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Tokyo Highway Battle; Tokyo Jungle; Tokyo Majin Gakuen Gehōchō: Keppūroku; Tokyo Majin Gakuen: Fuju Hōroku; Tokyo Majin Gakuen: Kenpūchō; Tokyo Mirage Sessions ♯FE; Tokyo Mono Hara Shi: Karasu no Mori Gakuen Kitan; Tokyo Tattoo Girls; Tokyo Twilight Ghost Hunters; Tokyo Wars; Tokyo Xanadu; Tokyo Xtreme Racer (video game) Tokyo Xtreme ...
Sakuichi Fukazawa's Baseball Game. Typical of the sōsaku hanga movement, there was much experimentation with colours and types of paper. The themes and subjects vary; some prints hark back to a bygone era such as Hiratuska's Shinobazu Pond in Snow and Fukazawa's Shiba Zōjō-ji Temple which is reminiscent of Hiroshige's work at the same location. [1]
Neo Tokyo (ネオ東京, Neo Tōkyō) or "New Tokyo" is a common name for a fictional futuristic version of Tokyo often depicted in manga, anime, and video games. An early example was the 1982 manga Akira , which was also adapted into a 1988 anime film .
Tokyo Jungle [a] is a science fiction survival action game developed by Crispy's! and Japan Studio and published by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation 3. [4] The game takes place in a deserted, futuristic Tokyo , in which the city has transformed into a vicious wildlife wasteland.
Taking place in modern-day Tokyo, the story follows a high school student known by the codename Joker who transfers to a new school after he is framed for assault and put on probation. Over the course of a school year, he and other students awaken to a special power, becoming a group of secret vigilantes known as the Phantom Thieves of Hearts ...
A lot of new deciduous growth suffered from necrosis, death of living tissue, and foliage on existing trees turned yellow and fell off. Deciduous trees resilience has allowed them to bounce back and they have populated where many coniferous trees, mostly pine, once stood. [9] Herbaceous vegetation was also affected by radiation fallout. [9]
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Itsukushima in Setonaikai National Park, the first of Japan's national parks (established 1934). National parks (国立公園, Kokuritsu Kōen) and quasi-national parks (国定公園, Kokutei Kōen) of Japan are places of scenic beauty that are designated for protection and sustainable use by the Minister of the Environment under the Natural Parks Law (自然公園法) of 1957. [1]