Manga Crayon Shin-chan, written and illustrated by
Yoshito Usui, debuted in
Futabasha's
seinen manga magazine
Weekly Manga Action in 1990. It started as a spin-off of the character Shinnosuke Nikaido (二階堂信之介) of another series by Yoshito Usui, Darakuya Store Monogatari (だらくやストア物語). The chapters were collected into 50
tankōbon volumes, which were published under Futabasha's
Action Comics imprint, from April 11, 1992, to July 10, 2010. Yoshito Usui died on September 11, 2009, after a fall at Mount Arafune. After Usui died,
Futabasha originally planned to end
Crayon Shin-chan in November 2009. Upon discovering new manuscripts, Futabasha decided to extend the comic's run until the March 2010 issue of the magazine, which shipped on February 5, 2010. Although the series formally ended on February 5, 2010, it was announced on December 1, 2009, that a new manga would begin in the summer of 2010 by members of Usui's team, A series of four bilingual Japanese-English manga were released in 1996 in Japan as
Shin-chan: The Little Horror! (クレヨンしんちゃんの楽しいゾ英会話).
ComicsOne translated ten volumes of Crayon Shin-chan into
English and released it in the
United States of America. Occasional
pop culture references familiar to Americans, such as
Pokémon and
Britney Spears, were added to increase the appeal to American audiences. The manga is mirrored from its original to read from left to right. Starting with the sixth volume, many of the names were changed to the ones used in the Vitello and Phuuz English version of the anime, even though the dub never aired in North America. This translation is rated Teen. Since then, American publisher
DrMaster took over the licenses of several manga series, including
Crayon Shin-chan, from ComicsOne. No new volumes of
Crayon Shin-chan were released under the DrMaster imprint. On July 28, 2007, DC Comics' manga division
CMX announced the acquisition of the Crayon Shin-chan manga. The CMX version is rated Mature instead of Teen from ComicsOne, because of nudity, sexual humor, dirty and bad language. The first volume was released on February 27, 2008, with uncensored art, and the style of jokes that frequent the Adult Swim dub with some throw backs to the original version, such as his original greeting. However, volume 10 omitted a gag which was in the ComicsOne version. On April 11, 2012, One Peace Books announced their release of the manga, which is a reprint of the CMX version, in an omnibus format. Three omnibus volumes were released simultaneously on October 15, 2012. Volume 4 was released on November 13, 2013, and included the Japanese volume 12, marking the first time that particular volume has an English translation. The Crayon Shin-chan manga spin-off, Action Mask, is currently available as read-only/print-only subscription from
Crunchyroll and Futabasha. The main Shin-chan manga is also available from Crunchyroll using the CMX version, concurrently up to volume 10.
Anime Television series An anime adaptation of
Crayon Shin-chan, produced by
Shin-Ei Animation, has aired in Japan on
TV Asahi since April 13, 1992. The series was originally directed by
Mitsuru Hongo from 1992 to 1996, and was replaced by
Keiichi Hara from 1996 to 2004. Since 2004, the series is directed by Yuji Muto. The music in the series is composed by
Toshiyuki Arakawa. The series was originally going to end in 1994 and have its time-slot replaced by a remake of
Umeboshi Denka. However, because the series was a huge hit on TV Asahi, the network decided not to replace it. An English subtitled version of
Crayon Shin-chan ran on
KIKU in
Hawaii from December 18, 1993, until December 2001 when Lacey Entertainment acquired the rights. The episodes were translated by Karlton Tomomitsu.
Spin-offs A Spin-off
SHIN-MEN which is set in a parallel world consists of 13 episodes aired from November 26, 2010, to September 14, 2012. Another spin-off series called
Crayon Shin-chan Gaiden consisting of four volumes is exclusively streaming on
Amazon Prime Video worldwide with English, German, Spanish, French, Italian and Portuguese subtitles. An anime spin-off series titled
Super Shiro was announced on February 3, 2019. The spin-off focuses on Shin-chan's dog Shiro. The series was directed by
Masaaki Yuasa and animated at
Science SARU. Kimiko Ueno handled series composition, while
Tomohisa Shimoyama served as chief director.
TV Asahi,
Shin-Ei Animation, ADK EM, and
Futabasha produced the anime. The series ran for 48 episodes, with each episode being five minutes long. The series premiered on October 14, 2019, on
AbemaTV. An English dub premiered on
Cartoon Network in Australia and Southeast Asia. Another spin-off titled
Nohara Hiroshi Hirumeshi no Ryūgi premiered in October 2025.
Crossovers A special crossover series titled
Kamen Rider Fourze x Crayon Shin-chan was aired in April 2012 featuring Shin-chan and
Kamen Rider Fourze to promote
Crayon Shin-chan: Fierceness That Invites Storm! Me and the Space Princess. On 2016 an animated crossover episode with
Godzilla was broadcast in Japan. The
Sanrio character
Hello Kitty appeared in the first
Reiwa-era episode of Crayon Shin-chan.
International releases The series was first dubbed into English by
Vitello Productions in
Burbank, California through 2001–2002, when TV Asahi and
Lacey Entertainment decided to market the series worldwide. During the early 2000s, it ran on
Fox Kids (and later
Jetix) in the
United Kingdom, on
Fox Kids in
Australia, on
Channel i in
Singapore and on
RTÉ Two in the
Republic of Ireland. Subtitled versions also aired on
Stöd 2 in
Iceland and on
Arutz HaYeladim in
Israel. RTÉ Two has not shown the series since 2005, and on Jetix UK, the series was eventually relegated to shorts in-between programs, as a slot-filler. The dub is of American origin, with veteran voice actors such as
Kath Soucie,
Russi Taylor,
Grey DeLisle,
Pat Fraley, Eric Loomis and
Anndi McAfee playing the characters. Soucie voiced Shin and Misae. In 2003,
Phuuz entertainment inc. was commissioned by Lacey Entertainment and TV Asahi to continue in a similar style as the Vitello dub. But their episodes featured a new cast of voice artists (among others
Diane Michelle,
Julie Maddalena, Peter Doyle).
52 episodes have been produced of the Vitello dub and
52 episodes of the Phuuz dub. Vitello and Phuuz episodes lasted on an average 21 minutes and contained three segments of 5 to 7 minutes. Some of the dubs of the series used the Vitello dub as the source for the dubbing. Some dubs also dubbed the Phuuz dub afterwards.
Funimation (now
Crunchyroll, LLC) acquired the Shin-chan North America license in 2006. As per all international licenses for the series, TV Asahi remained a licensing partner for North America. Funimation's version features a
Texas-based cast of voice actors. Funimation's dub takes many liberties with the source material and was heavily Americanized. Similar to the Vitello dub, episodes of the series were dubbed out of their original order, and segments were reordered. Additionally, many characters had their names changed to American-sounding ones. Many sexual references, dark humor, and references to current popular American culture were added. For example, in one scene, Ai and Penny argue over which one of them is
Jessica Simpson (whose first album was not released until 1999) and which one is
Ashlee Simpson (whose first album was not released until 2004), which is very different from the original Japanese script that dealt with many social issues within Japan at the time. At least two episodes reference
Rudy Giuliani and his unsuccessful bid for president. New, previously non-existent backstories were created, as well as significantly different personalities for the characters. For instance, the unseen father of Nene (known in the dub as "Penny") was suggested to be physically abusive toward both his wife and daughter, and this was used as a source of black humor. Principal Enchou was rewritten as a half-Peruvian, half-Romani man with a complicated prior life that includes a stint as a magician, in which he accidentally injured scores of audience members. Ageo-sensei (known in the dub as "Miss Polly"), Shinnosuke's teacher, was rewritten as a kinky
nymphomaniac, while Shin's schoolmate, Kazama, (known in the dub as "Georgie") was portrayed as a hawkish young
Republican. The first 52 episodes of the dub aired on
Adult Swim.
All three seasons, 26 episodes per season, have also been released on DVD. Season 3, released in 2011, culminated in the official finale, effectively ending the Funimation series. On August 9, 2025, it was announced the FUNimation English dub will be released on Blu-ray by
Discotek Media. A fourth English dub of Crayon Shin-chan has been produced in Hong Kong by Red Angel Media in 2015 and was commissioned by LUK Internacional, the company that produces the Spanish, Portuguese, the second Italian and the second French dubs of Crayon Shin-chan and commissioned the
Doraemon dub that aired on Boomerang UK. The dub was translated from LUK Internacional's Spanish dub, which is close to the Japanese original and has no censorship. The first three volumes of the dub were released in the European and South African
Nintendo 3DS eShop on December 22, 2016, and the fourth and fifth volumes were released on December 29, 2016. The dub is separated into five volumes, with the first volume being free while the other four cost €1.99/£1.79. The first volume contains two episodes while the other four contain 6 episodes each which makes
26 episodes in total. In
India,
Hindi dubs of the anime started airing on
Hungama TV on June 19, 2006. Later, it also began airing in
Tamil and
Telugu dubs. In 2024,
Sony YAY! also started airing the Hindi dub, also providing dubbed versions in
Bengali, Tamil & Telugu. As of September 2025, all films have been dubbed in Hindi, Tamil, and Telugu, and have aired on
Hungama TV and
Sony YAY!. In the
Philippines,
IBC 13 aired a Filipino dub of the anime in the early 2000s with Shinnosuke being voiced by Filipino rapper
Andrew E, and later by Richie Padilla.
Music Openings • Lyricist:
Yoshito Usui / Composer:
Tetsurō Oda / Arranger: Masao Akashi / Singers: TUNE'SEpisode Range: 1–21 (SPECIAL 1 ending theme) • Lyricist: Daiko Nagato / Composer: Tetsurō Oda / Arranger: Takeshi Hayama / Singers:
B.B. QueensEpisode Range: 22–57 • Lyricist: Reo Rinozuka / Composer: Yasuo Kosugi / Arranger: Michiaki Kato / Singer: Shinnosuke Nohara (
Akiko Yajima) and Misae Nohara (
Miki Narahashi)Episode Range: SPECIAL 3–161 (First used as the opening theme for SPECIAL 2, and was used as the ending theme for episode 776) • Lyricist: Poem-dan / Composer/Arranger:
Takashi Kimura / Singer: Shinnosuke Nohara (Akiko Yajima)Episode Range: 162–SPECIAL 13 (Also used as the opening theme for
Crayon Shin-chan: Great Adventure in Henderland) • Lyricist: C's / Composer/Arranger: Satoru Sugawara / Singer: PuppyEpisode Range: 203–SPECIAL 20 • Lyricist/Arranger/Composer:
motsu / Singers: Shinnosuke Nohara (Akiko Yajima) and Action Mask (
Tesshō Genda)Episode Range: 270–352 • Lyricist/Composer: LADY Q / Arranger: Toshiya Mori / Singers: LADY Q and Shinnosuke Nohara (Akiko Yajima) and Misae Nohara (
Miki Narahashi)Episode Range: 353–458 • "PLEASURE"Lyricist: Chihiro Kurosu / Composer: Kaori Hosoi / Arranger:
Nobuyuki Shimizu / Singer:
Tomomi KahalaEpisode Range: 459–SPECIAL 43 • Lyricist: Yuji Muto / Composer/Arranger: Yasunari Nakamura / Singer: Shinnosuke Nohara (Akiko Yajima)Episode Range: 509–594, 604–681 • Lyricist: Yuji Muto / Composer: Yasunari Nakamura / Arranger: Takafumi Iwasaki / Singer: Shinnosuke Nohara (Akiko Yajima) and Crayon Friends from
AKB48Episode Range: 595–603 • Singer:
Becky♪♯Episode Range: 682–708 • "HEY BABY"Singer:
Kumi KodaEpisode Range: 709–724 • "T.W.L."Singer:
Kanjani EightEpisode Range: 725–747 • Singer:
Watarirouka Hashiritai 7Episode Range: 748–SPECIAL 64 • "
Kimi ni 100 Percent"Singer:
Kyary Pamyu PamyuEpisode Range: 784–937, 943–969 • Singer: Shinnosuke Nohara (Akiko Yajima) and Misae Nohara (Miki Narahashi)Episode Range: 938–942 • Singer:
YuzuEpisode Range: 970–1050 • Singer:
KetsumeishiEpisode Range: 1051–1303 • Singer:
Fruits ZipperEpisode Range: 1304-now
Endings • Lyricist/Composer: Toshiyuki Arakawa / Arrangers/Singers: Daiji MAN Brothers BandEpisode Range: 1–21 • Lyricist/Composer/Singer: Hiromi Yonemura / Arranger: Itaru WatanabeEpisode Range: 22–57 • Lyricist: Yui Nishiwaki / Composer: Hideo Saito / Arranger: Hiroshi Shinkawa / Singers:
Sakurakko Club Sakura GumiEpisode Range: SPECIAL 3–99 • Lyricist: Moichi Kato / Composers/Arrangers: Ozutairiku and Yasuhiko Hoshino / Singers: Yuko and Shinnosuke Nohara (
Akiko Yajima)Episode Range: 100–112 • Lyricist: Marron Koshaku / Composer/Arranger: Takashi Kimura / Singers: Marron Koshaku and Shinnosuke Nohara (Akiko Yajima)Episode Range: 113–161 • "REGGAE"Lyricist/Singer: KOTONE / Composers: KEISUKE and Yoichi Yamazaki / Arranger: Yuzo HayashiEpisode Range: 162–192 • Lyricist: Moichi Kato / Composers: Ozutairiku and Yasuhiko Hoshino / Arrangers: Daisaku Kume and Kiyohiko Semba / Singers:
Haruo Minami and Shinnosuke Nohara (Akiko Yajima)Episode Range: 193–SPECIAL 13 • Lyricists: Aki Okui and Lemon Saito / Composer/Singer: Aki Okui / Arranger: Akitoshi OnoderaEpisode Range: 203–SPECIAL 17 • Lyricist/Composer/Arranger: RYUZI / Singer: Nanase OgawaEpisode Range: 249–297 • Lyricist/Composer: KAORU / Arrangers: Tsuyoshi Yamanaka and L'luvia / Singers:
L'luviaEpisode Range: 298–352 • Lyricist/Composer: Ke-chan / Singer: KamabokoEpisode Range: 353–397 • Lyricist/Composer:
Tsunku / Arrangers: Yuichi Takahashi and Tsunku / Singers: Sheki-DolEpisode Range: 398–SPECIAL 33 • Lyricists:
Yoshito Usui and Yuri Asada / Composer: Yasuo Kosugi / Arranger: Hideo Saito / Singers: Shinnosuke Nohara (Akiko Yajima) and Misae Nohara (
Miki Narahashi)Episode Range: 452–SPECIAL 38・SPECIAL 43 • Lyricist/Composer: Rio / Arranger: Papa Daisuke / Singers: YanawarabaaEpisode Range: 509–SPECIAL 46 • Episode Range: 938–942
Vitello and Phuuz dubs Opening • "Say hey! HEY! Shin-chan"
Ending • Say hey! HEY! Shin-chan" Instrumental
Funimation dub Opening • "Shin-chan Theme"Shortened version of the third opening theme.
Ending • "Party Join Us"Singer:
Brina PalenciaOriginally the fifth ending theme.
LUK Internacional dub Opening • Footage from Japanese opening 8 ("PLEASURE") but with completely different lyrics, to the melody of a techno remix of Japanese opening 3 ("Ora wa Ninkimono").Musical Director, Producer and English Director: World Worm Studios composer
Gary Gibbons Ending • Footage from Japanese ending 3 ("DO-shite") and at the end (only in the first 11 episodes) Japanese opening 9 ("Yuruyuru de DE-O!") but with completely different lyrics to the melody of "DO-shite".Musical Director, Producer and English Director: World Worm Studios composer
Gary Gibbons Films Video games Console and handheld Many video games were only released in Japan, but there were others released in South Korea, Italy and Spain.
Smartphone and tablet Note: The last app isn't a game in itself, rather a Crayon Shin-chan hub with news, manga, and games. ==Reception==