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This is a list of fictional bears that appear in video games, film, television, animation, comics and literature. This also includes pandas, but not the unrelated red panda species. The list is limited to notable, named characters. This list is a subsidiary to the List of fictional animals article.
A brown bear student and the series' third arc's antagonist. Being over 2-meter (6.6 ft), he is required to take government-sanctioned medications to limit his strength and thus (theoretically) reduce the danger he poses to society.
A list of characters from the Beastars created by Paru Itagaki. Subcategories. This category has only the following subcategory. ...
Paru's chicken mask. Itagaki is highly private about her personal life, and wears a chicken mask to obscure her face at all public appearances. [4] In 2018, Japanese tabloids reported that Itagaki is the daughter of Keisuke Itagaki, the creator of the manga series Baki the Grappler.
Beastars characters (1 C, 2 P) Pages in category "Beastars" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
Waylon Jones is a fictional character in DC Comics. He is a criminal and nemesis of Batman. He has a medical condition that is causing him to grow progressively more like a crocodile, hence his name. In the comics, his intelligence level has been portrayed differently, varying from competent schemer to simply a berserk monster. King K. Rool
Legoshi (Japanese: レゴシ, Hepburn: Regoshi) is the protagonist of Paru Itagaki's manga series Beastars.In a world of modern, civilized, anthropomorphic animals with a cultural divide between carnivores and herbivores, Legoshi is a high school student and gray wolf working with his red deer classmate Louis on settling tensions in the club at school.
The Berenstain Bears Comic Valentine is a Valentine-themed animated television special based on the Berenstain Bears children's book series by Stan and Jan Berenstain. Produced by Buzz Potamkin and directed by Mordicai Gerstein and Al Kouzel, the program made its debut on NBC on February 13, 1982.