Manga Death Note, written by
Tsugumi Ohba and illustrated by
Takeshi Obata, was serialized in
Shueisha's
manga magazine
Weekly Shōnen Jump from December 1, 2003, The series' 108 chapters were collected into twelve volumes by Shueisha, released from April 2, 2004, to July 4, 2006. A
one-shot chapter, titled ("Death Note: Special One-Shot"), was published in
Weekly Shōnen Jump on February 9, 2008. Set two years after the manga's epilogue, it sees the introduction of a new Kira and the reactions of the main characters in response to the copycat's appearance. Several
Death Note (four-panel comics) appeared in
Akamaru Jump. The was written to be humorous. The
Akamaru Jump issues that printed the comics include 2004 Spring, 2004 Summer, 2005 Winter, and 2005 Spring. In addition
Weekly Shōnen Jump Gag Special 2005 included some
Death Note in a
Jump Heroes Super 4-Panel Competition. On October 4, 2016, all 12 original manga volumes and the February 2008 one-shot were released in a single
All-in-One Edition, consisting of 2,400 pages in a single book. In April 2005,
Viz Media announced that they had licensed the series for English release in North America. The twelve volumes were released from October 10, 2005, to July 3, 2007. The manga was re-released in a six-volume omnibus edition, dubbed "Black Edition". The volumes were released from December 28, 2010, to November 1, 2011. The
All-in-One Edition was released in English on September 6, 2017, resulting in the February 2008 one-shot being released in English for the first time. In addition, a guidebook for the manga was also released on October 13, 2006. It was named
Death Note 13: How to Read and contained information relating to the series, including character profiles of almost every character that is named, creator interviews, behind the scenes info for the series and the pilot chapter that preceded
Death Note. It also reprinted all of the published in
Akamaru Jump and the
Weekly Shōnen Jump Gag Special 2005. In North America,
13: How to Read was released on February 19, 2008. In the June 2019 issue of Shueisha's
Jump Square, it was announced that a new one-shot chapter of
Death Note would be published. Part of the complete manuscript debuted at the "30th Work Anniversary Takeshi Obata Exhibition: Never Complete" event which ran in Tokyo from July 13 to August 12, 2019. Titled "Death Note: Special One-Shot", the entire 87-page chapter was published in
Jump Square on February 4, 2020, and on Viz Media's website. A collected volume titled , which includes the "C-Kira" one-shot chapter, the "Special One-Shot" (re-titled , the series' pilot chapter, the "L: The Wammy's House" and "L: One Day" one-shot chapters and the , was released on February 4, 2021. The volume was published in English by Viz Media on May 10, 2022.
Light novels A
light novel adaptation of the series has been written by
Nisio Isin, called
Death Note Another Note: The Los Angeles BB Murder Cases. The novel was released by Shueisha on August 1, 2006. It serves as a prequel to the manga series, with Mello narrating the story of L's first encounter with Naomi Misora during the Los Angeles "BB Serial Murder Case" mentioned in volume 2 of the manga. Besides Naomi's character, the novel focuses on how L works and one of the criminals L has to chase down. Insight was given into Watari's orphanage and how the whole system of geniuses such as L, Mello, Beyond Birthday, Matt and Near were put to work. Viz released the novel in English on February 19, 2008. The film
L: Change the World was also adapted into a light novel with the same name on December 25, 2007, by "M", While the novel is similar to the film, there are many significant changes to the plot (for example, Near is not a Thai boy, but the same Near that appears in the manga). It also reveals more information about L and his past. Viz released it on October 20, 2009.
Anime The
Death Note anime, directed by
Tetsurō Araki and animated by
Madhouse, premiered on
Nippon TV on October 4, 2006, and finished its run on June 27, 2007, totaling 37 episodes. The series aired on the network "every Tuesday at 0:56", which is effectively Wednesday. The series was co-produced by Madhouse, Nippon Television,
Shueisha, D.N. Dream Partners and
VAP. In North America, the series was licensed by Viz for American viewers to use "Download-to-Own" and "Download-to-Rent" services while it was still airing in Japan. This release was seen as "significant because it marked the first time a well known Japanese anime property was made legally available in the United States for domestic audiences to download while the title was still airing on Japanese television". The downloadable episodes contained the original Japanese audio and English subtitles, and were made available through
IGN's
Windows-only Direct2Drive service. DVDs of the series have also been released, Viz announced at
Anime Expo 2007 that the first DVD would be officially released on November 20, 2007, in both regular and special editions, and also confirmed at the
San Diego Comic-Con in 2007 that the first 15,000 copies of each DVD would contain collectible figures.
Death Note was slated to make its North American television premiere in Canada, as part of
YTV's Bionix programming block, on September 7, 2007. However, the show was removed from the schedule at the last minute and the Canadian premiere was pushed back to October 26, 2007, at 10:00 p.m. The series premiered in the U.S. on October 20, 2007, at 12:00 a.m. on
Adult Swim and ran until January 10, 2010, when its contract expired. The last episode aired on YTV on July 4, 2008, and would later air on Adult Swim two days later. The show was removed from YTV's schedule on July 5, 2008, with its last airing being a rerun of the final episode at 1:30 a.m.
ET. Soon after, Bionix became a 2-hour block on Saturday nights. The show also streamed online for free on Adult Swim Video, with a new episode available every Saturday afternoon, on the day of its broadcast premiere. On July 26, 2017,
Starz announced that they would be offering episodes of the series for their
video on demand service starting on August 1 of that same year. A two-hour animated TV special aired on Nippon Television in Japan on August 31, 2007, at 8:00 p.m. It is a recap which takes place after the series end, where a approaches Ryuk in the realm in order to learn more about the human world. Instead, Ryuk tells him of all the events leading up to the last story arc, about Light Yagami and his rival L. Originally, this special was advertised as a retelling told from Ryuk's point of view, but it does not give a different point of view from what was originally told. However, it contains updated dialogue, as well as a few new scenes.
Nippon TV aired the special on August 22, 2008. Like the first special, this new compilation summarized a part of the 2006–2007 anime television series. Specifically, it recounted the final half of the suspenseful supernatural story, including the investigators Near and Mello's confrontations with the vigilante Kira. This version features more updates than the previous one, most notably the omission of the mafia plot.
Soundtracks Several soundtracks for the series have been released. The music from the anime was composed by
Yoshihisa Hirano and Hideki Taniuchi, while the CDs were also published by VAP. The first one was
Death Note Original Soundtrack, which was released in Japan on December 21, 2006. It contains music from the series with the first opening and ending themes are sung by the Japanese band
Nightmare in the TV size format.
Death Note Original Soundtrack II was first released in Japan on March 21, 2007. It features the new opening and closing themes by
Maximum the Hormone in the TV size format. The third CD,
Death Note Original Soundtrack III was released on June 27, 2007. Tracks 1–21 were composed and arranged by Taniuchi, while tracks 22–28 were composed and arranged by Hirano. The album features one track sung by
Aya Hirano, who was also the Japanese voice actress of
Misa Amane in the anime series. Also appearing on this soundtrack is the ending theme
Coda〜Death Note, which can be heard at the end of the final episode of the anime as the credits are shown. Several soundtracks have also been released for the live action films.
Sound of Death Note is a soundtrack featuring music from the first
Death Note film composed and arranged by
Kenji Kawai. It was released on June 17, 2006, by
VAP.
Sound of Death Note the Last name is the soundtrack from the second
Death Note film,
Death Note the Last name. It was released on November 2, 2006.
Death Note Tribute is a tribute album dedicated to the
live action film
Death Note. Published by
BMG Japan on June 21, 2006, Japan, it contains 15 tracks performed by various artists, such as
Shikao Suga,
M-Flo,
Buck-Tick, and
Aya Matsuura. The soundtrack came with a
cosplay Death Note notebook. Another tribute album is
The Songs for Death Note the movie〜the Last name Tribute dedicated to the second film. Published by
Sony Music Entertainment Japan on December 20, 2006, it contains 14 tracks performed by various artists, such as
Orange Range,
Abingdon Boys School,
High and Mighty Color,
Doping Panda, and
Galneryus.
Live action films Death Note was adapted into a series of
live action films in 2006. The first two films were directed by
Shusuke Kaneko and the third was directed by
Hideo Nakata and produced by
Nippon Television, CG production of all three films were done by
Digital Frontier and distributed by
Warner Bros. Pictures Japan. The first film, simply titled
Death Note, premiered in Japan on June 17, 2006, and topped the Japanese
box office for two weeks, pushing
The Da Vinci Code into second place. The first film briefly played in certain North American theaters on May 20–21, 2008. The film was broadcast in Canadian theaters for one night only on September 15, 2008. The DVD was released on September 16, 2008, one day after the Canadian showing. The sequel,
Death Note 2: The Last Name, premiered in Japan on November 3, 2006. It was featured in U.S. theaters in October 2008. A spin-off from the films named
L: Change the World was released in Japan on February 9, 2008. It is focused on the final 23 days of L's life, as he solves one final case involving a bio-terrorist group. Two dubbed versions of the film were shown in the United States on April 29 and 30, 2009. In August 2016, a three-part miniseries entitled
Death Note: New Generation was announced as a part of the
Death Note live-action film series and aired in September. It bridges the 10-year gap between the previous films and the then-upcoming 2016 film. A
fourth Japanese Death Note film was released in 2016 and featured a cyber-terrorism setting with the inclusion of six Death Notes brought into the human world. An
American adaptation was released on
Netflix on August 25, 2017. The film was directed by
Adam Wingard and was written by Charles Parlapanides, Vlas Parlapanides, and
Jeremy Slater. It starred
Nat Wolff,
Lakeith Stanfield,
Margaret Qualley,
Shea Whigham,
Paul Nakauchi, Jason Liles, and
Willem Dafoe. A sequel film is reportedly in the works.
Live action series In April 2015, it was announced that a live action television series based on
Death Note manga would begin airing from July 2015 on
Nippon TV.
Masataka Kubota stars as Light Yagami and
Kento Yamazaki as L in the series. In July 2022, it was announced that
the Duffer Brothers recently founded Upside Down Pictures production company would be producing a new live-action series adaptation for Netflix. In October 2022, it was announced that Halia Abdel-Meguid was brought on to write and executive produce the series.
Video games A
Death Note video game developed and published by
Konami for the
Nintendo DS, titled , was released on February 15, 2007.
Kira Game is a
strategy game where the player takes on the role of Kira or L. These are just titles, as any character can be Kira or L. The player will attempt to deduce who their enemy is (Kira will try to uncover L's identity and vice versa). This will play out in three phases: investigation, where the player will discuss the case and clues with other characters; voting, where each member of the investigation team casts a vote on who they suspect is L or Kira based on the player's performance in the previous phase; L/Kira, where the player can either focus their investigation on one member to see if they are Kira (L part), or force a member off of the team (Kira part). A sequel to the game, , was released in Japan on July 12, 2007. The storyline is based on the second part of the manga, featuring characters such as Mello and Near. The player assumes the role of a rookie FBI agent who awakens in a strange hotel and attempts to escape with the help of L, who provides assistance via an in-game PDA. The story is set before the Kira investigation in the original series. The 2019 video game
Jump Force features Light and Ryuk as non-playable characters, playing a key role in the game's story mode. An online
social deduction game, titled
Death Note: Killer Within, was released by
Bandai Namco Entertainment for the
PlayStation 5,
PlayStation 4, and
Windows via
Steam on November 5, 2024. In the game, up to ten players are split into two teams—Kira and his followers and L and the police investigation team. Kira's team aims to kill all its target with the Death Note and L's team must seize and dispose of the Death Note. Both teams try to uncover the identities of the opposing players. The players are represented by pawns, akin to those used by Near in the original series. An update, which includes a role as Mello, was released in January 2025, and another update, including the roles of Watari and Soichiro Yagami, was released in March of that same year.
Musical In 2015, a
musical adaptation of the manga called
Death Note: The Musical ran in both Japan and South Korea. It was originally composed in English by Broadway composer
Frank Wildhorn, with lyrics by Jack Murphy and book by Ivan Menchell. An English production was announced in May 2023 to play at the London Palladium for two nights on August 21–22, 2023, directed by Nick Winston starring Joaquin Pedro Valdes as Light,
Dean John-Wilson as L and
Frances Mayli McCann as Misa. The original Japanese production, produced by Japanese talent agency , ran from 6 to April 29, 2015, and stars
Kenji Urai and double-cast as Light Yagami, and
Teppei Koike as L. A Korean production of the same musical ran from June 11 to August 11, 2015, in South Korea, starring musical actor
Hong Kwang-ho and
JYJ member and musical actor
Kim Junsu. ==Reception==