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Manga
Soul Eater
Cover of the first Japanese manga volume featuring Maka (right), Soul (bottom-left) and Blair (top-left).
ソウルイーター
(Sōru Ītā)
GenreAdventure,[1]dark fantasy[2]
Manga
Written byAtsushi Ōkubo
Published bySquare Enix
English publisher
DemographicShōnen
MagazineMonthly Shōnen Gangan
English magazine
Original runMay 12, 2004August 12, 2013
Volumes25 (List of volumes)
Anime television series
Directed byTakuya Igarashi
Produced byAya Yoshino
Taihei Yamanishi
Yoshihiro Oyabu
Written byAkatsuki Yamatoya
Music byTaku Iwasaki
StudioBones
Licensed by
Original networkTXN (TV Tokyo), AT-X
English network
ABS-CBN, Hero, Studio 23
Funimation Channel, Adult Swim (Toonami)
Original run April 7, 2008 March 30, 2009
Episodes51 (List of episodes)
Game
Soul Eater: Monotone Princess
DeveloperSquare Enix
PublisherSquare Enix
GenreAction-adventure
PlatformWii
ReleasedSeptember 25, 2008
Game
Soul Eater: Plot of Medusa
DeveloperNamco Bandai Games
PublisherNamco Bandai Games
GenreAction
PlatformNintendo DS
ReleasedOctober 23, 2008
Game
Soul Eater: Battle Resonance
DeveloperNamco Bandai Games
PublisherNamco Bandai Games
GenreFighting
PlatformPlayStation 2
PlayStation Portable
ReleasedJanuary 29, 2009
Related

Soul Eater (Japanese: ソウルイーターHepburn: Sōru Ītā) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Atsushi Ōkubo. Set at the 'Death Weapon Meister Academy', the series revolves around three teams, each consisting of a weapon meister and (at least one) weapon that can transform into a humanoid. Trying to make the latter a 'death scythe' and thus fit for use by the academy's headmaster Shinigami, the personification of death, they must collect the souls of 99 evil humans and one witch, in that order; otherwise, they will have to start all over again.

The manga is published by Square Enix and was first released as three separate one-shots serialized in two Gangan Powered special editions and one Gangan Wing in 2003. The manga started regular serialization in Square Enix's Monthly Shōnen Ganganmanga magazine from May 12, 2004 to August 12, 2013. The manga has been licensed for distribution in North America by Yen Press. The English translation of Soul Eater was serialized in Yen Press' Yen Plus manga anthology magazine starting in July 2008, and the first manga volume was released in October 2009. A manga series that runs alongside the main series, titled Soul Eater Not!, began serialization in Monthly Shōnen Gangan on January 12, 2011.

A single drama CD was produced on August 31, 2005, which came bundled with an art book. A 51-episode anime adaptation produced by Bones aired on TV Tokyo in Japan from April 2008 to March 2009; Funimation licensed the anime series for North American distribution. An action-adventurevideo game by Square Enix for the Wii was released in September 2008, and an action video game for the Nintendo DS was released in October 2008. Another action game was released in January 2009 on the PlayStation 2 and PlayStation Portable.

  • 1Synopsis
  • 3Media

Synopsis[edit]

Setting[edit]

Death Weapon Meister Academy

Soul Eater is set at Death Weapon Meister Academy (死神武器職人専門学校Shinigami Buki Shokunin Senmon Gakkō) — 'DWMA' (死武専Shibusen) for short — located in the fictional Death City[3] in Nevada, United States.[4] The school is run by Shinigami, also known as Death, as a training facility for humans with the ability to transform into weapons, as well as the wielders of those weapons, called meisters (職人shokunin).[3] Attending this school are Maka Albarn and her scythe partner, Soul Eater; assassin Black Star and his partner, Tsubaki Nakatsukasa, who can turn into various ninja weapons; and Shinigami's son, Death the Kid, and his pistol partners, Liz and Patty Thompson. The goal of the school's meister students is to have their weapons absorb the souls of 99 evil humans and one witch, which dramatically increases the weapon's power and turns them into 'death scythes' used by Shinigami.[3]

Plot[edit]

Maka and Soul Eater battle the witch Medusa, who forces Crona, her child and meister of the demon sword Ragnarok, to collect non-evil human souls and eventually transform into a kishin (鬼神), an evil god. Medusa and her cohorts attack DWMA to revive Asura, the first kishin who nearly plunged the entire world into madness before being sealed beneath DWMA by Shinigami. Despite the combined efforts of Maka, Black Star, and Death the Kid, Medusa's group successfully revives Asura, who leaves to spread chaos around the world after a brief battle with Shinigami. After Medusa is seemingly killed by meister and DWMA teacher Franken Stein, while Crona surrenders to DWMA and enrolls there.

As a result of Asura's spreading madness, Medusa's sister Arachne comes out of hiding and reforms her organization, Arachnophobia, which poses a serious threat to DWMA. Shinigami calls in death scythes from around the world to aid in the fight against Arachnophobia. During this time, Medusa reappears with her soul possessing the body of a young girl, and forms a truce with DWMA so they can annihilate Arachnophobia together. The DWMA students and Medusa's entourage infiltrate Arachnophobia's headquarters, where Maka kills Arachne, only for Medusa to betray DWMA, possess Arachne's body, and brainwash Crona into rejoining her. Meanwhile, Death the Kid is captured by Noah, an artificial construct created from the Book of Eibon. Following this, Maka uses Arachne's soul to turn Soul Eater into a death scythe. The duo become part of the newly formed meister unit Spartoi along with their friends, who rescue Death the Kid and defeat Noah.

Crona resurfaces in a city in Russia, destroying it and the death scythe stationed there, before being provoked by Medusa into killing her and getting taken by insanity. Maka is ordered by Shinigami to hunt down Crona; while searching for Crona with her powers, she unwittingly detects Asura's location on the cartoonish moon within the atmosphere. DWMA launches an attack on the moon to defeat Asura, aided by the witches after Death the Kid convinces them to establish a temporary alliance. During the battle, Crona absorbs Asura's body before being overtaken by him. Maka, Black Star, and Kid eventually restore Crona's sanity and defeat Asura by sealing him on the moon with his own blood; Crona willingly remains with Asura to keep him imprisoned, and Maka promises to one day rescue Crona. The DWMA forces return to Earth, where Death the Kid becomes the new Shinigami following his father's death, and establishes a peace treaty with the witches.

Production[edit]

After the end of his first manga series, B.Ichi, Atsushi Ōkubo created a one-shot story called 'Soul Eater' published in Gangan Powered.[5] Japanese readers were so fascinated by it that Ōkubo created two other one-shots called 'Black Star' and 'Death the Kid'. Since the results were high, the editor of Gangan Comics asked Ōkubo to create a series from his one-shots which became the introductory chapters to Soul Eater.

In an interview, Ōkubo stated that the series was greatly inspired by ideas from Tim Burton's animations, and by concepts from Harry Potter. Ōkubo also stated he made the hero (or heroine) of the series, Maka, a female to differ from the traditional male hero found in most shōnen manga. He also said the series' title, Soul Eater, was intended to refer to Asura and his desire to eat innocent souls, and not to the character, Soul.[6] Ōkubo has explained that, when he began Soul Eater, he already had the plot and details like the DWMA fully formed and shared with his editors. He thought too many manga had characters who were developed through flashbacks, which he considered too clever. Therefore, he decided to develop his characters in the present rather than referring to their pasts, and to focus on 'action and momentum,' so he could 'write freely.'[7]

Media[edit]

Manga[edit]

Soul Eater began as a manga series written and illustrated by Atsushi Ōkubo. The manga initially began as three separate one-shots serialized between June 24, 2003 and November 26, 2003 across two manga magazines published by Square Enix: first in the summer 2003 special edition of Gangan Powered,[5] followed by the autumn 2003 special edition of the same magazine, and finally in Gangan Wing.[8] The manga was serialized in Square Enix's Monthly Shōnen Gangan manga magazine between the June 2004 issue published on May 12, 2004 and the September 2013 issue published on August 12, 2013.[9][10] Square Enix compiled the series into 25 tankōbon volumes released under their Gangan Comics imprint in Japan between June 22, 2004[11] and December 12, 2013. The manga has been licensed by Yen Press for distribution in English in North America. The manga was initially serialized in Yen Press' Yen Plus anthology magazine; the first issue went on sale on July 29, 2008.[12] The first English volume of the manga was published on October 27, 2009.[13]

Another manga series which runs alongside the main series, titled Soul Eater Not! (ソウルイーターノット!Sōru Ītā Notto!), began serialization in the February 2011 issue of Monthly Shōnen Gangan published on January 12, 2011.[14]Soul Eater Not! is licensed by Yen Press, and it is released in English simultaneously.[15] The first tankōbon volume was released on September 22, 2011, and as of July 21, 2012, two volumes had been released.

Drama CD[edit]

A drama CD was released on August 31, 2005 by Square Enix titled Soul Eater (Vol. 1): Special Social Studies Field Trip (ソウルイーター(Vol.1)特別社会科見学Sōru Ītā (Vol. 1) Tokubetsu Shakaika Kengaku).[11] The CD came bundled with an art book and a script of the CD dialogue. Of the cast used for the drama CD, only Black Star's voice actressYumiko Kobayashi was retained for the anime voice cast.

Anime[edit]

A 51-episode anime adaptation was directed by Takuya Igarashi and produced by Bones, Aniplex, Dentsu, Media Factory, and TV Tokyo; Bones and Aniplex were responsible for the animation and music production respectively.[16] The scenario writer was Akatsuki Yamatoya who based the anime's story on Atsushi Ōkubo original concept. Character design was headed by Yoshiyuki Ito, with overall art direction by Norifumi Nakamura. The anime's conceptual design was done by Shinji Aramaki.

The episodes aired on TV Tokyo between April 7, 2008 and March 30, 2009, and two animated specials aired on May 29 and June 1, 2008.[17] The episodes aired at later dates on TV Aichi, TV Hokkaido, TV Osaka, TV Setouchi, and TVQ Kyushu Broadcasting Co. The anime was regularly broadcast Mondays at 6:00 pm on TV Tokyo. The official Japanese website of the Soul Eater anime series announced that each episode would air in two versions: the regular Monday 6:00 pm version and a late-night Soul Eater Late Show version. Special footage was added at the start and end of the commercial break; the next episode preview was different from the regular version. The dual broadcast of the series was billed as the 'world's first evening and late-night resonance broadcast.' The 'resonance' term refers to a story concept in which the characters, such as the heroine Maka and her living weapon partner Soul Eater, achieve maximum power by synchronizing their souls.[18] The first DVD compilation volume was released on August 22, 2008 with the first three episodes. The second DVD compilation volume was released on September 25, 2008 with episodes four through seven. Each DVD volume was released in monthly intervals.[19] The anime was licensed by Funimation, who released the series in four half-season DVD box sets starting with the first volume in February 2010.[20]

MTV Portugal premiered Soul Eater on February 1, 2010.[21] In the Philippines, Soul Eater aired in a Tagalog version over the cable channel Hero TV from April to June 2010. The anime made its North American television debut when it aired on the Funimation Channel on September 6, 2010;[22] it aired on Adult Swim's Toonami block in North America from February 17, 2013.[2] The series is being rebroadcast by TV Tokyo under the title Soul Eater: Repeat Show (ソウルイーター リピートショーSōru Ītā Ripīto Shō) as of September 30, 2010, featuring new opening and closing themes.[23] It was broadcast in Italy on Rai 4 between September 2, 2010 and September 8, 2011. An anime adaptation of Soul Eater Not! aired in 2014.

Video games[edit]

Three Soul Eater video games were produced. The first, Soul Eater: Monotone Princess (ソウルイーター モノトーン プリンセスSōru Ītā Monotōn Purinsesu), is an action-adventurevideo game exclusively for the Wii and developed by Square Enix with Bones. It was released on September 25, 2008 in Japan.[24] Two characters that appear in the game, Grimoire (グリモアGurimoa) and Ponera (ポネラ), are original characters designed by author Atsushi Ōkubo; Ponera is the titular Monotone Princess and Grimoire is known as Noah in the manga. A soundtrack called Shibusen's Treasure 'Campus Broadcast Music Complete Works' (死武専秘蔵「校内放送楽曲大全」)[25] was released as a pre-order bonus CD. This game is only compatible with Japanese Wii systems.[26]

The second game, Soul Eater: Plot of Medusa (ソウルイーター メデューサの陰謀Sōru Ītā Medyūsa no Inbō), is an action game produced by Namco Bandai Games for the Nintendo DS and was released on October 23, 2008.[27] Despite being created by two different companies, there are similarities between the Nintendo Wii game and the Nintendo DS game. It is a third-person hack-and-slash game.[28]

The third game, Soul Eater: Battle Resonance (ソウルイーター バトルレゾナンスSōru Ītā Batoru Rezonansu), is a fighting game developed by BEC and produced by Namco Bandai Games for the PlayStation 2 and PlayStation Portable, and was released on January 29, 2009. This game follows the story line of the first 24 episodes of the anime series and allows the player to engage in the training and battles the characters experienced first hand. Along with new costumes and items, the player gets to experience the minds and wardrobes of each playable character.[29]

Music[edit]

Six pieces of theme music are used for the episodes: two opening themes and four closing themes. The first opening theme is 'Resonance' by T.M.Revolution for the first 30 episodes, and the single was released on June 11, 2008. The second opening theme is 'Papermoon' by Tommy heavenly6 from episode 31 onward; the single was released on December 10, 2008 by DefStar Records. The first closing theme is 'I Wanna Be' by Stance Punks for the first 13 episodes and the 51 episode; the single was released on June 4, 2008. The second closing theme is 'Style' by Kana Nishino from episode 14 to 26; the single was released on August 13, 2008 by Sony Music Entertainment Japan. The third closing theme is 'Bakusō Yume Uta' (爆走夢歌) by Soul'd Out's Diggy-Mo from episode 27 to 39; the single was released on November 26, 2008 by Sony Music Entertainment Japan. The final closing theme is 'Strength' by Abingdon Boys School from episode 40 through episode 50; the single was released on February 25, 2009.[30][31] The anime rebroadcasting features two additional opening and closing themes. The first opening is 'Counter Identity' by Unison Square Garden, released in autumn 2010, and the first ending is 'Ao no Kaori' (碧の香り) by Yui Makino, released on November 10, 2010. The second opening is 'Ai ga Hoshii yo' (愛がほしいよ) by Shion Tsuji, released on March 9, 2011, and 'Northern Lights' by How Merry Marry.[23]

The first character songmaxi single sung by Chiaki Omigawa (Maka) and Kōki Uchiyama (Soul) was released on August 6, 2008 by Aniplex. The second single by Yumiko Kobayashi (Black Star) and Kaori Nazuka (Tsubaki) was released on September 3, 2008, and the third single by Mamoru Miyano (Kid), Akeno Watanabe (Liz), and Narumi Takahira (Patty) was released on October 1, 2008. Composed and produced by Taku Iwasaki, two CD soundtracks have been released for the Soul Eater anime series. Soul Eater Original Soundtrack 1 was released on August 27, 2008 with 20 tracks, and Soul Eater Original Soundtrack 2 was released on March 18, 2009 with 22 tracks by Aniplex. The theme song for Soul Eater: Monotone Princess is 'Soul's Crossing' sung by T.M.Revolution, and is included on the 'Resonance' single.[32]

Reception[edit]

Writing for the Los Angeles Times, Charles Solomon ranked the series the sixth best anime on his 'Top 10'.[33] Jacob Hope Chapman of Anime News Network describes the series as 'dark but lively, visually imaginative, explosive great fun.'[34]

References[edit]

Soul Eater Manga Download Free English

  1. ^'Soul Eater'. Funimation. Retrieved July 22, 2018.
  2. ^ ab'Soul Eater Anime to Run on Adult Swim's Toonami Block'. Anime News Network. February 3, 2013. Retrieved February 3, 2013.
  3. ^ abc'Story section at the anime's official website' (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-04-20.
  4. ^Ōkubo, Atsushi (2006). 'Chapter 23'. Soul Eater (in Japanese). 7. Square Enix. ISBN978-4-7575-1774-5.
  5. ^ ab'Summer 2003 issue of Gangan Powered' (in Japanese). Square Enix. Archived from the original on February 3, 2006. Retrieved 2008-04-20.
  6. ^'Interview with Atsushi Ōkubo' (in French). Manga News. March 20, 2009. Retrieved May 7, 2017.
  7. ^Soul Eater GAIDEN: Volume 20
  8. ^Peters, Megan (May 29, 2017). '5 Facts You Didn't Know About Soul Eater'. ComicBook. Retrieved February 22, 2019.
  9. ^6月号 5月12日(水)発売!! (in Japanese). Square Enix. Archived from the original on June 10, 2004. Retrieved March 12, 2019.
  10. ^'Soul Eater Manga to End in 2 More Chapters'. Anime News Network. June 6, 2013. Retrieved July 1, 2013.
  11. ^ ab'Books section at manga's official website' (in Japanese). Square Enix. Retrieved 2008-04-20.
  12. ^'Yen Press Announces Titles to Run in Anthology Mag'. Anime News Network. 2008-04-19. Retrieved 2008-04-19.
  13. ^'Soul Eater manga English volumes'. Yen Press. Retrieved 2008-08-11.
  14. ^'New Soul Eater Manga Series to Launch in January 2011'. Anime News Network. December 7, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  15. ^'Yen Press Adds Madoka Magica, Soul Eater Not, Yuki-chan'. Anime News Network. October 14, 2011. Retrieved October 14, 2011.
  16. ^'TV Tokyo: Soul Eater - Staff, Cast' (in Japanese). TV Tokyo. Retrieved 2008-04-14.
  17. ^'Two Soul Eater Anime Specials to Air in Japan'. Anime News Network. 2008-05-17. Retrieved 2008-05-17.
  18. ^'Soul Eater to Air in Japan in Two Weekly Versions'. Anime News Network. 2008-02-12. Retrieved 2008-04-17.
  19. ^'Goods section at the anime's official website' (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-06-02.
  20. ^'FUNimation Adds Soul Eater Anime from Media Factory'. Anime News Network. 2008-12-31. Retrieved 2008-12-31.
  21. ^'Soul Eater Episodios' [Soul Eater Episodes] (in Portuguese). MTV Portugal. Retrieved February 7, 2010.
  22. ^'Funimation Week 37 of 2010'. Funimation Entertainment. Archived from the original on October 27, 2014. Retrieved September 11, 2010.Cite uses deprecated parameter deadurl= (help)
  23. ^ ab'Soul Eater official website' (in Japanese). Square Enix. Retrieved September 27, 2010.
  24. ^'Soul Eater: Monotone Princess Released Date and Price Confirmed!' (in Japanese). ASCII Media Works. 2008-06-20. Retrieved 2008-06-21.
  25. ^'Soul Eater: Monotone Princess Original Soundtrack'. VGMdb. Retrieved June 19, 2011.
  26. ^'Soul Eater: Monotone Princess'. Play-Asia. Retrieved November 17, 2016.
  27. ^'D-pad and Touch Pen Resonance Operation Soul Eater: Plot of Medusa to Be Sold This Autumn' (in Japanese). ASCII Media Works. 2008-06-20. Retrieved 2008-06-20.
  28. ^Fletcher, JC (June 18, 2008). 'Soul Eater: Plot of Madusa'. Engadget. Retrieved November 17, 2016.
  29. ^'Soul Eater: Battle Resonance'. Play-Asia. Retrieved November 17, 2016.
  30. ^'Abingdon Boys School's 'Strength' single'. CD Japan. Retrieved 2008-12-14.
  31. ^'Music section at anime's official website' (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-04-20.
  32. ^'T.M.R to Sing the Theme Song for the Soul Eater Wii Game!' (in Japanese). ASCII Media Works. 2008-05-12. Retrieved 2008-06-04.
  33. ^Solomon, Charles (December 21, 2010). 'Anime Top 10: 'Evangelion,' 'Fullmetal Alchemist' lead 2010's best'. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 15, 2014.
  34. ^Chapman, Jacob Hope (February 9, 2010). 'Soul Eater DVD Part 1'. Anime News Network. Retrieved February 27, 2016.

External links[edit]

  • Manga official website(in Japanese)
  • Anime official website(in Japanese)
  • Soul Eater at TV Tokyo(in Japanese)
  • Soul Eater: Monotone Princess video game official website(in Japanese)
  • Soul Eater: Plot of Medusa video game official website(in Japanese)
  • Soul Eater: Battle Resonance video game official website(in Japanese)
  • Soul Eater anime at Funimation
  • Soul Eater (manga) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Soul_Eater_(manga)&oldid=914414367'

Soul_Eater_manga_volume_1.jpg ‎(230 × 356 pixels, file size: 37 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)

Summary[edit]

Non-free media information and use rationale for List of Soul Eater chapters
Description

Cover art for the first tankōbon of the Soul Eatermanga released in Japan by Gangan Comics.

Although Vertafore has made every effort to insure the accuracy of the calculator, Vertafore does not guarantee the accuracy of the calculator or the. Test Your Job Interview Skills ' Thank you for taking the time to interview with us, but we've decided to hire someone else. Ronco Tanks: All Sales Final on Ronco Marine & RV Tanks. Manual ronco calculator wheels for sale.

Source
Article
Portion used

Cover art only.

Low resolution?

Yes.

Purpose of use

This image is used to show the cover of the first tankōbon, which represents the first four chapters of the series mentioned in the article, of the Soul Eater manga, and it is the first tankōbon released in Japan of this manga, which is also referred to in the article. As the first tankōbon, it also serves as a representation of the series as a whole, and represents the tankōbon that are referred to in the article.

Replaceable?

No free alternative.

Soul Eater Anime

Non-free media information and use rationale for Soul Eater (manga)
Description

The first volume of the original Japanese release of Soul Eater, published by Gangan Comics on June 22, 2004

Source
Article
Portion used

cover art only

Low resolution?

yes

Purpose of use

To illustrate the appearance of the manga, which is the primary topic of the article, and to act as a visual identifier in the series infobox

Replaceable?

None, and other image would also be copyrighted

Licensing:[edit]

This image is from a comic strip, webcomic or from the cover or interior of a comic book. The copyright for this image is most likely owned by either the publisher of the comic or the writer(s) and/or artist(s) which produced the comic in question. It is believed that
  • the use of low-resolution images of the cover of a comic book to illustrate:
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  • or the use of low-resolution images of a single panel from a comic strip or an interior page of a comic book to illustrate:
    • the scene or storyline depicted, or
    • the copyrighted character(s) or group(s) depicted on the excerpted panel in question;
  • where no free alternative exists or can be created,
  • on the English-language Wikipedia, hosted on servers in the United States by the non-profit Wikimedia Foundation,

qualifies as fair use under United States copyright law. Any other uses of this image, on Wikipedia or elsewhere, may be copyright infringement. See Wikipedia:Non-free content and Wikipedia:WikiProject Comics/copyright for more information.
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