Some of the biggest manga franchises in the world have been featured by the historical magazine Weekly Shonen Leap Editor Shueisha. New series are constantly debuting in the weekly newspaper, which is always on the hunt for new masterpieces and new brilliant authors. The next series of Weekly Shonen Jump sees a great mystery at the heart of the story.

A secret we can’t wait to discover, of course. But besides the news, the biggest manga works published on Weekly Shonen Jump also have to be mentioned: Dragon Ball, One Piece, Demon Slayer and My Hero Academia These are just some of the series that have made Shueisha’s fortunes, both in Japan and around the world.

The manga gets a big boost from the anime of a series, which makes the work known to a wider audience. Have you ever wondered How many chapters does a work need to get an anime adaptation?? Well, Twitter user @Cer_clover He did this to then publish a list of Weekly Shonen Jump’s main series and how many chapters it took to get noticed by an animation studio.

As we can see from the tweet at the bottom of the news, is the series that needed fewer chapters to get an anime adaptation My hero academywith the announcement of the cartoon came simultaneously with the release of Chapter 65. Then we find the list Haikyuu (80 chapters), dr Stone (83 chapters), Jujutsu Kaisen (85 chapters), The Promised Neverland (88 chapters), Black clover (89 chapters), chainsaw man (97 chapters) e.g Demon Hunter (112 chapters).

We leave you to sell Weekly Shonen Jump and other Shueisha magazines in 2021.


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Sweety Otaku

One of the best parts of watching anime is how many times a show can surprise you. Sometimes for good, sometimes for bad. But if the Otaku know one thing, it's that anything is possible.

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