Manga Written and illustrated by
Yuki Urushibara,
Mushishi was first published as a
one-shot in
Kodansha's
Monthly Afternoon on January 25, 1999. It later started its serialization in the first issue of Kodansha's ''
, released on October 10, 1999. The magazine ceased publication after 14 issues on October 10, 2002, and the series moved to Monthly Afternoon
on December 25, 2002, and was serialized until August 25, 2008. Kodansha collected the chapters into ten volumes, published under the Afternoon KC'' line, from November 20, 2000, At the 2006
Comic-Con,
Del Rey Manga announced that it had licensed
Mushishi for an English-language translation in North America. Del Rey published the first volume on January 30, 2007, and the last volume, a combined edition covering volumes 8 to 10, was released on July 27, 2010.
Kodansha USA also released the manga in digital format between July 29 and August 12, 2014. In February 2025, Kodansha USA announced that it would publish the series in an
omnibus collector's edition starting on November 4 of the same year. In addition, two new chapters were published in the magazine on November 25 and December 25, 2013, respectively. They were encapsulated into a single titled and released on April 23, 2014. Another special short was published in
Monthly Afternoon on March 25, 2021.
Volumes Anime The
Mushishi anime adaptation was animated by
Artland, directed by
Hiroshi Nagahama, and produced by a group called "
Mushishi Production Committee", which consists of
Marvelous Entertainment,
Avex Entertainment and
SKY Perfect Well Think. The first 20 episodes of the series originally aired between October 23, 2005, and March 12, 2006, on
Fuji Television. A digest was broadcast on May 7, 2006, by
BS Fuji, which aired the last six episodes from May 14 to June 18 of the same year. Marvelous Entertainment and Avex released the series from January 25 to September 27, 2006, in five DVDs for sale, and at the same time in nine DVDs for rental. On March 28, 2008, a DVD box set containing all episodes was released; it was followed by a
Blu-ray box set on March 27, 2009, and a Limited Edition Blu-ray box on December 20, 2013. The anime series' licensing was announced by
Funimation to North American release in January 2007. To promote the series' release, it hosted Nagahama at the
Anime Expo 2007 between June 29 and July 2. In addition, Funimation exhibited the first four episodes in New York and Texas' locations such as
ImaginAsian Theater,
Studio Movie Grill, and
Alamo Drafthouse, on July 23 and 24 of that year. The series was released in six DVDs between July 31, 2007, to February 26, 2008, by Funimation, which also streamed series on its own channel,
Hulu,
Joost,
Anime News Network,
Crackle, as well as distributed it to
Comcast cable service. Funimation also released four box sets with all episodes: on December 16, 2008, on October 6, 2009, on July 6, 2010, and November 8, 2011. In United Kingdom, the series was released between October 22, 2007, and November 17, 2008, by
Revelation Films in six DVD.
Madman Entertainment acquired the series' distribution rights at
AVCon in 2007, releasing it in a six-discs box set on January 14, 2009, in
PAL region. Based on the 2013 two-chapter side story, a special titled was broadcast on
Tokyo MX, Tochigi TV,
Gunma TV, and BS11 on January 4, 2014, and streamed by
Niconico. A second anime television season titled started airing on April 5, 2014, on Tokyo MX and other channels. As with the special, Another special, , aired on August 20 on BS11. The latter half of the second season started to air on October 19, and ended on December 21, 2014.
Zoku-Shō first DVD compilation was released on July 23, 2014, in Japan, and the sixth—and last–was released on July 22, 2015. A sequel anime film titled , based on the manga's last arc, was announced in December 2014 and released on May 16, 2015, in Japan.
Hihamukage was streamed by
Crunchyroll for premium members on January 4, 2014, and made available for free user a week later. In March, the second season was licensed for streaming by
Aniplex of America and Crunchyroll as
Mushi-Shi -Next Passage-. In November, Madman Entertainment acquired its home media release rights for Australia. Late in the same month, Madman also licensed the series for streaming and made it available on its site AnimeLab. Madman released a DVD box set containing all
Next Passage episodes,
Path of Thorns and
Bell Droplets on December 7, 2016. In January 2026, Kodansha began streaming the first series on its "Anime Manga Official"
YouTube channel, offering the series in both Japanese dub with English subtitles and English dub.
Other media Several books based on
Mushishi have been released. A
guidebook titled
Mushishi Official Book was released by Kodansha on January 23, 2006. On June 30, and July 20, 2007, were released an
artbook, and a book with staff commentaries on the anime series production, respectively. Two books have been released on April 23, and May 14, 2014; a and a respectively. On June 19, 2015, a "large format" art book was released by Kodansha. The music for both
Mushishi anime adaptation was composed by
Toshio Masuda. A live-action
Mushishi feature film, released at the
2006 Venice International Film Festival, was directed by
Katsuhiro Otomo and starred
Joe Odagiri. it was released in Japanese theaters on March 24, 2007.
Mushishi was also adapted into a video game; the
Nintendo DS game titled was developed by Tenky and published by Marvelous Entertainment in Japan on January 31, 2008. From March 18 to 29, 2015, a "
stage reading" event, which adapted six chapters from the manga into six separate performances, was held in Tokyo. It was directed by
Mushishi anime director Hiroshi Nagahama and its original script was written by Kazuaki Nakamura, while the anime voice actors acted as their respective characters. The production used
augmented reality on its visuals, which was designed to span a 270 degree field of view. ==Reception==