Manga Written and illustrated by
Tsukasa Hojo,
City Hunter started in
Shueisha's
manga anthology
Weekly Shōnen Jump on February 26, 1985, and ran until the December 2, 1991, issue. Its chapters were collected by Shueisha in 35 volumes, under the
Jump Comics imprint, between January 15, 1986, and April 15, 1992. In these volumes the series is grouped into 55 different stories or "episodes" instead of as their original individual chapters. Each story is centred on a different female character or "heroine". An 18-volume edition was released by Shueisha from June 18, 1996, to October 17, 1997. A third edition
City Hunter Complete Edition of 32 volumes was published by
Tokuma Shoten from December 16, 2003, to April 15, 2005. To celebrate the 30th anniversary of the series, a fourth edition,
City Hunter XYZ edition, was published by Tokuma Shoten across twelve volumes from July 18 to December 19, 2015. In 2019, a fifth edition,
City Hunter Zenon Selection, was released in 29 volumes by Coamix to coincide with the French live-action adaptation of
City Hunter,
Nicky Larson et le parfum de Cupidon. Attempts were made to license the series for the American comic market during the 1980s; however, Hojo insisted the manga should be released in the right-to-left format. In 2002
Coamix created an American subsidiary,
Gutsoon! Entertainment.
City Hunter was a flagship title in their
Raijin Comics anthology.
Raijin switched from a weekly format to a monthly format before being cancelled after 46 issues. In 2022, Coamix's MangaHot service began publishing
City Hunter manga in English digitally. In April 2025,
Abrams ComicArts announced that it will start releasing the manga in an omnibus edition in print under its Kana imprint on September 9 of the same year. Kana is using a new English translation for the release.
Spin-offs From 2001 to 2017, Hojo serialized a spin-off series titled
Angel Heart. The series takes place in a
universe parallel to
City Hunter, where the character of Kaori Makimura is killed and her heart transplanted into Xiang-Ying,
Angel Hearts protagonist. A spin-off manga by Sokura Nishiki, , was launched in Tokuma Shoten's
Monthly Comic Zenon magazine on July 25, 2017. It is centered around a 40-year-old unmarried woman who is a fan of Ryō Saeba and the
City Hunter manga, and suddenly dies in a train accident and is reincarnated into the world of
City Hunter. A spin-off manga by
Est Em, , was serialized in
Monthly Comic Zenon from April 29, 2019, to August 27, 2021, and compiled into five volumes.
Anime The series was adapted into an anime series produced by
Sunrise, directed by
Kanetsugu Kodama and broadcast by
Yomiuri Television. •
City Hunter was broadcast for 51 episodes between April 6, 1987, and March 28, 1988, and released on ten VHS cassettes between December 1987 and July 1988. •
City Hunter 2 was broadcast for 63 episodes between April 8, 1988, and July 14, 1989, and released on ten VHS cassettes between August 1988 and March 1990. 26 of the discs comprising the four series were then released individually between December 19, 2007, and August 27, 2008. 30,000 box sets were sold, grossing (), in Japan. For the 30th anniversary of the original manga, buyers of all 12 volumes of
City Hunter XYZ edition were entitled receive a "motion graphic anime" DVD. The DVDe adapted a special
Angel Heart chapter entitled "Ryo's Proposal" and was voiced by the original
City Hunter cast. The series was licensed by
ADV Films for release in North America; they announced their acquisition in May 1998 at
Project A-Kon 9. The first
City Hunter series was released on the ADV Fansubs label in March 2000. The aim of this label was to provide cheaper subtitled-only VHS releases at a faster pace than usual. The series was scheduled for 13 tapes, consisting of four episodes each. The tapes could be ordered individually or as a subscription service. ADV later released the series on DVD. The first series was released as two boxsets of five discs on July 29, 2003.
City Hunter 2 was released as another two boxsets of five discs on October 28, and November 18, 2003.
City Hunter 3 was released as a single boxset on December 2, 2003, and ''City Hunter '91'' was released on December 16, 2003. On April 20, 2019,
Discotek Media announced that they had licensed the entire
City Hunter animated franchise, including the 2019 movie,
Shinjuku Private Eyes. The first 26 episodes of the first series were released on Blu-ray on February 25, 2020, and ''City Hunter '91'' was released on April 26, 2022.
Theatrical movies Three theatrical movies were released in 1989 and 1990:
.357 Magnum was released on June 17, 1989,
Bay City Wars was released on August 25, 1990, and
Million Dollar Conspiracy was released on August 25, 1990. During their panel at
Otakon 2022, Discotek Media announced that they licensed all the previously licensed ADV film releases and
Death of the Vicious Criminal Ryo Saeba television movie, and released them in a Blu-ray collection on January 31, 2023. A theatrical movie produced by Aniplex, titled
City Hunter: Shinjuku Private Eyes, set in present-day Shinjuku, premiered in Japan on February 8, 2019, after Sunrise and Kenji Kodama returned to animate and direct the film, respectively. The Kisugi sisters of ''
Cat's Eye'' appeared in the film as a crossover. Discotek Media premiered the English dub of the movie at Otakon 2019, and released it on Blu-ray on May 26, 2020. Another film,
City Hunter: Angel Dust, was released on September 8, 2023.
Television movies Three television movies were produced:
The Secret Service was broadcast on January 5, 1996, which was followed by
Goodbye My Sweetheart on April 25, 1997, and
Death of Vicious Criminal Ryo Saeba on April 23, 1999. They released
The Secret Service on VHS on December 5, 2000, and on DVD on June 25, 2002. Discotek Media released
Death of the Vicious Criminal Ryo Saeba with all films previously licensed by ADV in a Blu-ray collection on January 31, 2023.
Live action Hong Kong films Saviour of the Soul (九一神鵰俠侶
Gauyat sandiu haplui) is a live-action
Hong Kong film from 1991 that uses the characters from
City Hunter but changes the plot. During filming of the movie, Chan dislocated his shoulder. The movie has been criticised by Chan. Fortune Star and
20th Century Fox later released it on R1 DVD along with other budget classic HK films.
Proposed Chinese film In 2016, a new
Chinese film based on
City Hunter was announced to be in development. It was announced that it would be directed by Hong Kong filmmaker
Stanley Tong and star Chinese actor
Huang Xiaoming as Ryo Saeba. The French adaptation has
Philippe Lacheau as director as well as the star, playing the title character Nicky Larson (as Ryo Saeba is known in the French dubs of the anime series).
Netflix film In December 2022,
Netflix announced a live-action film adaptation in the works with lead actor
Ryohei Suzuki as Ryo Saeba and Misato Morita as Kaori Makimura. Directed by
Yūichi Satō, the film premiered on the streaming service on April 25, 2024.
Television series A planned live-action television series of City Hunter was announced in 2008, to be produced and distributed by Fox Television Studios and South Korean media company SSD.
Jung Woo-sung, was scheduled to play Ryo alongside Hollywood-based stars, with location filming in
Seoul and
Tokyo. In 2011, the series was adapted into a
Korean television series of the same name by
SBS, starring
Lee Min-ho and
Park Min-young. The series is available to watch with English subtitles on the streaming service
Hulu. In 2014, there was a Chinese television series based on
City Hunter, with the title
Cheng Shi Lie Ren (). In 2015, the spin-off manga
Angel Heart received its own
live-action Japanese TV drama adaptation.
Musical In 2021, the
Takarazuka Revue produced a musical version titled . It was performed at the Takarazuka Grand Theater from August 7 to September 13, 2021, and then at the Tokyo Takarazuka Theater from October 2 to November 14. The musical starred Sakina Ayakaze as Ryo Saeba and Kiwa Asazuki as Kaori Makimura.
Video games A
City Hunter video game for the
PC Engine was released by
Sunsoft on March 2, 1990. Ryo appears as a playable character in the crossover
fighting game Jump Force. ==Reception==