Manga Atsushi Ohkubo wrote three
one-shot chapters published by
Square Enix. and were published in the summer and autumn special editions of
Gangan Powered, released on June 24 and September 22, 2003, respectively; the third one-shot, "Death the Kid", was published in
Gangan Wing on November 26, 2003.
Soul Eater started in Square Enix's
manga magazine
Monthly Shōnen Gangan on May 12, 2004, and finished after a nine-year run in the magazine on August 12, 2013. Square Enix compiled the series' 113 individual chapters into 25 volumes, released under its
Gangan Comics imprint, between June 22, 2004, and December 12, 2013. Square Enix republished the series in a 17-volume edition, titled
Soul Eater: The Perfect Edition, released from July 12, 2019, to March 12, 2020. The manga has been licensed by
Yen Press for distribution in English in North America. The manga was initially serialized in Yen Press'
Yen Plus anthology magazine; the first issue went on sale on July 29, 2008. The first English volume of the manga was published on October 27, 2009. The last volume was published on March 24, 2015. In July 2019, Square Enix announced the English release of
Soul Eater: The Perfect Edition. The 17 volumes were released from July 28, 2020, to February 4, 2025. Another manga series by Ohkubo,
Soul Eater Not!, which ran alongside the main series, was serialized in
Monthly Shōnen Gangan from January 12, 2011, to November 10, 2014. Five volumes were released between September 22, 2011, and December 22, 2014. It was licensed by Yen Press in North America, with its five volumes released from July 24, 2012, and August 4, 2015.
Drama CD A
drama CD was released on August 31, 2005, by
Square Enix titled . The CD came bundled with an art book and a script of the CD dialogue. Of the cast used for the drama CD, only Black Star's voice actress
Yumiko Kobayashi was retained for the anime voice cast.
Anime A 51-episode
anime adaptation was directed by
Takuya Igarashi and produced by
Bones,
Aniplex,
Dentsu,
Media Factory, and
TV Tokyo; Bones and Aniplex were responsible for the animation and music production respectively. The scenario writer was Akatsuki Yamatoya who based the anime's story on Ohkubo's original concept. Character design was headed by Yoshiyuki Ito, with overall art direction by Norifumi Nakamura. The anime's conceptual design was done by
Shinji Aramaki. The episodes aired on TV Tokyo between April 7, 2008, and March 30, 2009, and two animated specials aired on May 29 and June 1, 2008. The series aired in two versions: the regular evening broadcast and a late-night "
Soul Eater Late Show" version, which included special footage. The dual broadcast of the series was billed as the "world's first evening and late-night resonance broadcast". The "resonance" term refers to a story concept in which Maka and her living weapon partner, Soul Eater, achieve maximum power by synchronizing their souls. Media Factory collected the episodes in thirteen DVDs, released from August 22, 2008, to August 25, 2009. The series was rebroadcast on TV Tokyo, under the title , on September 30, 2010, featuring new opening and closing themes. Media Factory and
Kadokawa brought the two previous Blu-ray box sets together into one box set released on February 26, 2014. In North America, the anime has been licensed by
Funimation, who released the series in four half-season DVD box sets starting with the first volume in February 2010. The anime made its North American television debut on
Funimation Channel in September 2010. It later aired on
Adult Swim's
Toonami programming block from February 17, 2013, to March 16, 2014.
Video games Three
Soul Eater video games were produced. The first, is an
action-adventure video game exclusively for the
Wii and developed by
Square Enix with
Bones. It was released on September 25, 2008, in Japan. Two characters that appear in the game, and , are original characters designed by author Ohkubo; Ponera is the titular Monotone Princess and Grimoire is known as
Noah in the manga. A soundtrack called was released as a pre-order bonus CD. The second game, is an
action game produced by
Namco Bandai Games for the
Nintendo DS and was released on October 23, 2008. Despite being created by two different companies, there are similarities between the Nintendo Wii game and the Nintendo DS game. It is a third-person hack-and-slash game. The third game, is a
fighting game developed by
BEC and produced by Namco Bandai Games for the
PlayStation 2 and
PlayStation Portable, and was released on January 29, 2009. This game follows the story line of the first 24 episodes of the anime series and allows the player to engage in the training and battles the characters experienced first hand. Along with new costumes and items, the player gets to experience the minds and wardrobes of each playable character.
Music Six pieces of
theme music are used for the episodes: two opening themes and four ending themes. The first opening theme is "
Resonance" by
T.M.Revolution for the first 30 episodes. The second opening theme is "
Papermoon" by
Tommy heavenly6 from episode 31 onward. The first ending theme is "I Wanna Be" by
Stance Punks for the first 13 episodes and the 51 episode. The second ending theme is "Style" by
Kana Nishino from episode 14 to 26. The third ending theme is by
Soul'd Out's Diggy-Mo from episode 27 to 39. The final ending theme is "Strength" by
Abingdon Boys School from episode 40 through episode 50. The anime rebroadcasting features two additional opening and ending themes. The first opening is "Counter Identity" by
Unison Square Garden, and the first ending is by
Yui Makino. The second opening is by
Shion Tsuji and the second ending is "Northern Lights" by How Merry Marry.
Other media An
art exhibition to celebrate the series' 20th anniversary ran at Tokyo's Space Galleria from August 23 to September 23, 2024, and at Osaka's Space Gratus from October 25 to November 25 of the same year. A special video featuring
Chiaki Omigawa and
Koki Uchiyama, Maka and Soul's voice actors respectively, was released alongside a teaser visual for the event. ==Reception==