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Excel Saga is an anime adaptation of the manga by Koshi Rikudo. The series was produced by J.C.Staff and directed by Shinichi Watanabe. It aired on TV Tokyo from October 7, 1999, to March 30, 2000 for 26 episodes. At the publisher's request, the anime series follows a different storyline from the manga; Rikdo was pleased with the adaptation. [1]
Excel Saga (Japanese: エクセル♥サーガ, Hepburn: Ekuseru Sāga) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Kōshi Rikudō. It was serialized in Shōnen Gahōsha 's seinen manga magazine Young King OURs from 1996 to 2011, and its individual chapters were collected and published in 27 tankōbon volumes .
Like Excel Saga, it is a parody of other anime, manga and various aspects of popular culture, though in this case with the magical girl genre providing its primary focus and general structure. The series was originally an in-joke from an episode of Excel Saga ; Watanabe decided to take the in-joke to its most extreme logical conclusion ...
A 26-episode anime television series adaptation by J.C.Staff aired on TV Tokyo from October 7, 1999, to March 30, 2000. [1] Viz Media licensed Excel Saga for an English language release in North America in 2003. [2] Viz released the first volume on August 13, 2003, and has released all twenty-seven volumes of the series by January 2014.
His most popular work is Excel Saga, [2] and Pandora in the Crimson Shell: Ghost Urn. a manga which he describes as a work dealing with the everyday aspects of living in Japan. The anime version of Excel Saga contains stories from the first five volumes of the manga, and even features Rikdo as a character (voiced by Wataru Takagi).
Excel Kobayashi and Mikako Hyatt are a pair of self-promoting, neophyte voice actresses who cosplay as Excel and Hyatt and perform the opening song "Ai (Chuuseishin)" as the Excel Girls. They appear in only three episodes (Episodes 5, 9, and 13) of the anime, in which they often receive much comedic physical abuse at the hands of the real Excel.
This episode was banned from airing on Nickelodeon, and the show's creator John Kricfalusi was fired along with his team. It later aired on Spike TV. You can watch the episode here. 2.
"Excel Saga the anime" is used twice in the lead. It isn't the name of the anime so it should be either "Excel Saga, the anime," (with commas) or "The anime adaption of Excel Saga" as I mentioned in point 2. What is an Oubliette? It is mentioned in the lead but not explained in detail. Then it is linked for the first time later in the article.