Manga Written and illustrated by
Makoto Raiku,
Zatch Bell! was serialized in
Shogakukan's
manga magazine
Weekly Shōnen Sunday magazine from January 10, 2001, to December 26, 2007. The manga ran for a total of 323 chapters, collected in thirty-three volumes, released from May 18, 2001, and June 18, 2008. The series was licensed for the English-language release by
Viz Media, which also provided the alternate title. The first two volumes of the series were released on August 2, 2005. Viz Media discontinued the series after twenty-five volumes, with the last released on June 9, 2009. The manga was also published in English by
Chuang Yi in Singapore. In March 2011, Raiku released a one-shot chapter of
Zatch Bell! to promote the repackaging of the manga in a new format under
Kodansha. Sixteen volumes were published between March 8, 2011, and June 7, 2012. In July 2018, a
digital sixteen-volume edition of
Zatch Bell! was released through Birgdin Board Corp., Raiku's
own publishing company. The re-releases feature newly drawn cover art, color pages from the original
Weekly Shōnen Sunday serialization, and a special
bonus chapter in each volume called
Zatch Café, which stars characters from that volume's cover. After successful sales and demand from fans, the edition was released in physical format in 2019. In February 2022, Raiku announced a sequel to the manga, titled , which began its
digital publication on various digital book services on March 14 of the same year. The first volume was released on September 16, 2022. As of January 15, 2026, six volumes have been released.
Anime A 150-episode
anime television adaptation, titled in Japan as , was produced by
Toei Animation, and directed by Tetsuharu Nakamura and Yukio Kaizawa, with Akatsuki Yamatoya and Hiroshi Hashimoto as the lead scriptwriters. It began airing on
Fuji Television on April 6, 2003, and ran for 50 episodes per season, concluding after three seasons on March 26, 2006. The episodes were collected and distributed by
Pony Canyon into three DVD series, labeled as "levels", consisting of seventeen DVDs each, totaling fifty-one sets: the first level was released from November 19, 2003, to April 20, 2005; the second level was released from May 18, 2005, to June 21, 2006; the third level was released from July 5, 2006, to March 7, 2007. ShoPro Entertainment (then Viz LLC's sister company, later merged to form
Viz Media) acquired the license to the anime series, under the title
Zatch Bell! in 2004, and announced its home video release in August 2005. The English dubbed of the series (produced at
Studiopolis) premiered in the United States on
Cartoon Network's Saturday night programming block
Toonami on March 5, 2005. The series was also broadcast on the network's daily programming block
Miguzi starting on April 3, 2006. Seventy-seven episodes were broadcast on Cartoon Network until January 20, 2007. and finished with the 104th and last English-dubbed episode on December 6, 2008. Thirteen DVDs, collecting the first fifty-two episodes, were released by Viz Media between November 8, 2005, and December 4, 2007.
New Video Group released a DVD box set,
Zatch Bell!: The Complete Seasons 1 & 2, on December 3, 2013, which included the first hundred episodes of the English dub. All 104 episodes of the English dub began streaming on
Crunchyroll in 2015. In June 2017,
Starz announced that it would be offering episodes of the series for its
video on demand service starting on July 1, 2017.
Films Toei Animation produced two animated films based on the TV series, both which serve as
spin-offs. The first film,
Zatch Bell!: 101st Devil, was released to Japanese theaters on August 7, 2004, and to DVD on December 15, 2004. Here, a vengeful Mamodo named Wiseman seeks to illicitly enter the tournament by stealing a coveted white spell book, then baiting Zatch into the Mamodo world as a means of displacing him from the battle for king. The film also explores Zatch's home world in finer detail and how a human partner is selected for each Mamodo, with Wiseman deemed incompatible for one. The second film,
Zatch Bell! Movie 2: Attack of Mechavulcan, premiered in Japanese theaters on August 6, 2005, before coming out on DVD on January 2, 2006. This movie tells of a conceited Mamodo scientist, Dr. M2, from the future who invades Earth with an army of
oversized robots resembling a toy that Kiyo made for Zatch in the main series.
Discotek Media licensed both films for distribution in North America. They were released on
Blu-ray and DVD with the original Japanese audio and English subtitles on March 27 and May 21, 2018, respectively.
Video games A number of video games have been created featuring characters of the
Zatch Bell! series, with all but one being
action or
fighting games. Three games were imported and localized in North America.
Zatch Bell! Electric Arena, initially released on December 12, 2003, for the
Game Boy Advance, was the very first video game for the series. The second game titled
Zatch Bell! Mamodo Battles, which debuted on March 25, 2004, for the
PlayStation 2 and
GameCube, became the first
console game installment based on the series. Lastly,
Zatch Bell! Mamodo Fury was released on December 2, 2004, for
PlayStation 2 and is the only North American release for the GameCube. A video card game based on the series' CCG is the only installment not featuring in-combat form of gameplay.
Eighting,
Banpresto, and
Bandai oversaw the development and publication of the
Zatch Bell! games; since the merging of Bandai and
Namco in 2004, GameCube versions are published under
Namco Bandai Games. A
smartphone RPG game, titled , developed by Neowiz, is set to be released in 2023, with a closed
beta test taking place in mid-September. The game was released on January 17, 2024. It ended service on January 31, 2025.
Other media A toy line made by Mattel and a
collectible card game, titled
Zatch Bell!: The Card Battle, were released by
Bandai in the United States and Japan. == Reception ==