Manga Written by
Daisuke Satō and illustrated by
Shōji Satō (no relation),
Highschool of the Dead started in
Fujimi Shobo's manga magazine
Monthly Dragon Age on August 9, 2006. The manga went on hiatus from 2008 to 2010, but after March 2011, only one more chapter was released on April 9, 2013. The series was left unfinished following Daisuke Satō's death on March 22, 2017. Fujimi Shobo and Kadokawa Shoten published seven volumes from March 1, 2007 and April 25, 2011 in Japan. A full-color version of the manga, called , began serialization in the February 2011 issue of
Monthly Dragon Age. Kadokawa Shoten released the manga's seven volumes from February 25, 2011 to March 9, 2013. In North America, the full-color edition began serialization in the March 2011 issue of
Yen Press'
Yen Plus online magazine, and ran until the July 2011 issue. The volumes were later released in two hardcover
omnibus volumes on November 22, 2011 and December 17, 2013. Shortly following the inception of the series and before it was licensed for distribution in English, the manga became popular enough in English via
scanlation to draw the attention of the creators, who included a message in English within the magazine's printing of the fifth chapter that requested readers to buy the original manga when it is available. The manga was later licensed in North America by Yen Press, and the first volume was released on January 25, 2011. The series is also published in Spain by
Glénat España, in Germany by
Carlsen, in Italy, Brazil, Mexico and Colombia by
Panini Comics, in Canada and France for French-language publication by
Pika Édition, in Poland by
Waneko, and in Taiwan by Kadokawa Media. A crossover manga by Shōji Satō, called , was published on August 9, 2012, featuring characters from
Triage X, Sato's other work. The writer of the series, Daisuke Satō, became sick in 2008, which made the production of the manga very difficult. After his death in 2017, Kawanakajima and Shōji Satō agreed that the series should be stopped as is and instead focus on the
Triage X series.
Anime An anime adaptation aired on the Japanese network
AT-X from July 5 to September 20, 2010, with subsequent broadcasts on
TV Kanagawa,
Tokyo MX,
Chiba TV,
KBS Kyoto,
TV Aichi,
TV Saitama, and
Sun TV. Produced by
Geneon Universal Entertainment,
Showgate, AT-X and
Madhouse, the series is directed by
Tetsurō Araki, with
Yōsuke Kuroda handling series composition, Masayoshi Tanaka designing the characters and
Takafumi Wada composing the music. Six
DVD and
Blu-ray volumes were released by Geneon Universal Entertainment between September 22, 2010 and February 23, 2011. In North America, the anime series was licensed by
Sentai Filmworks for
simulcast on the
Anime Network. Some of the more graphic scenes were censored. In Australia and New Zealand, the series was licensed by
Madman Entertainment. Sentai and Madman later gained additional rights to the series, with
Section23 Films releasing the series with an English dub (produced by
Seraphim Digital) on Blu-ray and DVD on June 28, 2011.
Manga Entertainment also released the series in the United Kingdom. The English dub of the series aired on Anime Network's
VOD service from March 10, 2011 to May 26, 2011, and was made available on Microsoft's
Zune Marketplace and Apple's
iTunes Store on May 27, 2011 and June 27, 2011, respectively. An
original video animation episode, titled "Drifters of the Dead", was bundled on Blu-ray with the limited edition release of the seventh volume of the manga on April 26, 2011. It was later licensed by Sentai Filmworks in North America for streaming, with the DVD and Blu-ray being released on November 26, 2013.
Music The series' opening theme is "Highschool of the Dead" by
Kishida Kyoudan & The Akeboshi Rockets. The series' closing theme songs differ in each episode, and each are sung by
Maon Kurosaki. The CD single features the TV and instrumental versions of "Highschool of the Dead" and a new song called , along with an instrumental version of the song. A CD containing all 12 ending themes sung by Kurosaki was released by Geneon on September 22, 2010, along with an
original soundtrack.
Light novel A light novel, called , was published in March 2011.
Game CTW Inc. unveils G123’s latest title: 'HIGH SCHOOL OF THE DEAD DAY 0 (HOTDZero)'. Alongside this, official social media channels have launched, and global pre-registration is now open. == Reception ==