Anime Television series Multiple
Digimon anime series have been produced by
Toei Animation since 1999. The first of these was
Digimon Adventure; it began as a short film, but after its storyboard was finished, a request for the film to become a television series was made. The film debuted in theaters a day before the series debuted on TV. There are seven
Digimon series
adapted into English for release in Western markets, with the first four treated as a single show under the collective title
Digimon: Digital Monsters. The sixth series,
Digimon Fusion, was only partially dubbed; its third season was never dubbed into English.
Films Several
Digimon films were released in Japan, with some of them seasonal tie-ins for their respective television series. Footage from the first three films was used for the American-produced
Digimon: The Movie.
OVA Distribution and localization In the United States, the first three series/seasons that made up
Digimon: Digital Monsters first aired on
Fox Kids from August 14, 1999 to June 8, 2002. The localized series was produced by
Saban Entertainment, which was acquired by
The Walt Disney Company during the show's Fox Kids run. Some scenes from the original shows were modified or omitted in order to comply with Fox's
standards and practices. The show also featured more jokes and added dialogue, along with a completely different musical score. As a cross-promotional stunt, 2001 and 2002 saw
Digi-Bowl specials co-produced with
Fox Sports;
NFL on Fox commentator
Terry Bradshaw provided interstitial segments in-between episodes as if the episodes were actually a football game. Disney's acquisition of Saban resulted in
Digimon airing on Disney's TV networks and programming blocks. Reruns of the show began airing on the
cable network ABC Family on March 4, 2002, while the fourth series/season,
Digimon Frontier (which serves as the final season of
Digimon: Digital Monsters), premiered on the
Disney's Animation Weekdays block on
UPN, and the
ABC Kids block on
ABC. UPN aired the series until late August 2003, when they severed their ties to Disney. Saban announced an English dub for
Digimon Xros Wars, retitled
Digimon Fusion, for broadcast on
Nickelodeon and
Nicktoons in the United States starting September 7, 2013.
Saban Capital Group sold most of Saban Brands' entertainment properties to
Hasbro in 2018 and shutter the division in July of that year. while retaining the original Japanese score.
Shout! Factory acquired the broadcast and home media distribution rights for the films.
International In Canada, the English versions of
Digimon were broadcast on
YTV, with the exception of
Data Squad, which aired in
Family Channel's Jetix block. YTV acquired
Digimon Fusion, but only the first 26 episodes were shown. In the United Kingdom,
Digimon first aired on
Fox Kids.
ITV's children's slot
CITV broadcast
Adventure,
Adventure 02 and several episodes of
Tamers during after school hours from 2001–2002. The rest of
Tamers aired on
Fox Kids from 2002–03.
Digimon Frontier was originally announced to be broadcast on Jetix, but the series was later dropped. The series eventually saw a release on October 29, 2018. In 2011,
Digimon Data Squad aired on
Kix!. According to Fox Kids' (2000–03) and Kix's (2010–)
BARB Television ratings,
Adventure,
Adventure 02 and
Tamers have been the most popular series'/seasons in the United Kingdom and was consistently in the weekly top 10 broadcasts for both channels for new episodes. Broadcast rights and merchandising sub-licensing rights for
Digimon Fusion in the UK have been acquired by
ITV Studios Global Entertainment.
Digimon Fusion had aired since Spring 2014 on digital terrestrial channel, CITV. In the Philippines,
Digimon was first aired on
ABS-CBN in Filipino English language from June 2, 2000 to October 21, 2001. And later, it was shift to Filipino on April 6, 2002.
Comics Digimon first appeared in narrative form in the
one-shot manga ''C'mon Digimon
, released in the summer of 1997. C'mon Digimon
spawned the popular Digimon Adventure V-Tamer 01'' manga, written by Hiroshi Izawa, which began serialization on November 21, 1998.
Digimon Next Written by Tatsuya Hamazaki and illustrated by
Takeshi Okano, was serialized in
Shueisha's magazine
V Jump from 2005 to 2008. Shueisha collected its chapters in four
tankōbon volumes, released from July 4, 2006, to February 4, 2008. The story follow Tsurugi Tatsuno and his digimon partner,
Greymon (later Agumon). Tsurugi makes contact with the Digital World through his virtual pet device called Digimon Mini and a "Battle Terminal", a virtual reality interface. Digimon can use the technology to materialize in the human world as well.
Digimon Dreamers In 2021, a manga called
Digimon Dreamers was announced.
Yuen Wong Yu manhua A Chinese
manhua was written and drawn by
Yuen Wong Yu, who based its storyline on the television series. This adaptation covers
Digimon Adventure in five volumes,
Digimon Adventure 02 in two,
Digimon Tamers in four, and
Digimon Frontier in three. The original stories are heavily abridged, though on rare occasions events play out differently from the anime. The Chinese-language version was published by in Hong Kong. Yu also wrote
D-Cyber. Two English versions were also released. The first one was published by
Chuang Yi in Singapore. The second one, which was adapted by
Lianne Sentar, was released by
Tokyopop in North America.The three volumes for
Digimon Frontier have been released by Chuang Yi in English. These have not been released by TOKYOPOP in North America or Europe. However, the Chuang Yi releases of
Digimon Frontier were distributed by
Madman Entertainment in Australia.
Dark Horse Dark Horse Comics published American-style Digimon
comic books, adapting the first thirteen episodes of the English
dub of
Digimon Adventure in 2001. The story was written by Daniel Horn and Ryan Hill, and illustrated by Daniel Horn and Cara L. Niece.
Panini The Italian publishing company
Panini published
Digimon titles in several ways in different countries. Germany had their own adaptations of episodes, the UK reprinted the Dark Horse titles and translated some of the German adaptations of
Adventure 02 episodes. Eventually the UK comics had their own original stories, which appeared in both the UK's
Digimon Magazine and the UK Fox Kids companion magazine
Wickid. These original stories roughly followed the
continuity of
Adventure 02. When the comic switched to the
Tamers series the storylines adhered to continuity more strictly; sometimes it expanded on subject matter not covered by the original Japanese anime (such as
Mitsuo Yamaki's past) or the English adaptations of the television shows and movies (such as Ryo's story or the movies that remained undubbed until 2005). In a money saving venture, the original stories were later removed from
Digimon Magazine, which returned to printing translated German adaptations of
Tamers episodes. Eventually, both magazines were cancelled.
Video games The
Digimon series has inspired various video games, including the
Digimon World and
Digimon Story sub-series of
role-playing video games. Other genres have included
life simulation,
adventure, video
card game,
strategy, and
racing games. By March 2001, Bandai had sold approximately video games worldwide, including 400,000 in Japan. In February 2010, a website for the
MMORPG Digimon Battle Online was launched. On September 22, 2011, online game publisher
Joymax announced the release of an MMORPG game called
Digimon Masters, which was developed by the Korean publisher
DIGITALIC. In June 2021 it was announced that they were developing a new MMORPG titled
Digimon Super Rumble. In 2011, a new entry in the
Digimon World series was announced after a seven-year hiatus, titled
Digimon World Re:Digitize. The game was released in Japan on July 19, 2012, followed by an enhanced version for
Nintendo 3DS released in 2013.
Digimon Story: Cyber Sleuth was first released in Japan in 2015. It is the first game in the
Digimon Story series to be released in North America under its original title;
Digimon World DS and
Digimon World Dawn and Dusk were originally marketed as entries in the
Digimon World series, with the latter game being the last to be released in the West for nine years until
Cyber Sleuth's release on February 2, 2016. There have been several mobile games.
Digimon Links was active from March 2016 to July 2019, and was similar to the
Story games in that the player raised digimon in a farm and fought enemies using a team of three of their Digimon. It was succeeded by
Digimon ReArise, which launched June 2018 in Japan and October 2019 in America.
Web novel In February 2023, Bandai announced a
web novel titled to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the franchise. The novel will serialize on the Digimon Web website for about a year, starting on April 3, simultaneously in English, Chinese, and Japanese.
Webcomic In December 2023, Bandai announced a webcomic titled
Digimon Liberator for Spring 2024.
Card game The Digimon Collectible Card Game is a card game based on Digimon, first introduced in Japan in 1997 and published by Bandai. The third season (
Digimon Tamers) utilized this aspect of the franchise by making the card game an integral part of the season. Versions of the card game are also included in some of the Digimon video games including
Digital Card Battle and
Digimon World 3. During the fourth anime (
Digimon Frontier), Bandai created the
D-Tector Card Game to tie in to their own D-Tector virtual pet toys. This was a West-only card game. From February 25, 2011 to September 28, 2012,
Digimon Jintrix was an online card game supported by physical card releases. It was followed up by the mobile game
Digimon Crusader, which lasted from December 2012 to December 2017. In 2020 a new card game was launched to coincide with
Digimon Adventure: using a new system, this was released in the West in January 2021. ==References==