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  2. Den-noh Coil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Den-noh_Coil

    Den-noh Coil is an anime about children growing up in the near future, when semi-immersive augmented reality (AR) technology has just begun to enter the mainstream. It deals with various advanced and new technologies of the future that were not well known at the time of its broadcast, such as wearable computers , self-driving car technology ...

  3. Anime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anime

    Anime enthusiasts have produced fan fiction and fan art, including computer wallpapers, and anime music videos (AMVs). [214] Many fans visit sites depicted in anime, games, manga and other forms of otaku culture. This behavior is known as "Anime pilgrimage". [215]

  4. Viewtiful Joe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viewtiful_Joe

    An anime TV series based on the video game series, simply titled Viewtiful Joe, was produced by Group TAC and aired from 2004 to 2005. [4] A manga series was published concurrently in V Jump magazine. [5] Viewtiful Joe appears as a playable character in the Wii version of the 2008 fighting game Tatsunoko vs. Capcom: Ultimate All-Stars. [6]

  5. Doko Demo Issyo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doko_Demo_Issyo

    The player interacts with Toro in Doko Demo Issyo (1999, PlayStation). Doko Demo Issyo is a long-running series in Japan, [2] where it has seen commercial success. [3] The games feature "pokepi" (short for "pocket people"), [1] characters which the player interacts with through a variety of virtual pet mechanics and minigames (e.g. talking, feeding, sleeping, photography).

  6. Blame! - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blame!

    Double page from Blame!. Blame! is set in "The City", a gigantic megastructure occupying much of what used to be the Solar System. Its exact size is unknown, but Tsutomu Nihei suggested its diameter to be at least equal to Jupiter's orbit, or about 1.6 billion kilometers (a detail suggested in the manga by having Killy cross an empty, spherical room roughly the size of Jupiter, suggesting that ...

  7. Lily Chou-Chou - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lily_Chou-Chou

    Lily Chou-Chou as a character was initially created by Shunji Iwai in 2000, as a part of an online novel that was posted on a BBS. [1] [2] The music was produced as a collaboration between Iwai, Salyu, a musician who had not debuted yet, and Takeshi Kobayashi, a music producer who had previously worked with Iwai on the soundtrack to his 1996 film Swallowtail Butterfly. [3]

  8. All About Lily Chou-Chou - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_About_Lily_Chou-Chou

    All About Lily Chou-Chou follows the lives of two boys, Yūichi Hasumi and Shūsuke Hoshino, from the start of junior high school into their second year. The film follows a nonlinear narrative structure, beginning midway through the story just after the second term of junior high school begins, then flashing back to the first term, then summer vacation, and then returning to the present as it ...

  9. Vib-Ribbon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vib-Ribbon

    Vib-Ribbon [b] (stylized vib-ribbon) is a 1999 rhythm video game developed by NanaOn-Sha and published by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation.The game came out in Japan on December 9, 1999 and in Europe on September 1, 2000, but was never released for the PlayStation in North America; it was re-released on the PlayStation 3 via PlayStation Network in October 2014, which finally ...