Manga Written and illustrated by
Hiro Mashima,
Rave Master was serialized in
Kodansha's
manga magazine
Weekly Shōnen Magazine from July 6, 1999, to July 27, 2005. Its 296 chapters were published in thirty-five volumes by
Kodansha, released from November 17, 1999, to September 16, 2005. The series was later rereleased in eighteen volumes between August 10, 2006, and April 12, 2007.
Rave Master was licensed for an English release in North America by
Tokyopop, which released 32 volumes of the series. On August 31, 2009, Tokyopop announced that they would not be completing the series as their licenses with Kodansha expired and Kodansha required that they immediately stop publication of all previously licensed series, including
Rave Master. The next month, it was announced that
Del Rey Manga had acquired the license and would begin publishing the remaining volumes in 2010. The last three volumes were published in a single omnibus volume. Del Rey never released the earlier volumes before their license expired. In 2017
Kodansha USA licensed the series for release in digital format, and released all volumes on October 3 of that same year.
Rave Master was also one of the first manga series released in Spanish in North America by
Public Square Books. In 2011, Mashima authored a
crossover one-shot between
Rave Master and
Fairy Tail. It was published in Kodansha's
Magazine Special May issue. Another crossover manga between
Rave Master,
Fairy Tail, and
Edens Zero was published in
Weekly Shōnen Magazine from October 16 to December 25, 2019.
Anime The series was adapted into a fifty-one episode anime series, entitled
Groove Adventure Rave, by
Studio Deen. It was directed by
Takashi Watanabe and the music was composed by
Kenji Kawai. The anime premiered on
TBS on October 13, 2001, and ran until September 28, 2002. The anime series is based on the first twelve volumes of the manga series. The series was also collected in a total of seventeen DVD volumes between February 6, 2002, and June 4, 2003.
Tokyopop licensed the series for release and broadcast in North America. As with the manga, Tokyopop released the series under the name
Rave Master. Rita Majkut produced the English-language version, which edited the series for its content and length and given an alternate musical score composed by Glenn Scott Lacey. The dub was recorded at Bill & Ted's Recording Studio in
Burbank. The ADR writer was
Bob Buchholz, and
Marc Handler was the voice director for all of the episodes. The dub aired on
Cartoon Network in the United States, premiering in June 2004 as part of the
Toonami programming block. The series' second half began airing on January 22, 2005. It was also on the
MiGUZi weekday afternoon after-school action block and its Sunday Morning daytime lineup of Summer 2005.
Syfy would begun airing the series on March 16, 2009, as part of its "Ani-Monday" programming block, where it ran until its conclusion on September 21, 2009. Tokyopop released three DVD volumes of the series and in 2010 it collected the entire series. The one-shot crossover between
Rave Master and
Fairy Tail was adapted into an
original video animation with Mashima himself acting as supervisor to the project and had expanded the original chapter to include more characters from
Rave Master. It was released on August 16, 2013, alongside the thirty-ninth volume of
Fairy Tail.
CDs The Japanese audio by Kenji Kawai was released in a total of four CD soundtracks by King Records. Geneon also published a CD based on the Japanese soundtrack for English release under the title of
Rave Master: Music Side.
Video games There are six video games based on
Rave Master published by Konami. Three games were released for the PlayStation including the role-playing games
Groove Adventure Rave and its sequel , and platforming game
Plue no Daibouken from Groove Adventure Rave. For
Nintendo's consoles Konami released both
Groove Adventure Rave and
Rave Master: Special Attack Force! (
Groove Adventure Rave: Hikari to Yami no Daikessen 2), two
fighting games for the
Game Boy Advance, and
Rave Master, which was released on the
GameCube. ==Reception==