During the
Meiji (1868–1912) and
Taisho (1912–1926) periods, the Shinsengumi were generally unpopular. At that time, the Japanese considered the
Meiji Restoration a great achievement and regarded the current system centered around Satsuma and Choshu as just. Therefore, the Shinsengumi were perceived as a foolish group resisting the Meiji Restoration. This prevailing notion began to change with
Kan Shimozawa's novel "Shinsengumi Shimatsuki" (1928). Furthermore, after World War II, there was a reevaluation of history among the Japanese.
Ryōtarō Shiba's novel "
Moeyo Ken" (1964) gained popularity, spreading empathy towards the way of life of the Shinsengumi. Today, the Shinsengumi is depicted and beloved by people through various media such as novels, movies, dramas, anime, and more. • An early film,
The Legend of (1963) was based on a 1928 novel of the same name. • In 1969, a full-length film,
: Assassins of Honour, starring
Toshiro Mifune was released. It depicted the rise and fall of the Shinsengumi. • The main characters of were named after Shinsengumi members. • The 1999 film
Taboo () depicted the Shinsengumi one year after the Ikedaya affair. The film shows the Shinsengumi's strict code and acceptance of homosexuality among the samurai members. • Manga artist
Nobuhiro Watsuki is a self-proclaimed fan of the Shinsengumi, and many of his characters in are based on its members, including
Sagara Sanosuke (inspired by Harada Sanosuke);
Shinomori Aoshi (modeled after Hijikata Toshizō);
Seta Sōjirō (based on Okita Souji); and
Saitō Hajime. • The 2003
manga, , or
Goodbye Shinsengumi, by Kenji Morita depicted the life of Hijikata Toshizō. The manga presents a fictional tale of a girl joining the Shinsengumi in disguise and falling in love with Okita Soji. • The manga
Peacemaker Kurogane by Nanae Chrono is a historical fiction taking place during the end of the Tokugawa period, following a young boy.
Ichimura Tetsunosuke, who tries to join the Shinsengumi. • The anime series
Soar High! Isami features three fifth-graders who are fictional descendants of the Shinsengumi and fight against the evil organization the Black Goblin. • The game, anime and film series (, ) follows a girl looking for her lost father, a doctor who worked with the Shinsengumi. The premise mixes supernatural elements and fictional enemies and historical events. The Shinsengumi characters are fictionalized adaptations of the real members and retain their real names. • , a 2015
free-to-play collectible card browser video game developed by
Nitroplus and
DMM Games with multiple different spinoff anime series, (2016) and (2018), both for a younger audience, as well as the more sophisticated (2017), is about a universe in which the legendary swords, spears, and guns of famous warriors from Japan's feudal past are granted human form and come to life in a swashbuckling historical adventure. The swords of Shinsengumi memberw Okita Souji, Hijikata Toshizo, and Isami Kondo are featured. One of the most prominent characters is Hijikata's longsword, which bore the name Izumi-no-Kami Kanesada. • The 2004 video game , which was developed by
Genki and published by
Konami, is based on the Shinsengumi. • In March 2012, a stand-alone expansion for
Total War: Shogun 2 set during the Boshin War was released.
Fall of the Samurai features the as recruitable agents used for assassination and bribery, and as an elite combat unit capable of fighting both at range and in melee. •
Moeyo Ken is a video game and also an anime series about girl members of the Shinsengumi. • ("Burn My Sword") is the name of a famous 1964 novel by
Ryōtarō Shiba about the
Boshin War (1868 to 1869
CE) from the point of view of Hijikata Toshizō. It is regarded by Shinsengumi fans as the 'bible' of Shinsengumi fiction and was the first literary work to focus on Hijikata; previously, Shinsengumi stories tended to focus on the commander Isami Kondo. Shiba also published short stories about the Shinsengumi. His Shinsengumi fiction has not yet been translated into English; it is available in Japanese and Chinese. • Japanese television period drama was broadcast on
TV Asahi in 1998. • The Shinsengumi appear in the mobile game
Fate/Grand Order, initially as one of two factions players can side with during the GUDAGUDA 2: Meiji Restoration event. Members of this team include Servant versions of Okita Souji and Hijikata Toshizo, which are both limited-availability Servants. Shinsengumi is also the name of Toshizo's Noble Phantasm, which gets much stronger as his HP gets lower. Furthermore, in GUDAGUDA 5: Yamanataikoku, servant versions of Saitou Hajime, Yamanami Keisuke, and Serizawa Kamo were introduced. As of 2025, Shinsengumi members available as playable party members include Saitou, Yamanami, Nagakura Shinpachi, Harada Sanosuke and Todo Heisuke. The 2025 event Bakumatsu Chanbara Shinwa: GUDAGUDA Shinsengumi The End REVENGE OF MAKOTO prominently featured the Shinsengumi-based characters, among them the first in-game appearanceor Kondou Isami, and included an obtainable Shinsengumi uniform costume for the player character. • The feature heavily in the plot of the 2014 video game . In this game, main protagonist
Sakamoto Ryoma, a 19th-century
doppelgänger of main series protagonist
Kazuma Kiryu, becomes the group's third unit captain under the alias of Saito Hajime. • The appears in the app . Players are confrontations to members by
Koi Koi. • In the manga
Golden Kamuy and its anime adaptation, Hijikata appears as the leader of one of the contending groups trying to locate a cache of gold on Hokkaido soon after the Russo-Japanese War. He would have been in his seventies at the time the story takes place. • The manga and anime
Gintama features its own alternate reality version of the Shinsengumi as regular characters, including members with surnames such as Kondo, Hijikata, and Okita. • The manga and anime
The Blue Wolves of Mibu is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by
Tsuyoshi Yasuda. • In 2024, Toei produced a television drama based on the 1963 Shinsengumi manga by
Osamu Tezuka titled: With You I Bloom: The Shinsengumi Youth Chronicle starring Oku Tomoya and Maeda Kentaro in the leads. The story revolves around two fictional Shinsengumi soldiers Fukakusa Kyujuro and Kamagiri Daisaku. After his father is killed at the hands of the choshu, Kyujuro joins the Shinsengumi to improve his sword skills and avenge his death. At the entrance exam, he meets Daisaku, a promising newcomer with excellent sword skills. Although the two develop a passionate friendship, they are at the mercy of the times and are destined to have to kill each other. This drama also features fictional versions of historical figures such as
Kondo Isami,
Hijikata Toshizo,
Okita Soji,
Harada Sanosuke,
Saito Hajime,
Serizawa Kamo and
Sakamoto Ryoma. • The 2024 video game
Rise of the Ronin heavily features the Shinsengumi in Chapter 2, as the player is tasked to join them alongside their ally, Sakamoto Ryoma. == See also ==