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A video game walkthrough is a guide aimed towards improving a player's skill within a particular video game and often designed to assist players in completing either an entire video game or specific elements. Walkthroughs may alternatively be set up as a playthrough, where players record themselves playing through a game and upload or live ...
The Manga Guides (Japanese: マンガでわかる, Hepburn: Manga de Wakaru) is a series of educational Japanese manga books. Each volume explains a particular subject in science or mathematics.
In May 2019, Katō started two Anjo manga spinoffs: Ms. Komaki: The School Nurse At Anjo's School (安城さんの学校の保健室の小牧先生, Anjō-san no Gakkō no Hokenshitsu no Komaki-sensei), illustrated by Tsubaki Ayasugi, and Anjo the Mischievous Gal and Friends: First Year Edition (やんちゃギャルの安城さんたち 高1 ...
Golden Kamuy volume 1 cover, featuring Sugimoto. Golden Kamuy is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Satoru Noda.It is set in Hokkaido, Japan, and follows Saichi "Immortal" Sugimoto, a Japanese soldier surviving the Russo-Japanese War, trying to provide for his dead comrade's wife, and Asirpa, an Ainu girl searching for her father's murderer.
Golden Gold (Japanese: ゴールデンゴールド, Hepburn: Gōruden Gōrudo) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Seita Horio. It has been serialized in Kodansha 's seinen manga magazine Morning Two [ ja ] since October 2015.
Golden Kamuy (Japanese: ゴールデンカムイ, Hepburn: Gōruden Kamui) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Satoru Noda. It was serialized in Shueisha 's seinen manga magazine Weekly Young Jump from August 2014 to April 2022, with its chapters collected in thirty-one tankōbon volumes.
Awaken Forest (Japanese: 目覚めの森, Hepburn: Mezame no Mori) is a one-shot Japanese manga written and illustrated by Yuna Aoi published by Taiyoh Tosho on March 15, 2006. [1] It is licensed in North America by Digital Manga Publishing , which released the manga through its imprint, Juné, on May 6, 2009.
In 1966, Zim launched a related series, the Golden Field Guides, aimed at high school or college-age readers. An updated series was relaunched in 2001 as "Golden Guides by St. Martin's Press", illustrated largely with photographs but retaining some of the original 1950s illustrations. [1]