Inazuma Eleven
Inazuma Eleven | |||
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Original title | イ ナ ズ マ イ レ ブ ン | ||
transcription | Inazuma Irebun | ||
genre | Sports | ||
Computer / video game | |||
Studio | Level-5 | ||
Publisher | Level-5 | ||
Erstveröffent- lichung |
August 22, 2008 January 29, 2011 |
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platform | Nintendo DS | ||
genre | Computer role play | ||
language | Japanese | ||
Age rating | |||
Manga | |||
country | Japan | ||
author | Tenya Yabuno | ||
publishing company | Shogakukan | ||
magazine | Coro Coro Comics | ||
First publication | May 2008 - October 2011 | ||
expenditure | 10 | ||
Anime television series | |||
Country of production | Japan | ||
original language | Japanese | ||
Year (s) | 2008-2011 | ||
Studio | OLM | ||
length | 25 minutes | ||
Episodes | 127 | ||
Director | Katsuhito Akiyama | ||
music | Yasunori Mitsuda | ||
First broadcast | October 5, 2008 on TV Tokyo | ||
German-language first broadcast |
June 10, 2012 on RTL II | ||
Anime television series | |||
title | Inazuma Eleven Go Inazuma Eleven Go: Chrono Stone Inazuma Eleven Go: Galaxy |
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Original title | イ ナ ズ マ イ レ ブ ン GO イ ナ ズ マ イ レ ブ ン GO ク ロ ノ ・ ス ト ー ン イ ナ ズ マ イ レ ブ ン GO ギ ャ ラ ク シ ー |
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transcription | Inazuma Irebun GO Inazuma Irebun GO: Kurono Sutōn Inazuma Irebun GO: Gyarakushī |
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Country of production | Japan | ||
original language | Japanese | ||
Year (s) | 2011-2014 | ||
Studio | OLM | ||
length | 25 minutes | ||
Episodes | 141 in 3 seasons | ||
Director | Katsuhito Akiyama | ||
music | Yasunori Mitsuda | ||
First broadcast | May 4, 2011 on TV Tokyo | ||
Inazuma Eleven ( Japanese イ ナ ズ マ イ レ ブ ン , Inazuma Irebun ) is the name of a series of Japanese computer games from the manufacturer Level-5 . The role-play is about a soccer team that is put together by a young goalkeeper. The games were adapted as manga and anime , which can be classified into the sports genre .
content
The talented goalkeeper Mark Evans ( 円 堂 守 , Mamoru Endō), grandson of one of the best goalkeepers in Japan, is a member of his school's football club. Apart from him, there are only little motivated players in this. A player who has just moved to town, Axel Blaze ( 豪 炎 寺 修 也 , Shūya Gōenji), motivates him to rebuild the team and take on the other teams.
Game mechanics
On the one hand, in the role of Mark Evans, the player can find new players and opponents as well as useful items and thereby assemble and equip the team. There are around 1000 playable characters to choose from. On the other hand, the player can play the soccer games against other teams and thereby arrange and control his players. Special skills of the players can also be used.
publication
The game developed by Level-5 for Nintendo DS was released on August 22, 2008 by the same company in Japan. Nintendo released the game in Europe on January 29, 2011, and in the United Kingdom on August 26 of the same year.
For the game, the two sequels appeared Firestorm: Inazuma Eleven 2 ( イナズマイレブン2脅威の侵略者ファイア , 2 Inazuma Erebun: Kyoi no Shinryakusha Faia ; 2009) and Inazuma Eleven 2: Ice Storm (~ ブリザード , ~ Burizādo ; 2009), and Inazuma Eleven 3: Sekai e no Chosen !! ( イ ナ ズ マ イ レ ブ ン 3 世界 へ の 挑 戦 !! ; 2010) (only in Japan) for the same platform. For the Wii appeared Inazuma Eleven Strikers ( イナズマイレブンストライカーズ; Inazuma Erebun Sutoraikāzu ; 2011) and Inazuma Eleven Strikers 2012 XTreme (only in Japan) ( イナズマイレブンストライカーズ2012エクストリーム , Inazuma Erebun Sutoraikāzu 2012 Ekusutorīmu ; 2012). Inazuma Eleven GO ( イ ナ ズ マ イ レ ブ ン GO ) was released for the Nintendo 3DS in 2011 . In addition, the publication of a collection of the first three Nintendo DS games on a 3DS card is planned.
Adaptations
Manga
A manga adaptation of the game was published from May 2008 to October 2010 in Coro Coro Comics magazine published by Shogakukan . It was implemented by Tenya Yabuno. The chapters also appeared in ten anthologies.
Anime
Studio OLM produced an adaptation of the game as an anime series . Directed by Katsuhito Akiyama and based on a script by Atsuhiro Tomioka, 127 episodes were initially created. The character design was created by Yuji Ikeda and Yuko Inoue; Chikara Nishikura was responsible for the artistic direction. It was broadcast from October 5, 2008 to April 27, 2011 on TV Tokyo . From May 4, 2011, the second series Inazuma Eleven GO followed with another 47 episodes. From April 18, 2012 TV Tokyo broadcast the sequel Inazuma Eleven GO: Chrono Stone , which includes 51 episodes. The last season Inazuma Eleven GO: Galaxy , which consists of 43 episodes, was broadcast by TV Tokyo from May 8, 2013 to March 19, 2014.
2010: The standard in Japan three films to the cinema came Inazuma Eleven: Saikyo Gundan UCI Shūrai ( イナズマイレブン最強軍団オーガ襲来), 2011 Kyūkyoku no Kizuna Griffon: Inazuma Eleven GO ( イナズマイレブンGO究極の絆グリフォン) and 2012 Eleven GO Inazuma VS Danball Senki W ( イ ナ ズ マ イ レ ブ ン GO VS ダ ン ボ ー ル 戦 機 W ), a crossover with the Danball Senki series .
The first season aired in English in Australia, Southeast Asia, Eastern Europe and the UK. There were also localized broadcasts in Latin America, Italy, France, Spain, Portugal, Poland, the Philippines, the Netherlands and in the Arab world. There are also translations into Chinese and Korean. From June 10 to December 2, 2012, RTL II broadcast the first 26 episodes of the series in German premieres. For the western versions, the characters' Japanese names have been swapped for English names in both the anime and the games. The location is still Japan.
synchronization
role | Japanese speaker ( seiyū ) | German speaker | |
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Japanese | German | ||
Mamoru Endo | Mark Evans | Junko Takeuchi | Maximilian Belle |
Shūya Gōenji | Axel Blaze | Hirofumi Nojima | Paul Sedlmeir |
Yūto Kidō | Jude Sharp | Hiroyuki Yoshino | Max fields |
Ichirota Kazemaru | Nathan Swift | Yuka Nishigaki | Roman Wolko |
Ryugo Someoka | Kevin Dragonfly | Yasuyuki cheese | Dirk Meyer |
Asuka Domon | Bobby Shearer | Jun Konno | Daniel hose |
Jin Kageno | Jim Wraith | Yūichi Nakamura | Max fields |
Ayumu "Shōrin" Shōrinji | Tim "Timmy" Sanders | Masako Jō | Caroline Combrinck |
Shin'ichi Handa | Steve Grim | Hiro Shimono | Tobias John von Freyend |
Kūsuke "Max" Matsuno | Maxwell "Max" Carson | Yūki Kodaira | Angela Wiederhut |
Teppei Kurimatsu | Death Ironside | Miho Hino | Patrick Roche |
Kakeru Megane | Willy Glass | Nanae Kato | Max fields |
Aki cinema | Silvia Woods | Fumiko Orikasa | Gabrielle Pietermann |
Haruna Otonashi | Celia Hills | Hinako Sasaki | Farina Brock |
Natsumi Raimon | Nelly Raimon | Sanae Kobayashi | Caroline Combrinck |
Seigō Hibiki | Seymour Hillman | Kinryu Arimoto |
Crock Krumbiegel (up to episode 6) Reinhard Brock (from episode 11) |
Reiji Kageyama | Ray Dark | Seiji Sasaki | Crock Krumbiegel |
music
The music for the series was composed by Yasunori Mitsuda .
The songs were used for the opening credits:
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The credits were underlaid with the titles:
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Awards
The manga won the award in the "Children" category at the 34th Kōdansha Manga Prize .
Individual evidence
- ↑ 講 談 社 漫画 賞 (過去 の 受 賞 者 一 覧). (No longer available online.) Kodansha , archived from the original on July 3, 2010 ; Retrieved June 17, 2012 (Japanese). Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ 34th Annual Kodansha Manga Awards Announced. Anime News Network , May 11, 2010, accessed May 23, 2011 .
Web links
- Official Website (Japanese)
- Official German website for the game
- Entry on Manga and Anime on Anime News Network (English)
- Review at netzwelt.de ( Memento from February 11, 2013 in the web archive archive.today )
- Review at 4Players