Manga Written and illustrated by
George Morikawa,
Hajime no Ippo has been published in
Kodansha's
manga magazine
Weekly Shōnen Magazine since October 11, 1989. It has run in the magazine for over 30 years, and reached its 1000th chapter in December 2012. It became one of the
longest running manga series with over 1,500 chapters released in Japan by 2025. Kodansha has collected its chapters into individual volumes. The first volume was published on February 17, 1990. As of January 16, 2026, 145 volumes have been published. In June 2021, it was announced that the series would get a digital release, for the first time in 33 years of publication, starting on July 1 of the same year. Kodansha started publishing the series digitally in English on its
K Manga service, with the first ten volumes (first 87 chapters) released in September 2023 and new chapters released every week.
Anime Hajime no Ippo has been adapted into an
anime series franchise. The first 75-episode anime television series, produced by
Madhouse,
Nippon Television and
VAP and directed by Satoshi Nishimura, aired on Nippon TV between October 4, 2000, and March 27, 2002. The episodes were collected into twenty-five DVDs released by VAP from March 16, 2001, to March 21, 2003. The last DVD includes a special episode which did not air in Japan, numbered 76. An
original video animation (OVA) titled
Hajime no Ippo Mashiba vs. Kimura was released on September 5, 2003. A second series titled
Hajime no Ippo: New Challenger aired on Nippon TV from January 6 to June 30, 2009. In July 2013, it was reported in that a third season of
Hajime no Ippo would air in 2013. The third season, titled
Hajime no Ippo: Rising, ran for 25 episodes from October 5, 2013, to March 29, 2014.
English release In North America, the first series was licensed by
Geneon Entertainment in 2003, which released it under the name
Fighting Spirit. Geneon distributed
Fighting Spirit on 15 DVDs with five episodes per disc. The first DVD was released on July 6, 2004 and the fifteenth released on December 19, 2006. The TV film
Champion Road was released on North America on January 9, 2007. There were no plans to release the OVA,
Mashiba vs. Kimura. Disc sales of the series did not perform well. In September 2020,
Discotek Media announced that it had licensed the series, including the 76 episodes,
Champion Road and, for the first time in North America, the OVA
Mashiba vs. Kimura. The first
Blu-ray Disc set (episodes 1–24) was released on January 26, 2021; the second set (episodes 25–48) was released on March 30, 2021; and the third set (episodes 49–76,
Mashiba vs. Kimura, and
Champion Road) was released on October 26, 2021.
Hajime no Ippo: Rising started streaming on
Crunchyroll in 2013, and the first series (including its 76th episode) was added to the platform in 2021;
Rising has since been removed from the platform. In January 2025, Netflix started streaming
New Challenger and
Rising, making
New Challenger officially available for the first time in English.
Music The music for the first anime series was composed by Tsuneo Imahori, who also did the third opening theme song. Tracks of guitars, drums, piano, horns, and combinations of the instruments were used to help accentuate the mood and action of the scenes. The soundtrack was released in Japan on two CDs,
First KO and
Final Round. The music for the second series was composed by
Yoshihisa Hirano. In the third series, Yoshihisa Hirano and Tsuneo Imahori are credited for the music.
Anime theme songs ;Opening theme songs • "Under Star" by Shocking Lemon (episodes 1–25) • "Inner Light" by Shocking Lemon (episodes 26–50, TV movie) • "Tumbling Dice" by Tsuneo Imahori (episodes 51–76) • "Hekireki" by
Last Alliance (episodes 77–102) • "Yakan Hikou" by Wasureranneyo (episodes 103–127) ;Ending theme songs • "Yuuzora no Kamihikouki" by Mori Naoya (episodes 1–25, TV movie) • "360°" by Mori Naoya (episodes 26–50, 75, OVA) • "Eternal Loop" by
Saber Tiger (episodes 51–74, 76) • "
8AM" by
Coldrain (episodes 77–102) • "Buchikome!!" by Shikuramen (episodes 103–127)
Video games A total of nine video games based on the series have been released, included on the
PlayStation,
PlayStation 2,
Game Boy Advance,
Wii,
PlayStation Portable,
Nintendo DS, and
PlayStation 3. Three of the games have been released in North America and in
PAL territories. Ippo and Takamura have also appeared in the 2009 crossover video game
Sunday vs Magazine: Shūketsu! Chōjō Daikessen as playable characters. == Reception ==