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Digimon Adventure (Japanese: デジモンアドベンチャー, Hepburn: Dejimon Adobenchā), also known as Digimon: Digital Monsters Season 1 [4] in English-speaking territories, is a 1999 Japanese anime television series produced by Toei Animation in cooperation with WiZ, Bandai and Fuji Television.
"Digimon, Digimon Everywhere" ("You're my Friend! Introducing Terriermon") Transliteration: "Kimi wa Boku no Tomodachi Teriamon Tōjō!" (Japanese: 君はぼくのともだち テリアモン登場!) April 8, 2001 () September 1, 2001: 3 "To Fight or Not to Fight" ("Renamon VS Guilmon! Battle is a Digimon's Life")
At summer camp, a group of seven children—Tai Kamiya, Matt Ishida, Sora Takenouchi, Izzy Izumi, Mimi Tachikawa, Joe Kido and T.K. Takaishi—are each given a strange device called a Digivice and are transported into the Digital World, a world inhabited by digital monsters called Digimon, where they are found by seven Digimon of their own.
Digimon: Digital Monsters [a] [2] Dinosaurs [2] Extreme Ghostbusters [2] Galidor [2] Heavy Gear: The Animated Series [2] Hercules [1] The Hughleys [1] Just Deal [1] The Kids from Room 402 [3] Medabots [2] Men in Black: The Series [2] Monster Rancher [2] My So-Called Life [1] The Nanny [2] Our Hero [1] The Parkers [1] Power Rangers Time Force [2 ...
Digimon Adventure 02 (デジモンアドベンチャー02, Dejimon Adobenchā Zero Tsū), originally released as Digimon: Digital Monsters Season 2 [3] in English-speaking territories, is a Japanese anime television series produced by Toei Animation. [4] It is the sequel to Digimon Adventure, and the second anime series in the Digimon franchise ...
Digimon (Japanese: デジモン, Hepburn: Dejimon, branded as Digimon: Digital Monsters, stylized as DIGIMON), short for "Digital Monsters" (デジタルモンスター Dejitaru Monsutā), is a Japanese media franchise, which encompasses virtual pet toys, anime, manga, video games, films, and a trading card game.
The third season of Digimon: Digital Monsters (aka Digimon Tamers) was licensed by Saban Entertainment in North America and other English-speaking territories, and was distributed by BVS Entertainment and Buena Vista Television. The show initially aired on Fox Kids, before distribution rights were held by Disney, later airing on Toon Disney and ...
In a series of online polls conducted on the Digimon website, Mimi was ranked 6th by Japanese voters as Favorite DigiDestined. [43] When the same question was asked three more times, her rank rose to 3rd, [44] fell to 9th, [45] and failed to chart on the final poll. [46] Mimi is ranked first as the DigiDestined whom voters related to the most. [47]