Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Anime and manga portal The Barbarian's Bride ( Japanese : 姫騎士は蛮族の嫁 , Hepburn : Himekishi wa Barbaroi no Yome ) , also known as The Warrior Princess and the Barbaric King , is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Noriaki Kotoba.
Defender's Quest; Defenders of Ardania; Defense Grid 2; Defense Grid: The Awakening; Desktop Tower Defense; Dillon's Rolling Western; Dillon's Rolling Western: The Last Ranger; Dome Keeper; Drake Hollow; Dungeon Defenders; Dungeon of the Endless
Burn-Up W is a 1996 anime OVA directed by Hiroshi Negishi. [1] It was soon followed by a series version called Burn-Up Excess, though it occasionally lacks continuity with the series. The OVA consists of four episodes, chronicling Team Warrior through more missions. Like the original series, there is still a large amount of fan service.
Dungeon Defenders is a mix of tower defense, role-playing, and action-adventure where one to four (sometimes up to six) players work together to protect one or more Eternia Crystals from being destroyed by waves of enemies which include goblins, archers, orcs, kobolds, ogres and other creatures.
The Family's Defensive Alliance (地球防衛家族, Chikyū Bōei Kazoku, lit. Earth Defence Family) is an anime television series created and written by Shōji Kawamori.The series premiered in Japan on WOWOW between January 9, 2001 and March 29, 2001, spanning a total of 13 episodes.
Kyoshiro Kagami: A private inspector in the present, he is the Warrior of the Mirror. Voiced by: Juurouta Kosugi. Hagiri Ranba: A teenage girl who is the Warrior of Fire. Voiced by: Kotono Mitsuishi. Jingo Kazamatsuri: A trendy teenage boy; he uses wind attacks. Voiced by: Ryotaro Okiayu. Futaba Amitaka: A quiet teenage girl who uses paper ...
Crystal Defenders is a set of two tower defense video games developed and published by Square Enix. The games use the setting of Ivalice and design elements from Final Fantasy Tactics A2: Grimoire of the Rift , forming part of the wider Final Fantasy franchise.
Xena: Warrior Princess is set primarily in a fantasy version of ancient Greece (sometimes alluding to Roman Greece) and was filmed in New Zealand.Some filming locations are confidential [clarification needed], but many scenes were recorded in places such as the Waitākere Ranges Regional Park, part of the Auckland Regional parks often credited at the end of the episodes.