Light novels The series has several print adaptations. Two
Devil May Cry light novels, written by Shinya Goikeda and illustrated by
Shirow Miwa, were published in Japan in 2002 and translated and published in the United States in 2006. The first,
Devil May Cry Volume 1, was published in Japan in conjunction with the release of the first game and explored Dante in an adventure set before the game's events. The second, entitled
Devil May Cry Volume 2 in the US, was published in Japan to coincide with the second game's release and is set after the first game's events.
Tokyopop published the books in the United States in June and November 2006, respectively. Bingo Morihashi wrote a
Devil May Cry 4 novel entitled
Devil May Cry 4 Deadly Fortune. The two-volume novel, published in Japan in 2009, has a number of scenes which were not included in the original game due to time constraints. A prequel novel by Morihashi titled
Before the Nightmare, set before
Devil May Cry 5 and leading to the beginning of the game, was published on March 1, 2019.
Comics and manga Three issues of a comic adaptation of the first game were published by the Canadian
Dreamwave Productions in 2004, but the series was left unfinished when the company went bankrupt the following year. On July 25, 2008,
WildStorm (a
DC Comics imprint) and
Capcom announced that they would collaborate on a
Devil May Cry comic-book series. Details about the series were planned to be announced at a later date, but no new information has been provided. Two volumes of a planned three-part
Devil May Cry 3 manga series have been published in Japan and the United States. Set a year before the events of
Devil May Cry 3, the manga describes how the characters come to be at the beginning of the game. On March 7, 2019, Capcom announced that a tie-in manga entitled
Devil May Cry 5 Visions of V would be serialized on the Japanese manga-hosting site Line Manga (LINE マンガ). The manga's prologue was published before the serialization began. Illustrated by Tomio Ogata, the manga (only available in Japan) would update every other Sunday beginning on April 27.
Animation Anime An
anime series,
Devil May Cry: The Animated Series, premiered on Japan's
Wowow TV network on June 12, 2007. The 12-episode series, produced by
Madhouse, was directed by Shin Itagaki. Bingo Morihashi, a writer of the third and fourth games, was one of its writers.
Animated series In November 2018,
Adi Shankar announced that he had acquired the rights to produce a
Devil May Cry animated series for
Netflix. Shankar, who has been completing a similar
animated series for Konami's
Castlevania franchise, said that he considered both series part of a shared "Bootleg Multiverse". In November 2021, Shankar revealed that the show's first season will have 8 episodes. He also has plans for a connected "multi-season arc", like what he did with
Castlevania, and that fan-favorite characters will make their debut throughout the series. The first season would premiere on April 3, 2025. The series would be renewed for a second season shortly thereafter, set for release on May 12, 2026.
Film On February 28, 2011,
Screen Gems (which made
Resident Evil into a
film series) had purchased feature-film rights to the
Devil May Cry series. Kyle Ward was hired to write the screenplay for the film (based on
DmC: Devil May Cry), which would be Dante's origin story. No news has emerged about the project's status.
Plays Capcom produced
Sengoku Basara vs. Devil May Cry a staged amalgam of the
Devil May Cry and
Sengoku Basara series, in August 2015. In the play, Dante, Lady, Trish, and Vergil encounter mysterious historical ruins while chasing a devil and are sent back in time to Japan's
Warring States period. There, they meet Date Masamune, Sanada Yukimura, and other characters from the
Sengoku Basara franchise. The play ran at the AiiA 2.5 Theater in Tokyo for 18 performances. Masanari Ujigawa wrote and directed the play, and
Hideaki Itsuno and Izaki Matsuno collaborated on the scenery. Kazushi Miyakoda and Tetsuya Yamaura were the producers, supervised by
Hiroyuki Kobayashi and Makoto Yamamoto.
Devil May Cry: The Live Hacker, a musical, ran for 13 performances in March 2019 at
Zepp DiverCity in Tokyo. Jun Yoriko wrote and directed the musical and its video, and a DVD was released in late August of that year.
Soundtracks The
Devil May Cry series has seen the release of seven separate soundtracks. Initially, Capcom was very reluctant to release an officially sanctioned
soundtrack for the
Devil May Cry series, due to worries that the products would sell poorly. As a means of testing the market, Capcom decided to ask for pre-release sales. ==In other games==