serialized in Kodansha's Monthly Shōnen Magazine from June 6, 2017[12] to February 4, 2022. It will end in its twelfth volume,[13] which will be released on March 4, 2022.[14] At Anime Expo 2022, Kodansha USA announced that they licensed the series for English publication.[15]
Light novels
Template:Nihongo is a prequel focusing on Guren Ichinose as the main protagonist, detailing the series of events that occurred eight years before the start of the manga. Written by Takaya Kagami and illustrated by Yamato Yamamoto, it consists of seven volumes and was published by Kodansha from January 2013 to December 2016. On February 15, 2015, Vertical announced that it has licensed the light novels for a North American release and will be releasing it in an omnibus with two volumes per omnibus in January 2016.[16][17][18] The novels have also been translated into other languages, such as German and French by Kazé.[19] A drama CD was released on October 30, 2015, bundled with volume 6 of the light novel and is written by Takaya Kagami.[20]
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A new light novel series about Mikaela's story and the origin of vampires titled Template:Nihongo began publication by Shueisha on December 4, 2015. The story is written by Takaya Kagami and illustrated by Yamato Yamamoto.[21]
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On October 20, 2017, it was announced on Kodansha's light novel blog that a second spin-off series about Guren, titled Template:Nihongo would be released in December. It is written by Takaya Kagami and illustrated by Yo Asami.[22] On March 11, 2019, Vertical announced that it has licensed the novels for a northern American release, saluted for December 2019.[23]
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Anime
Template:Further An anime television series adaptation was announced on August 28, 2014, and aired on April 4, 2015. The series has 24 episodes. It is produced by Wit Studio, directed by Daisuke Tokudo, and written by Hiroshi Seko.[24] Additionally, the original manga's writer, Takaya Kagami, personally drafted the original story for episodes with material not yet serialized in the manga and supervised the scripts until the anime's final episode.[25] On December 12, 2014, it was announced the series would be split into two parts (quarters of the year). The first half (12 episodes) aired in 2015 from April to June and the second half (12 episodes) from October to December.[26] The series premiered on Tokyo MX, MBS, TV Aichi, and BS11 at their respective time slots. NBCUniversal Entertainment Japan released the first 12 episodes on Blu-ray and DVD formats in Japan starting on June 24, 2015, across four volumes. A six-minute omake anime special adapted from the omake featured in the original manga, was included in each Blu-ray/DVD volume titled Template:Nihongo.[27]
On March 31, 2015, it was announced that Funimation has licensed the series for streaming and its home video release in North America.[28] Hulu also streamed the series. On May 13, Funimation announced that the English broadcast dub will stream every Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. EDT on its "Dubble Talk" streaming block.[29][30] In the United Kingdom, the English dub was broadcast on Viceland, beginning February 15, 2018.[31][32]
An OAD bundled with volume 11 of the original manga titled Template:Nihongo was released on May 2, 2016. It was first screened at the Jump Special Anime Festa 2015 event in November 2015.[33]
Hiroyuki Sawano produced and co-composed the music, as well as the opening and ending themes, "X.U." and "scaPEGoat", respectively, with Takafumi Wada, Asami Tachibana, and Megumi Shiraishi. As part of Sawano's vocal song project "SawanoHiroyuki[nZk]", for the first 12 episodes, the opening song is performed by SawanoHiroyuki[nZk]:Gemie, while the ending song is performed by SawanoHiroyuki[nZk]:Yosh. Both themes were released in Japan on a CD on May 20, 2015.[34]
Video games
A PlayStation Vita strategy game, titled Template:Nihongo, was released by Bandai Namco Entertainment and Activision on December 17, 2015.[35]
BNEI also released a smartphone game titled Template:Nihongo on September 28, 2015.[36]
Reception
The manga was nominated for the 40th Kodansha Manga Award for shōnen category in 2016.[37]
Rebecca Silverman of Anime News Network gave volume 1 an overall grade of B+.[38]
Sales
Volume 1 reached 24th place on the Japanese weekly manga chart,[39] and, by January 13, 2013, has sold 62,434 copies.[40] It also reached third place on The New York Times manga bestseller chart.[41] Volume 2 reached 15th place on the weekly manga chart,[42] and, by May 12, 2013, has sold 91,095 copies.[43] Volume 3 reached ninth place,[44] and, by September 15, 2013, has sold 121,235 copies.[45] Volume 4 also reached ninth place on the chart,[46] and, by January 19, 2014, has sold 160,444 copies.[47] Volume 5 also reached ninth place,[48] and, by May 11, 2014, has sold 155,139 copies.[49] In 2015, the manga sold 2.8 million copies.[50] By May 2017, the manga had 7 million copies in print,[51] and by April 4, 2018, the manga had 8.5 million copies in print.[52] In March 2019, the manga had 9 million copies in print.[53] On August 15, 2019, the manga had 10 million copies in print.[54] By June 4, 2021, the manga had 12 million copies in print.[55] By October 2021, the manga has 13 million copies in print.[56]
The Guren Ichinose: Catastrophe at Sixteen light novels reached 21st place as one of the top-selling light novels in Japan, with 128,690 copies sold in May 2015, and it additionally reached 29th place in 2016, with 100,077 more copies sold. The Story of Vampire Mikaela novels also reached 21st place, having sold 127,373 copies in May 2016.[57][58] Its manga adaptation second volume reached 25th place on the Japanese's weekly manga chart, with 30,147 copies in print.[59]
References
External links
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