Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Id - The Greatest Fusion Fantasy is a manhwa (comic) written by Kim Daewoo (김대우), with art by A. T. Kenny. Released between 2001 and 2009, the manhwa version is adapted from the web novel of the same name written by Kim Daewoo.
Aspirin (manhwa) Kim Eun-jeong: Tokyopop: Attaque: Lee Sae Hyung: N/A: Audition (manhwa) Chon Kye-young: DramaQueen: Another Typical Fantasy Romance: WOLHET: Beauty and the Brawn: written and illustrated by Magic mangnani XXL: Tapas [1] Bambi (manhwa) Park Young-ha: Infinity Studios: A Beastly Scandal: 완결,완결, Akeo Studio,박플럼
Girls of the Wild's (Korean: 소녀 더 와일즈; RR: Sonyeo Deo Wailjeu) is a South Korean manhwa webtoon series written by Hun and illustrated by Zhena (Kim Hye-jin). It was first published on Naver Webtoon on August 7, 2011, [3] and has been released in English by Line.
iD_ᴇNTITY or Yureka (유레카) is a Korean manhwa series created by Son Hee-joon in collaboration with Kim Youn-kyung and distributed by Tokyopop in North America. The series centers on the main character Jang-Gun and his friends along with their virtual reality avatars in the computer game world called "Lost Saga".
Lights Out (manhwa) Little Queen (manhwa) Lizzie Newton: Victorian Mysteries; Lookism (manhwa) Lost in Translation (webtoon) The Love Doctor (webtoon) Love Is an Illusion! Love Revolution (manhwa) Love Story (manhwa)
The cover of the first Initial D tankōbon, released in Japan by Kodansha on November 6, 1995. This is a list of chapters for the manga series Initial D written by Shuichi Shigeno and serialized in Young Magazine. The first chapter appeared in the 1995 issue and the series ended in 2013, with seven hundred and nineteen chapters published as of ...
The Girl Downstairs, known in South Korea as Lee Doo-na! (Korean: 이두나!; RR: Iduna!) (Chinese: 爱上她的理由; pinyin: Ài shàng tā de lǐyóu) is a South Korean manhwa released as a webtoon written and illustrated by Min Songa.
Since then, manhua (漫画) and manhwa (만화; 漫畫) have also come to mean 'comics' in Chinese and Korean respectively. [citation needed] Although in a traditional sense, the terms manga/ manhua / manhwa had a similar meaning of comical drawing broadly, in English the terms manhwa and manhua generally designate the manga-inspired comic strips.