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Pages in category "Fictional Japanese people in anime and manga" The following 170 pages are in this category, out of 170 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Fictional characters that originated in Japanese animation. This does not mean that they necessarily have that nationality in the animation, only that they were created by Japanese animation writers and/or artists.
Voiced by: Keiko Toda (Japanese); Ghia Burns [10] [11] (English) The main character of the anime, whose head is an Anpan made by Uncle Jam. His name comes from his being a man whose head is made of bread (Japanese: pan) that is filled with red bean paste (Japanese: anko) called an anpan. When translated into English, Anpanman means "Bean Bun Man."
Doraemon (Japanese: ドラえもん) is a fictional title character in the Japanese manga and anime eponymous series of the same name created by Fujiko Fujio.Doraemon is a male robotic earless cat that travels back in time from the 22nd century to aid a preteen boy named Nobita Nobi.
Sanrio has created over 450 characters as of 2022, the best known of which is the white cat character Hello Kitty from 1974. [35] Other well-known characters include the rabbit My Melody from 1975, the frog Keroppi from 1988, the penguin Bad Badtz-Maru from 1993, the white dog Cinnamoroll from 2001, the rabbit Kuromi from 2005, the animal series Jewelpet from 2008, the egg character Gudetama ...
Pokémon, known in Japan as Pocket Monsters (ポケットモンスター, Poketto Monsutā), is a Japanese anime television series based on the Pokémon video game series published by Nintendo. It began broadcasting on TV Tokyo on April 1, 1997, in association with MediaNet (formerly TV Tokyo MediaNet and Softx) and Shopro, stands for ...
Sumikko Gurashi (すみっコぐらし) is a set of fictional characters produced by the Japanese company San-X. The name directly translates to "life in the corner". The name directly translates to "life in the corner".
Japanese animators (4 C, 227 P) Anime character designers (1 C, 128 P) C. Japanese caricaturists (5 P) Japanese comic strip cartoonists (5 P) E.