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This category should be reserved specifically for characters originating in anime and manga, as opposed to licensed appearances in such media. This category is for fictional characters in anime and manga who are female.
AMAIM Warrior at the Borderline - Funimation; Ancient Girl's Frame - Funimation; Baki Hanma: Combat Shadow Fighting Saga/Great Prison Battle Saga - Netflix; BanG Dream! Girls Band Party! ☆ Pico Fever! - YouTube; Banished from the Hero’s Party, I Decided to Live a Quiet Life in the Countryside - Funimation [b] Blue Period - Netflix
Magical girl (魔法少女, mahō shōjo) is a subgenre of Japanese fantasy media centered around young girls who use magic, often through an alter ego into which they can transform. Since the genre's emergence in the 1960s, media including anime , manga , OVAs , ONAs , films, and live-action series have been produced.
Voiced by: Ayako Kawasumi (Japanese); Monica Rial (Funimation) (English) A five-year-old girl and Kawaguchi's sister, who once lived in New York until they moved to Japan and enrolled her in Futaba Kindergarten after throwing a dart at a map of Japan to determine where she would go next. She is in love with Shinnosuke and uses his weaknesses to ...
The Rolling Girls (ローリング☆ガールズ, Rōringu Gāruzu) is a 2015 Japanese original anime television series produced by Wit Studio. The logo of this title contains the text, "Rolling, Falling, Scrambling Girls. For others. For themselves. Even if they're destined to be a 'mob'".
Kantai Collection (Japanese: 艦隊これくしょん, Hepburn: Kantai Korekushon, translated as "Fleet Collection", subtitled as "Fleet Girls Collection"), known as KanColle (艦これ, KanKore) for short, is a 2015 Japanese anime television series created by Diomedéa, based on the game of the same name by Kadokawa Games.
Ancient Girl's Frame (Japanese: 闘神機ジーズフレーム, Hepburn: Tōshinki Jīzu Furēmu) is a Japanese-Chinese original net animation series which aired in Chinese on streaming platforms from October 11 to December 27, 2021, and on Japanese television on Tokyo MX the following day. [1] The series is licensed in North America by ...
It was broadcast by the anime television network Animax on its respective networks worldwide, including Japan, East Asia, South Asia, and Southeast Asia, where it received its first English-language broadcast. The series was adapted as a manga serialized in Dengeki Daioh, a shōnen manga magazine, and collected into two tankōbon volumes.