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High school student and guitarist Ritsuka Uenoyama repairs the broken strings on a guitar belonging to classmate Mafuyu Satō, who asks Ritsuka to teach him to play the instrument. Ritsuka refuses, though he invites Mafuyu to watch a practice session of a band composed of himself, bassist Haruki Nakayama, and drummer Akihiko Kaji.
Given the Movie (Japanese: 映画 ギヴン, Hepburn: Eiga Givun, stylized in all lowercase) is a 2020 Japanese animated romantic drama film directed by Hikaru Yamaguchi and written by Yuniko Ayana based on a manga of the same name by Natsuki Kizu.
Ritsuka Uenoyama Given: July 11, 2019 Ritsuka and Mafuyu are bandmates. Ritsuka gets tired of playing music, but his love for Mafuyu is instrumental to get him to enjoy playing again. [225] Japan Mafuyu Satō White Knight Generator Rex: April 23, 2010
The following is a list of characters from The Qwaser of Stigmata series of stories that were published in the Japanese manga Champion Red.The characters also appear in the anime series The Qwaser of Stigmata, The Qwaser of Stigmata II, and an OVA episode The Qwaser of Stigmata: Portrait of the Empress all derived from the manga series.
Happy Sugar Life (Japanese: ハッピーシュガーライフ, Hepburn: Happī Shugā Raifu) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Tomiyaki Kagisora [].It was serialized in Square Enix's shōnen manga magazine Gangan Joker from May 2015 to June 2019.
Fatal Frame [a] is a survival horror video game developed by Tecmo for PlayStation 2.The first entry in the Fatal Frame series, it was published by Tecmo in Japan (2001) and North America (2002), and by Wanadoo Edition in Europe in 2002.
The story chronicles the school lives of Mafuyu Oribe and Tomo Yamanobe at the Japanese Eastern Orthodox school St. Mihailov Academy, where they have endured persecution and isolation from other students led by the daughter of the current dean, Miyuri Tsujidou. and her second-in-command Hana Katsuragi. Mafuyu and Tomo's lives take a drastic ...
A fan translation of the fourth game was released in 2010, which enabled the game to be played on any Wii system. [3] Outside their international releases, the Fatal Frame games are not numbered. This was due to the series' creators considering each entry to be a standalone game, with minimal connections to previous titles. [ 4 ]