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Zero (Hangul: 제로: 시작의 관, RR: Jero: Sijagui Gwan, lit. "Zero: The Gate of Beginning") is a Korean manhwa written by Dall-Young Lim and illustrated by Park Sung-woo. Based on a popular series of Korean eroge of the same title. The manhwa was serialized into 69 chapters. The individual chapters were published into 10 bound volumes by ...
Daewon C.I. was founded in 1991 as the publishing arm of Daewon Media. Its initial publication was the Comic Champ magazine in December of that year. In 1994, they launched Young Champ, and followed with two additional monthly magazines in 1995, which are no longer in print.
A manga adaptation by Daichi Matsue, titled Re:Zero −Starting Life in Another World- Chapter 1: A Day in the Capital (Re:ゼロから始める異世界生活 第一章 王都の一日編, Re: Zero Kara Hajimeru Isekai Seikatsu Dai-Ichi-Shō: Ōto no Ichinichi-hen), began serialization in the August 2014 issue of Media Factory's seinen manga ...
Comic Champ began in 1991 as Boy Champ (소년챔프) to complete with the already successful IQ Jump by Seoul Manhwasa.Comic Champ debuted with many popular manhwa series like Pagumki, about an emperor who gets his hands on a beyond powerful sword, and Rebirth about a man named Sang-Ho Do who ran a group of spiritual investigators.
Super Champ (수퍼챔프) is a South Korean magazine produced by Daiwon C.I. It is available only online, and specializes in serializing domestic and imported comics. Its first issue was published in 2006, and it is released on the last day of each month.
Daewon Media was founded in 1973 in South Korea as "One Production", and in 1974 the name was changed to "Daiwon Productions". In 1977, Daiwon Animation Ltd was formed, and the company entered into an OEM agreement with Japan's Toei Animation to provide technical assistance work on its animation productions.
Viet comics (Vietnamese: Truyện tranh Việt), also known as mạn họa (Sino-Vietnamese for manhua, Chinese: 漫畫), are comics or graphic novels originating from Vietnam. The term Viet comics was firstly introduced by Floral Age Bimonthly (Bán nguyệt san Tuổi Hoa) magazine in 1960 in Saigon. [1]
Its purpose was to compete with Seoul Cultural Publisher's IQ Jump (아이큐점프) for the adolescent and teenage boys market. [1] It had early success with its serialization of the Japanese basketball series Slam Dunk. In September 2002, the magazine changed its name to Comic Champ, [2] and in 2006 changed to a biweekly publication schedule. [3]