Manga titles from
Weekly Shōnen Jump are translated into many foreign languages, and some even have their own separate version of the
Weekly Shōnen Jump anthology.
Weekly Shōnen Jump manga are also published in many other countries where the magazine itself is not published, like the
United Kingdom,
Argentina,
Mexico,
Spain,
Australia, and
South Korea.
Shonen Jump Shonen Jump, published in North America by
Viz Media, debuted in November 2002, with a January 2003 cover date. Though based on
Weekly Shōnen Jump, the
English language Shonen Jump is retooled for English readers and the American audience and is published monthly, instead of weekly. It features serialized chapters from seven manga series, and articles on Japanese language and culture, manga, anime, video games, and figurines. In conjunction with the magazine, Viz launched new imprints for releasing media related to the series presented in the magazine, and other
shōnen works. This includes two new manga imprints, an
anime DVD imprint, a fiction line for releasing
light novels, a label for fan and data books, and a label for the release of art books. Prior to the magazine's launch, Viz launched an extensive marketing campaign to promote the magazine and help it succeed where other manga anthologies in North America have failed. Shueisha purchased an equity interest in Viz to help fund the venture, and
Cartoon Network,
Suncoast, and
Diamond Distributors became promotional partners in the magazine. It was awarded the ICv2 "Comic Product of the Year" award in December 2002, and continued to enjoy high sales with a monthly circulation of 215,000 in 2008.
Shonen Jump was discontinued in April 2012 in favor of its digital successor,
Weekly Shonen Jump. With it ending in an incomplete, but yet almost complete picture spine of the Naruto splash page of "
Declaration of War" on the side of each said magazine.
Weekly Shonen Jump Weekly Shonen Jump, Viz Media's successor to the monthly print anthology
Shonen Jump, was a North American
digital shōnen manga anthology published simultaneously with the Japanese editions of
Weekly Shōnen Jump, in part to combat the copyright violation of manga through
bootleg scanlation services. It began serialization on January 30, 2012, as
Weekly Shonen Jump Alpha with a lineup of six titles and new issues published online two weeks after Japanese release, but within a year had expanded to twelve ongoing series, and on January 21, 2013, it underwent a rebranding and transitioned to simultaneous publication with Japan.
Banzai! Banzai! is a German-language version of
Weekly Shōnen Jump published by
Carlsen Verlag that was published from 2001 through December 2005 before being canceled. In addition to the
Weekly Shōnen Jump manga series, the magazine also included original German language
manga-influenced comics. The magazine competed as a sister publication to a
shōjo anthology called
Daisuki. It had a circulation of 140,000 copies.
Remen Shaonian Top Rèmén Shàonián Top (熱門少年TOP) is the former weekly Chinese-language version of
Weekly Shōnen Jump, published in Taiwan by Da Ran Publishing. In the 1990s Da Ran went bankrupt and the magazine had to cease publication.
Rèmén Shàonián Top serialized series such as
Yu-Gi-Oh!,
Tottemo! Luckyman,
Hikaru no Go, and
One Piece as well as several other domestic
manhua.
Formosa Youth Formosa Youth (寶島少年
Báodǎo Shàonián) is the current weekly Chinese version of
Weekly Shōnen Jump.
Formosa Youth features various series from
Weekly Shōnen Jump. The
Formosa Youth magazine translates
Weekly Shōnen Jump manga up to date. A sister publication of
Formosa Youth is
Dragon Youth Comic (龍少年
Lóng Shàonián), which specializes in domestic manhua. In 1977, the Tong Li company was created and founded by Fang Wan-Nan which created bootlegs, this ended in 1992. A law in Taiwan restricted the act of bootlegging all manga. Some series like
One Piece and
Hikaru no Go were first published in the manga/manhua magazine
Rèmén Shàonián Top (熱門少年TOP) by Da Ran Publishing, but when Daran Publishing went bankrupt the series were transferred to
Formosa Youth.
EX-am EX-am is the Hong Kong version of
Weekly Shōnen Jump published by Culturecom Holdings's comic division Culturecom Comics, the largest comic distributors in all of Asia. The magazine published
Hunter × Hunter,
Captain Tsubasa and
Dragon Ball—which holds the highest circulation of manga in Hong Kong, alongside the highest of domestic manhua which would be
Chinese Hero: Tales of the Blood Sword.
C-Kids publishes many
Weekly Shōnen Jump series such as
One Piece, Gintama along with many original manga-influenced comics from the division Cartoon Thai Studio like
EXEcutional.
Boom Boom (บูม) is another
Thai language Weekly Shōnen Jump published by Nation Edutainment.
Boom publishes many
Weekly Shōnen Jump series such as
Naruto,
Death Note along with many original manga-influenced comics from Factory Studio like
Meed Thii Sib-Sam and
Apaimanee Saga.
Swedish Shonen Jump In November 2004, began publication of a
Swedish language version of
Weekly Shōnen Jump in Sweden, called
Shonen Jump as a sister publication to their existing magazines
Manga Mania and
Shojo Stars. The magazine included chapters from various popular
Weekly Shōnen Jump titles including
Bleach,
Naruto,
Shaman King, and
Yu-Gi-Oh!. In November 2007, after 37 issues published, Manga Media ceased publication of the magazine. It had a circulation of 30,000 copies. Also a
film comic based on the
Dragon Ball Z anime was released under the "TV Anime Comic" imprint. ==Imprints==