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The following is a list of the best-selling Japanese manga series to date in terms of the number of collected tankōbon volumes sold. All series in this list have at least 20 million copies in circulation. This list is limited to Japanese manga and does not include manhwa, manhua or original English-language manga.
The first year of the Best Seller list saw 55 manga titles and one light novel title make their appearances. Of these, eight titles reached the top of the weekly list (in order of number of weeks at the top of the list, from highest to lowest): Naruto, 18 weeks; Bleach, 9 weeks; Vampire Knight, 7 weeks; Fruits Basket, Pokémon Special, 4 weeks; Negima!, 3 weeks; Chibi Vampire, 1 week ...
This list includes Japanese manga magazines, European comic magazines, and English-language comic magazines. In Japan, manga magazines account for the vast majority of manga sales. Most manga series first appear in manga magazines, before later being sold separately as collected tankobon volumes. [1]
December 10, 2014: 21 111: 1,140 [n 4] +8 extra One Piece (ワンピース) Eiichiro Oda: Weekly Shōnen Jump (weekly) Shueisha July 22, 1997 [42] December 24, 1997 [43] Ongoing 22 110: 1,067 [n 4] Kowashiya Gen (解体屋ゲン) Hoshino Hideki, Sadayoshi Ishii: Weekly Manga Times (weekly) Houbunsha January 10, 2003 July 7, 2003: Ongoing 23 110 ...
$10.7 billion: Video Game – $10.61 billion [194] Box office & home video – $211 million [bh] Video game Takashi Nishiyama Hiroshi Matsumoto Capcom: Grand Theft Auto (GTA) 1997 $10 billion: Video games – $10 billion [bi] Video game DMA Design David Jones Mike Dailly: Rockstar Games (Take-Two Interactive) Rilakkuma: 2003 $10 billion
This is a list of the series that have run in the Shueisha manga anthology book Weekly Shōnen Jump. This list is organized by decade and year of each series' first publication, and lists every single notable series run in the manga magazine, along with the author of each series and the series' finishing date if applicable.
On two separate occasions, five One Piece volumes (39–43 in week 15 and 44–48 in week 19) debuted on the Best Seller list simultaneously. [4] Week 19 was also the first time a Naruto release did not appear in the top ten rankings. [4]
A total of 18 manga titles have made first appearances in 2011. As of the 33rd week, nine titles reached the top of the weekly list (in order of number of weeks at the top of the list, from highest to lowest): Naruto, 12 weeks; Black Bird, 4 weeks; Hetalia: Axis Powers, 4 weeks; Black Butler, 3 weeks; Rosario + Vampire: Season II, 3 weeks; Yu-Gi-Oh!