Animeta!

Japanese manga series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Animeta! (アニメタ!) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Yaso Hanamura. It began serialization in Kodansha's Morning Two [ja] magazine in June 2015. As of January 2020, the series' individual chapters have been collected into five volumes.

WrittenbyYaso Hanamura
PublishedbyKodansha
English publisher
Quick facts アニメタ!, Genre ...
Animeta!
Cover of the first volume, featuring Miyuki Sanada
アニメタ!
GenreDrama, slice of life[1]
Manga
Written byYaso Hanamura
Published byKodansha
English publisher
MagazineMorning Two [ja]
Original runJune 22, 2015 – present
Volumes5
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Publication

Written and illustrated by Yaso Hanamura, a former animator, the series began serialization in Kodansha's Morning Two [ja] magazine on June 22, 2015.[2][3] The magazine ceased print publication and moved to a digital release starting on August 4, 2022.[4][5] As of January 2020, the series' individual chapters have been collected into five tankōbon volumes.[6]

In December 2018, J-Novel Club announced that they licensed the series for English publication.[7]

Volumes

More information No., Original release date ...
No. Original release date Original ISBN English release date English ISBN
1December 22, 2015[8]978-4-06-388547-7June 17, 2019 (digital)
October 1, 2019 (print)[9]
978-1-71-833700-8
2May 23, 2016[10]978-4-06-388603-0October 2, 2019 (digital)
January 7, 2020 (print)[9]
978-1-71-833702-2
3October 21, 2016[11]978-4-06-388656-6January 8, 2020 (digital)
April 7, 2020 (print)[9]
978-1-71-833704-6
4October 23, 2017[12]978-4-06-388730-3June 10, 2020 (digital)
August 4, 2020 (print)[9]
978-1-71-833706-0
5January 23, 2020[6]978-4-06-515524-0February 3, 2021 (digital)
April 6, 2021 (print)[9]
978-1-71-833708-4
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Reception

Rebecca Silverman from Anime News Network praised the story and illustrations; she felt the story offered a great insight into the anime industry.[13] Demelza from Anime UK News also praised the story and illustrations, favorably comparing the tone to that of Complex Age.[14] Kazuya Masumoto of Studio Trigger felt the story was realistic and recommended the series to anyone interested in seeing how the anime industry works.[1]

References

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