Manga Written and illustrated by
Hiromu Arakawa,
Fullmetal Alchemist was serialized in
Square Enix's monthly manga magazine
Monthly Shōnen Gangan. Its first installment was published in the magazine's August 2001 issue on July 12, 2001. The series concluded with the 108th installment in the July 2010 issue of
Monthly Shōnen Gangan, published on June 11, 2010. A side-story was published in the same magazine on September 11, 2010. In the July 2011 issue, the prototype version of the manga was published. Square Enix compiled the chapters in 27 volumes, released from January 22, 2002, to November 22, 2010. A few chapters were re-released in Japan in two "Extra number" magazines and
Fullmetal Alchemist, The First Attack, which features the first nine chapters of the manga and other side stories. In North America,
Viz Media licensed the series for an English language release in North America and published the 27 volumes between May 3, 2005, and December 20, 2011. From June 7, 2011, to November 11, 2014, Viz Media published the series in an omnibus format, featuring three volumes in one. In April 2014,
Yen Press announced the rights for the digital release of the volumes in North America, and on December 12, 2016, released the series on the
ComiXology website. Viz Media published the 18-volume edition, as
Fullmetal Alchemist: Fullmetal Edition, from May 8, 2018, to August 23, 2022. Other English localizations were done by
Madman Entertainment in Australasia and
Chuang Yi in Singapore. A full-color
Webtoon version, reformatted for the platform's vertical-scroll format, launched on May 7, 2025, with new chapters released twice a week. The series has been also localized in Polish, French, Portuguese, Italian, and Korean.
Anime series Fullmetal Alchemist has been adapted into two separate
anime television series: a loose anime adaptation with a mostly original story, titled
Fullmetal Alchemist, aired from 2003 to 2004, and the second adaptation, which faithfully adapts the original story of the manga, titled
Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood, aired from 2009 to 2010.
Theatrical films Animated Two feature-length anime films were produced;
Fullmetal Alchemist the Movie: Conqueror of Shamballa, a sequel and conclusion to the 2003 series, and
Fullmetal Alchemist: The Sacred Star of Milos, featuring an original story set during the time period of
Brotherhood.
Live-action A live-action film based on the manga,
Fullmetal Alchemist, was released on November 19, 2017. Directed by
Fumihiko Sori, the film stars
Ryosuke Yamada as Edward Elric,
Tsubasa Honda as Winry Rockbell and
Dean Fujioka as Roy Mustang. The sequels and were released on May 20 and June 24, 2022, respectively. They became available on
Netflix on August 20 and September 24, 2022, respectively.
Light novels Square Enix has published a series of six
Fullmetal Alchemist Japanese
light novels, written by Makoto Inoue and illustrationsincluding covers and
frontispiecesby Arakawa. The novels were licensed for an
English-language release by
Viz Media in North America, with translations of the first five by
Alexander O. Smith. The novels are
spin-offs of the manga series and follow the Elric brothers on their continued quest for the philosopher's stone. The first novel,
Fullmetal Alchemist: The Land of Sand, was animated as episodes eleven and twelve of the original anime series. The fourth novel contains an extra story about the military called "Roy's Holiday". Novelizations of the
PlayStation 2 games
Fullmetal Alchemist and the Broken Angel,
Curse of the Crimson Elixir, and
The Girl Who Succeeds God have also been written, the first by Makoto Inoue and the rest by Jun Eishima.
Audio dramas There have been two series of
Fullmetal Alchemist audio dramas. The first volume of the first series, , was released before the anime and tells a similar story to the first novel. The Tringham brothers reprised their anime roles. and are stories based on different manga chapters; their
State Military characters are different from those in the anime. Bandai also released a
fighting game,
Dream Carnival, for the PlayStation 2. For the
Wii, was released in Japan on August 13, 2009. A direct sequel of the game, , was released by Square Enix on December 10, 2009, for the same console. For the 20th Anniversary of the series, Square Enix released
Fullmetal Alchemist Mobile for
iOS and
Android devices on August 4, 2022; the game ended service on March 29, 2024. Of the twelve games made in Japan,
Broken Angel,
Curse of the Crimson Elixir,
Dual Sympathy, and
Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood have seen international releases. Arakawa oversaw the story and designed the characters for the RPG games, while Bonesthe studio responsible for the anime seriesproduced several animation sequences. The developers looked at other titlesspecifically Square Enix's action role-playing game
Kingdom Hearts and other games based on manga series, such as
Dragon Ball,
Naruto or
One Piece gamesfor inspiration. The biggest challenge was to make a "full-fledged" game rather than a simple character-based one. Tomoya Asano, the assistant producer for the games, said that development took more than a year, unlike most character-based games. Funimation licensed the franchise to create a new series of
Fullmetal Alchemist-related video games to be published by
Destineer in the United States. Destineer released its first
Fullmetal Alchemist game for the Nintendo DS, a translation of Bandai's
Dual Sympathy, on December 15, 2006, and said that they plan to release further titles. On February 19, 2007, Destineer announced the second game in its
Fullmetal Alchemist series,
Fullmetal Alchemist: Trading Card Game, based on the
trading card game of the series, which was released on October 15 of that same year for the Nintendo DS, in North America only.
Art and guidebooks Fullmetal Alchemist has received several artbooks. Three artbooks called were released by Square Enix; two of them were released in the US by Viz Media. The first artbook contains illustrations made between May 2001 to April 2003, spanning the first six manga volumes, while the second has illustrations from September 2003 to October 2005, spanning the next six volumes. The last one includes illustrations from the remaining volumes. The manga also has three guidebooks; each of them contains timelines, guides to the Elric brothers' journey, and Spin-off (media)#Sidequels| chapters that were never released in manga volumes. A guidebook titled , which contains post-manga story information, was released in Japan on July 29, 2011.
Merchandise Action figures, busts, and statues from the
Fullmetal Alchemist anime and manga have been produced by toy companies, including Medicom and Southern Island. Medicom has created high end deluxe vinyl figures of the characters from the anime, which were exclusively distributed in the United States and UK by Southern Island. Southern Island released its own action figures of the main characters in 2007, and a 12" statuette was scheduled for release the same year. Southern Island has since gone bankrupt, and the statuette was not released. A trading card game was first published in 2005 in the United States by Joyride Entertainment. Six expansions were released before the card game was withdrawn on July 11, 2007. Destineer released a Nintendo DS adaptation of the game on October 15, 2007. == Reception ==