Manga Written and illustrated by
Takehiko Inoue,
Slam Dunk was serialized in
Shueisha's
manga magazine
Weekly Shōnen Jump from October 1, 1990, to June 17, 1996. The 276 individual chapters were originally collected in 31 volumes under Shueisha's Jump Comics imprint, with the first being published on February 8, 1991, and the final volume on October 3, 1996. It was later reassembled into 24 volumes under the Jump Comics Deluxe imprint from March 19, 2001, to February 2, 2002. A 20 volume edition was published between June 1 and September 1, 2018. On November 8, 2022, a book imitating an issue of
Weekly Shōnen Jump and collecting 24 select chapters of the original manga was published under the title
Slam Dunk Jump. In North America, an English version of
Slam Dunk was published by the now-defunct
Gutsoon! Entertainment, which serialized the title in their manga anthology
Raijin Comics from 2002 to 2004. Five collected volumes were published under Gutsoon's
Raijin Graphic Novels imprint. They were released from July 2, 2003, until May 5, 2004. After Gutsoon! went out of business, the license for
Slam Dunk was purchased by
Viz Media, which published a preview of the series in the December 2007 issue of the North American edition of
Shonen Jump.
Slam Dunk began serialization in the magazine, starting with the May 2008 issue, as well as in format with the first being published on September 2, 2008. The 31st and final volume was released on December 3, 2013.
10 Days After In 2004, Inoue produced an epilogue titled
Slam Dunk: 10 Days After, which was drawn on 23 chalkboards on the former campus of the defunct Misaki High School located in
Kanagawa Prefecture, and was held for public exhibition for three days between December 3 and 5. The epilogue, along with coverage of the event, was printed in the February 2005 issue of
Switch magazine. A documentary of the event was released on DVD in May 2005. The epilogue was published in book form by Flower under the title
Slam Dunk 10 Days After Complete on April 10, 2009.
Anime series and
Toei Animation An anime series, consisting of 101 episodes, was produced by
Toei Animation and directed by Nobutaka Nishizawa. It was first broadcast on
TV Asahi from October 16, 1993, to March 23, 1996. It was later aired on the
satellite television network,
Animax, in addition to four animated movies produced. The anime followed the manga storyline, but left out the National Tournament games. Toei compiled the episodes into a series of seventeen DVDs which were released in Japan from December 10, 2004, to May 21, 2005. Toei once again collected the series in three DVD boxes during 2008. All the three boxes have a total of seventeen discs. To celebrate 20 years since its broadcast, the anime was released on Blu-ray format. Toei and
Geneon briefly teamed up to release the anime on DVD in North America after the manga was discontinued, though this was also discontinued after only a few volumes. The first DVD was released on March 15, 2005, and volume 4 was the last one released on June 14, 2005, before they were cancelled. Various episodes from the series were also downloadable in
IGN's Direct2Drive service. Toei made available the series for streaming on
Crunchyroll in 2008.
Joost also started streaming the series in May 2009. The music was composed by Takanobu Masuda (from episode 1 to 61) and BMF (from episode 62 to 101). Three CD soundtracks were published during the airing of the series in Japan. The openings, ending and other two themes were collected into the CD soundtrack
The Best of TV Animation Slam Dunk, released on July 21, 2003.
Anime films Four anime films were produced by
Toei Animation from 1994 to 1995 while the manga and TV series were still running. They contain largely new material that is either only hinted at or is not presented in the manga. From August 1 to 4, 2006,
NHK broadcast all four movies as part of its satellite networks NHK BS-2's
Summer Anime Choice line-up, and
TV Osaka aired the last three movies from January 3 to 8, 2007. All the films were collected into a DVD box named
Slam Dunk The Movie which was released on December 10, 2004. The first film, simply titled
Slam Dunk, premiered on March 12, 1994. Set after Shohoku's practice game against Ryonan (before the second half of episode 20), the film focuses on a practice game against Takezono High. Before the game, Sakuragi runs into Yoko Shimura, the girl who rejects him in the very first scene of the series, and Oda, the basketball player she rejected him for. released on July 9, 1994, is the second film from the series. It happens during Shohoku's 4th round qualifying game against Tsukubu High (between the first half of episode 36). The film features original characters including Godai, an old friend of Akagi and Kogure's, Rango, a wild show-off who is in love with Haruko and quarrels with Sakuragi, and Coach Kawasaki, a former pupil of Anzai-sensei. was released on March 4, 1995. Set after Shohoku's loss to Kainan, and during a practice match against Ryokufu High (between episode 61). which was released one June 15, 1995, tells that Rukawa's middle school Ichiro Mizusawa will be paralyzed soon and wishes to have one last game against Rukawa (between the first half of episode 62). Inoue is the director and writer of the film, with Yasuyuki Ebara designing the characters. It premiered in Japan on December 3, 2022.
Video games Numerous video games based on the series, mostly developed by
Banpresto and produced by
Bandai, have been published for the Japanese market. Two basketball sims titled and
Slam Dunk 2 were released for the
Game Boy. The
Super Famicom had three games, and
SD Heat Up!!.
Slam Dunk games have also been released for the
Game Gear,
Mega Drive, and
Sega Saturn. A
Slam Dunk coin-operated arcade game developed by Video System and published by
Banpresto was released in 1995, which was called From TV Animation Slam Dunk: Super Slams. During development, the game was called
3 on 3 Dunk Madness and did not have the Slam Dunk license. Characters of the series also appear in the
Nintendo DS games
Jump Super Stars and
Jump Ultimate Stars. Unofficial game modifications have been made by fans for
NBA 2K13 (PC version).
Other media A novel depicting an original story written by Yoshiyuki Suga was published on December 2, 1994. Illustrations from
Slam Dunk are included in the art book
Inoue Takehiko Illustrations, which was published on June 4, 1997, and
Plus/Slam Dunk Illustrations 2, which followed on April 3, 2020.
Slam Dunk Shōri-gaku, a book written by sports psychologist Shuichi Tsuji on the "Psychology of Winning" and using
Slam Dunk as a reference, was published on October 5, 2000. ==Reception==