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The series follows main protagonist Ash Ketchum for the majority of its run. [1] He is a young boy from Pallet Town who strives to become a "Pokémon Master," often seeking to become Pokémon Champion- the strongest Trainer of a given "region"- as a result.
[2] [5] [7] Comic Market organizer and manga critic Yoshihiro Yonezawa said that parody production is an accepted form of fan activity that enhances anime and manga culture, and expressed concern that this incident could delegitimize expression without any discussion of "what kind of parody manga is allowed". [7]
Image credits: Warner Bros. #3 Ash, Misty, and Brock. The original Pokémon anime series features the brave Ash Ketchum, Tomboyish Misty, and the romantic Brock as Poke trainers and guardians.
Ash Ketchum, known as Satoshi (サトシ) in Japan, is a character in the Pokémon franchise owned by Nintendo, Game Freak, and Creatures. He was the protagonist of the Pokémon anime for the first 25 seasons, as well as the protagonist of several manga series.
The anime follows the quest of one of the main characters, Ash Ketchum, as he and his friends travel around the fictitious world of Pokémon along with their Pokémon partners. Misty is a stubborn tomboy who trains Water Pokémon and has three siblings, Daisy, Lily, and Violet.
Liko (Japanese: リコ, Hepburn: Riko) is a fictional character who appears in the Pokémon anime series.She is one of the main characters, taking over the role of main character from the previous main character, Ash Ketchum, in Pokémon Horizons: The Series.
Pokémon known in Japan and South Korea as simply Pocket (ポケットモンスター, Poketto Monsutā), is one of the first Pokémon manga to come out in Japan and ran for 13 volumes. In Singapore it was published by Chuang Yi in English in 2005 and it was retitled Pokémon . [ 1 ]
Toshihiro Ono, the author of the series, said that he began drawing the series after Saito, Ono's editor, asked Ono to draw a manga to go along with the anime. During the production of the manga, Ono received scripts of the anime series. The author then altered the stories to fit the desired amount of pages used per storyline. [6]