Japanese manga series
7 Seeds
(stylized as
7SEEDS
) is a Japanese
manga
series written and illustrated by
Yumi Tamura
. It is set in a
post-apocalyptic
future, long enough after a
meteorite
hits
Earth that new species have evolved, and follows the struggles of five groups of young adults to survive after they are revived from
cryonic preservation
. The title comes from five groups of individuals in cryogenic chambers along with supplies, called "seeds", laid down by the Japanese government.
The manga was originally serialized in
Shogakukan
's
Bessatsu Sh?jo Comic
magazine, premiering in the November 2001 issue; it transferred to
Flowers
magazine in April 2002, where it ran until its conclusion in May 2017. Shogakukan collected the individual chapters into 35
bound volumes
.
An
original net animation
(ONA) adaptation, produced by
Gonzo
and directed by Yukio Takahashi, was announced in November 2018. The first season was released worldwide on
Netflix
in June 2019. A second season produced by
Studio Kai
premiered on 26 March 2020.
In 2007,
7 Seeds
won the 52nd
Shogakukan Manga Award
for the
sh?jo
category. Including
digital
sales, it has sold more than 6 million copies in Japan.
Story
[
edit
]
When astronomers predict that the Earth will be hit by a meteorite, the world leaders meet to develop a plan for human survival called the Seven Seeds project. Each country agrees to preserve numbers of healthy young people through
cryogenics
, which will allow them to survive the devastation of the impact. After a computer determines that Earth is once again safe for human life, it will revive each group. The Japanese government creates five groups of survivors named Winter, Spring, Summer A, Summer B, and Fall. Each group consists of seven members, who are not told about what will happen before they are placed in
cryonic preservation
, and one adult guide who is trained in
wilderness survival
. These groups are scattered across Japan: the Summer groups in southern and northern
Ky?sh?
, Fall in western
Honsh?
, Spring in central Honsh? near Tokyo, and Winter in
Hokkaid?
.
Awoken from the cryogenic sleep many years later, the young men and women find themselves amidst a hostile environment bare of any human life. Their former home country Japan has
greatly changed
. Completely alone, they must depend only on themselves to survive in the new world.
Setting
[
edit
]
7 Seeds
takes place an unknown number of years after the collision of a large meteorite with Earth. As a result of the impact, the climate of Japan has greatly changed from what the characters knew from the present day. In the
Kansai region
there are only two seasons, a dry season and a longer, heavier rainy season.
[2]
Takahiro of Winter group describes the winters in the northern island of
Hokkaid?
as being as mild as in
Kanagawa Prefecture
where he grew up.
[3]
In addition, sea levels have risen greatly: downtown
Yokohama
is completely underwater,
[4]
only the top hand of the statue in
Nagasaki Peace Park
is above the surface of the ocean.
[5]
The geography of Japan has changed as well: after an eruption of
Mount Aso
,
Ky?sh?
has been split into two islands,
[6]
and the Kansai region is separated from central
Honsh?
by a wide strait.
[2]
The series depicts a Japan in which, as a result of the new environment and mass extinctions,
ecosystems
have changed and several new species of animals and plants have
evolved
.
For example, on the island where Summer group B first lands, off the coast of
Nagasaki Prefecture
, Botan notes how few of the ecological niches are filled, including no birds or flying insects, and that the limited number of species are still
radiating
to fill empty niches.
[7]
In particular, a local rodent resembling a rabbit is in the process of
speciation
into herbivorous and ravenously carnivorous versions, which are still visually similar. Other dangers new to the characters include swarms of carnivorous white cockroaches and gigantic Venus flytraps, sundews, and
nepenthes
. Species that are unchanged but were previously unknown in Japan include banana trees and crocodiles. Semimaru notes that neither on the island nor on the Ky?sh? mainland do they see any ants, bees, or similar insects.
[8]
In the Kansai region, Fall group domesticates flightless birds about the size of a chicken and sheep that have grown to resemble llamas, which can be ridden, milked and shorn for wool. Izayoi tells Natsu that a local wasp is deadly, killing with a single sting, and another species has a sting that sickens the victim for a day.
[9]
According to Akio, corn is the only crop from their seed cache that grows in the area's soils, but Fall group also cultivates a variety of tobacco with a narcotic effect when smoked.
[2]
In the southern part of central Honsh?, Natsu, Arashi, and Semimaru of Summer group B cross a desert with cactus scrub. Throughout the region they find remains of large reptiles that revive from
estivation
during the rainy season, which remind Natsu of
velociraptors
from
Jurassic Park
.
[10]
These "dinosaurs", as the characters call them, have grassland and woodland varieties, and during the rainy season are the dominant predator from the south coast to at least as far north as Tokyo.
On the island where the Spring group first lands, off the coast of the
Kant? region
, Hana notes that there are no vertebrates on land or in the sea, and Momotaro describes the ecology as similar to that of the
Carboniferous Era
.
[11]
On land, there are giant insects the characters call "boat beetles" and swarms of bees with stings that are painful but not deadly, which force the group to live on rafts off-shore. In the island's swamps, there are giant praying mantis and giant dragonflies. While at the island, the group lives off shellfish and shallow-water
nautiluses
, but see no
bony fish
. The characters find the climate changed as well, as it is too overcast to see the stars for the first two weeks after they are awake, even though it is spring, a season that in the present day is noted for clear weather.
On the mainland of the Kant? region, Spring group meets large aquatic lizards living among the submerged ruins of Yokohama, which hunt in groups. Nearby, in the ruins of central Tokyo, the party from Summer group B is attacked by a giant predatory fish, which Takahiro of Winter group identifies as descended from a deep-sea fish, the only kind of bony fishes to have survived.
[12]
They also meet a fungus-like growth Takahiro calls "blue mucus", which infects Hana's skin when she touches it. This growth goes dormant in the dry season, and Takahiro realizes it is intolerant to salt and uses it to cure her.
[13]
In northern Honsh? near
Sendai
, Natsu, Arashi and Semimaru of Summer group B find the first flowers they have seen during their journey over most of the length of Japan.
[14]
In southern Hokkaid?, Winter group encounters
grasslands
populated by many mammals they do not know, including small-eared rodents, herds of unknown
ruminants
, and tigers with saber-teeth. They also meet wolves with the ability to project illusions normally used to help hunt.
[3]
The project organizers also prepared sealed caches containing seeds and instructional books near the "seven Fuji". These seven Fuji are not related to the famous
Mount Fuji
, but are regional landmarks also named Fuji:
- Bungo
Fuji in
?ita Prefecture
is Mt. Yufudake, where the cache is marked by a statue of the
Buddha
Vairocana
.
- Ogino Fuji in
Kanagawa Prefecture
is Mt. Kyogatake, where the cache is marked by a statue of Monjubosatsu, the
bodhisattva
Manjusri
.
- Kobe Fuji in
Hyogo Prefecture
is Mount Futatabi of the
Rokk? Mountains
, marked by a statue of
Acala
(Fud? my?-?).
- Natori Fuji in
Miyagi Prefecture
is Mt. Taihaku, near
Sendai
, where the cache is marked by a statue of Kok?z? Bosatsu (
?k??agarbha
).
- Akan Fuji in
Hokkaid?
is Mt. Meakandake, where the cache is marked by a statue of
Avalokite?vara
, the goddess of mercy.
- Tosa Fuji in
Kumamoto Prefecture
is Mount Takamori, marked by a statue of
Mah?sth?mapr?pta
.
- Noto Fuji in
Ishikawa Prefecture
is Mount Takatsume-ya, where the cache is marked by a statue of goddess
Kukurihime
.
- Fuji is a
ghost ship
with similar capabilities to the
RP FLIP
. The ghost ship is adrift at sea in a vast ship graveyard. It is marked by a painting of the buddha
Samantabhadra
riding on a white elephant's back. This Fuji was the only one kept hidden and used as a humans' shelter at the same time.
Development and production
[
edit
]
In an author's note, Tamura says that
7 Seeds
was inspired by news reports that
near-Earth object
(89959) 2002 NT
7
might potentially collide with Earth.
Songs
[
edit
]
Yumi Tamura often includes certain songs in her chapter titles. If there is further info material available, you can find it using the links in the 'manga' table.
There are also songs that do not appear in chapter titles but still play a major role at turning points in the manga. Those are listed below.
- Bridge Over Troubled Water
(by
Simon and Garfunkel
).
Appeared in Volume 3, East Wind Chapter 2,
Spirit of Sound
.
- Die Fledermaus
(The Bat)
(by
Johann Strauss II
).
Appeared in Volume 14, Summer Solstice Chapter 11,
Tell
.
- Clair de lune
(by
Claude-Achille Debussy
).
Appeared in Volume 14, Summer Solstice Chapter 12,
Know
.
- Minute Waltz
(by
Frederic Francois Chopin
).
Appeared in Volume 14, Summer Solstice Chapter 13,
Hate
.
- Eine kleine Nachtmusik
(by
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
).
Appeared in Volume 16, Summer Solstice Chapter 23,
Farewell
.
- Csikos Post
(by
Hermann Necke
).
Appeared in Volume 16, Summer Solstice Chapter 23,
Farewell
.
- Pomp and Circumstance
(by
Sir Edward William Elgar
).
Appeared in Volume 16, Summer Solstice Chapter 23,
Farewell
.
- Nutcracker Suite
(originally choreographed by
Marius Petipa
and
Lev Ivanov
with a score by
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
).
Appeared in Volume 16, Summer Solstice Chapter 23,
Farewell
.
- Orphee aux enfers (
Orpheus in the Underworld
)
(by
Jacques Offenbach
).
Appeared in Volume 16, Summer Solstice Chapter 23,
Farewell
.
The four seasons
[
edit
]
The four seasons serve as the theme for
7 Seeds
, since every team is named after one of them: Spring, Summer A/B, Autumn, and Winter.
[15]
The team members were chosen into their teams based on which seasons their names matched best.
Almost every
7 Seeds
chapter arc is named after one of the 24 solar terms consisting of the 72 pentads (
Shichij?ni k?
). The Rainwater chapter, for example, completely consists of
Shichij?ni k?
.
Media
[
edit
]
Manga
[
edit
]
7 Seeds
was written and illustrated by
Yumi Tamura
and published by
Shogakukan
. It began serialization in the November 2001 issue of the monthly
sh?jo
manga magazine
Bessatsu Sh?jo Comic
.
[16]
In April 2002, it transferred to the monthly
josei
manga magazine
Flowers
.
[17]
The final chapter was published in the July 2017 issue of
Flowers
, released on 27 May.
[18]
Shogakukan collected the individual chapters into 35
bound volumes
, printed under the Flower Comics imprint, and later, under the Flower Comics Alpha imprint. The first volume was released on 26 March 2002; the last volume was released on 10 August 2017. Each volume was divided into sections focusing on different groups of survivors, with section titles containing a
kigo
(seasonal word) appropriate for the group name.
[19]
[20]
Shogakukan also published an official
fanbook
, titled
Edge of Emotions
, on 9 December 2011. The fanbook contained detailed character profiles, a color illustration gallery, and a long interview with Tamura.
[21]
In 2008,
Pika Edition
licensed the manga in France, where it was marketed as a
seinen
series.
[22]
In 2011, Pika announced that negotiations with the Japanese publisher, Shogakukan, had been unsuccessful, and therefore, they would cease publishing
7 Seeds
and two other titles.
[23]
In total, Pika published 10 volumes of the manga in French.
[24]
[25]
In 2017, after the conclusion of the
7 Seeds
manga in Japan, Tamura announced the launch of a
spin-off
series in
Flowers
. The first chapter was published in the magazine's October issue, released on 28 August; the final chapter was published in the December issue, released on 28 October.
[18]
[26]
Shogakukan collected the chapters into a single bound volume on 10 January 2018.
[27]
Drama CDs
[
edit
]
7 Seeds
was adapted into a
radio drama
which was broadcast in Japan from 9 December 2003 to 6 February 2004. The nine episodes were collected on three drama CDs:
[28]
- 7 Seeds 1
, released on 26 March 2004, focuses on Summer group B and dramatizes the events of volume 1 of the manga.
- 7 Seeds 2
, released on 23 April 2004, focuses on Winter group and dramatizes events of volume 4 of the manga.
- 7 Seeds 3
, released on 21 May 2004, focuses on Spring group and dramatizes events of volumes 2 and 3 of the manga.
A fourth drama CD was released in Japan on 10 August 2017, bundled with a
limited edition
of volume 35 of the
7 Seeds
manga. The story was based on an original scenario written by
Yumi Tamura
. Several voice actors who would later be cast in the
anime
adaptation of
7 Seeds
were first featured on the drama CD, including
Kazuhiko Inoue
as Kaname Mozunoto,
Sh? Hayami
as Takashi Sugurono,
Nozomu Sasaki
as Takahiro Aramaki, and
Katsuyuki Konishi
as Semimaru Asai.
[1]
Anime
[
edit
]
An
anime
adaptation was announced on 26 November 2018.
[29]
The series is animated by
Gonzo
and directed by Yukio Takahashi, with
Touko Machida
handling series composition, Youko Satou designing the characters, and Michiru composing the music.
[30]
The series was originally scheduled to release on
Netflix
in April 2019,
[31]
but it was delayed to 28 June 2019 due to production delays.
[32]
[33]
Amatsuki performed the series' opening theme song "Ark", while
majiko
performed the series' ending theme song "WISH".
[34]
[35]
A second season premiered on 26 March 2020. The main cast and staff members reprised their roles, and
Studio Kai
producing the animation.
[36]
Mone Kamishiraishi
performed the second season's opening theme song "From the Seeds", which was composed by
Glim Spanky
, while Cider Girl performed the second season's ending theme "Synchro".
[37]
[38]
On 4 January 2021, the staff members announced that the second season's ending animation sequence has been removed after they were notified that it had similarities to the anime
Beyond the Boundary
'
s ending theme.
[39]
Season 1 (2019)
[
edit
]
Season 2 (2020)
[
edit
]
Reception
[
edit
]
7 Seeds
won the 52nd
Shogakukan Manga Award
for the
sh?jo
category in 2007.
[40]
The series ranked number 10 on the top 20 list of manga for female readers in the 2018 edition of
Takarajimasha
's
Kono Manga ga Sugoi!
guidebook.
[41]
It was nominated in the comic category for the 49th
Seiun Awards
in 2018.
[42]
Including
digital
sales, the series has sold more than 6 million copies in Japan.
[43]
Volume 12 reached number 7 on the Tohan best-seller list and volume 13 reached number 10.
[44]
[45]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
c
「7SEEDS」完結?に田村由美書き下ろしシナリオのドラマCD、flowersに外?も
.
Comic Natalie
(in Japanese). 10 August 2017
. Retrieved
10 December
2019
.
- ^
a
b
c
Tamura, Yumi
(2004). "Pampas Grass Seed Chapter 3".
7 Seeds
(in Japanese). Vol. 5.
Shogakukan
.
ISBN
978-4-09-138017-3
.
- ^
a
b
Tamura, Yumi
(2004). "Winter Chapter 4".
7 Seeds
(in Japanese). Vol. 4.
Shogakukan
.
ISBN
978-4-09-138016-6
.
- ^
Tamura, Yumi
(2003). "East Wind Chapter 1".
7 Seeds
(in Japanese). Vol. 3.
Shogakukan
.
ISBN
978-4-09-138015-9
.
- ^
Tamura, Yumi
(2003). "Beginning of Summer Chapter 1".
7 Seeds
(in Japanese). Vol. 3.
Shogakukan
.
ISBN
978-4-09-138015-9
.
- ^
Tamura, Yumi
(2003). "Beginning of Summer Chapter 2".
7 Seeds
(in Japanese). Vol. 3.
Shogakukan
.
ISBN
978-4-09-138015-9
.
- ^
Tamura, Yumi
(2002). "Island Chapter 3".
7 Seeds
(in Japanese). Vol. 1.
Shogakukan
.
ISBN
978-4-09-138013-5
.
- ^
Tamura, Yumi
(2004). "Pampas Grass Seed Chapter 1".
7 Seeds
(in Japanese). Vol. 5.
Shogakukan
.
ISBN
978-4-09-138017-3
.
- ^
Tamura, Yumi
(2004). "Pampas Grass Seed Chapter 2".
7 Seeds
(in Japanese). Vol. 5.
Shogakukan
.
ISBN
978-4-09-138017-3
.
- ^
Tamura, Yumi
(2004). "Pampas Grass Seed Chapter 4".
7 Seeds
(in Japanese). Vol. 5.
Shogakukan
.
ISBN
978-4-09-138017-3
.
- ^
Tamura, Yumi
(2002). "Early Spring Chapter 2".
7 Seeds
(in Japanese). Vol. 2.
Shogakukan
.
ISBN
978-4-09-138014-2
.
- ^
Tamura, Yumi
(2004). "Pampas Grass Seed Chapter 6".
7 Seeds
(in Japanese). Vol. 5.
Shogakukan
.
ISBN
978-4-09-138017-3
.
- ^
Tamura, Yumi
(2004). "Pampas Grass Seed Chapter 7".
7 Seeds
(in Japanese). Vol. 5.
Shogakukan
.
ISBN
978-4-09-138017-3
.
- ^
Tamura, Yumi
(2005). "Rainwater Chapter 10".
7 Seeds
(in Japanese). Vol. 6.
Shogakukan
.
ISBN
978-4-09-138018-0
.
- ^
GQ Staff (28 May 2019).
"What Is
7 Seeds
? The Post-Apocalyptic Anime Series That's Gone Viral"
.
GQ
. Retrieved
20 July
2019
.
- ^
約16年の連載に幕!田村由美氏『7SEEDS』、?flowers?7月?で完結
.
Shogakukan Comic
(in Japanese). 26 May 2017
. Retrieved
10 December
2019
.
- ^
月刊flowers (2/4) ? コミックナタリ? 特集?インタビュ?
.
Comic Natalie
(in Japanese). 26 February 2010
. Retrieved
10 December
2019
.
- ^
a
b
Hodgkins, Crystalyn (28 May 2017).
"
Basara
'
s Yumi Tamura Ends
7SEEDS
Manga After Nearly 16 Years"
.
Anime News Network
. Retrieved
28 May
2017
.
- ^
7SEEDS 1 (フラワ?コミックス)
.
Shogakukan
(in Japanese)
. Retrieved
10 December
2019
.
- ^
7SEEDS 35 (フラワ?コミックス)
.
Shogakukan
(in Japanese)
. Retrieved
10 December
2019
.
- ^
「7SEEDS」番外編??のファンブック、藤田和日?ら寄稿
.
Comic Natalie
(in Japanese). 9 December 2011
. Retrieved
11 December
2019
.
- ^
"
7Seeds
"
.
Pika Edition
(in French). Archived from
the original
on 13 May 2011
. Retrieved
10 December
2019
.
- ^
"Pika fait le point sur certaines series"
.
Manga News
(in French). 19 April 2012
. Retrieved
10 December
2019
.
- ^
7 Seeds
, Tome 1
(in French).
ASIN
284599835X
.
- ^
7 Seeds
, Tome 10
(in French).
ASIN
2811603689
.
- ^
Baker, Bayleigh (30 October 2017).
"
Basara
'
s Yumi Tamura Ends
7SEEDS
Spinoff Manga, Launches New Series"
.
Anime News Network
. Retrieved
10 December
2019
.
- ^
7SEEDS 外? (フラワ?コミックスアルファ)
.
Shogakukan
(in Japanese)
. Retrieved
10 December
2019
.
- ^
"
7SEEDS
"
.
bestack.co.jp
(in Japanese)
. Retrieved
15 September
2008
.
- ^
Sherman, Jennifer (26 November 2018).
"
7SEEDS
Manga Gets Anime on Netflix"
.
Anime News Network
. Retrieved
26 November
2018
.
- ^
「7SEEDS」貴士役は速水?、??久役は興津和幸、マリア役は?美菜子
.
Comic Natalie
(in Japanese). 26 April 2019
. Retrieved
28 May
2019
.
- ^
Pineda, Rafael Antonio (26 November 2018).
"
7SEEDS
Anime Reveals Cast, Staff, April 2019 Debut"
.
Anime News Network
. Retrieved
26 November
2018
.
- ^
Pineda, Rafael Antonio (5 March 2019).
"
7SEEDS
Anime Delayed 2 Months to June"
.
Anime News Network
. Retrieved
5 March
2019
.
- ^
Pineda, Rafael Antonio (8 March 2019).
"Netflix Premieres
7SEEDS
Anime Worldwide on June 28"
.
Anime News Network
. Retrieved
8 May
2019
.
- ^
Sherman, Jennifer (11 February 2019).
"majiko Performs
7SEEDS
Anime's Ending Theme Song"
.
Anime News Network
. Retrieved
11 February
2019
.
- ^
Pineda, Rafael Antonio (22 March 2019).
"
7SEEDS
Anime Unveils Teaser Video, More Cast"
.
Anime News Network
. Retrieved
22 March
2019
.
- ^
Pineda, Rafael Antonio (21 October 2019).
"
7SEEDS
Anime Gets 2nd Season on Netflix in 2020"
.
Anime News Network
. Retrieved
21 October
2019
.
- ^
Hodgkins, Crystalyn (27 December 2019).
"Rock Band Cider Girl Perform Theme for 7SEEDS Anime's 2nd Season"
.
Anime News Network
. Retrieved
27 December
2019
.
- ^
Pineda, Rafael Antonio (4 February 2020).
"Mone Kamishiraishi Performs 7SEEDS Anime Season 2's Opening Song"
.
Anime News Network
. Retrieved
4 February
2020
.
- ^
Pineda, Rafael Antonio (5 January 2021).
"7SEEDS Anime Staff Replaces Season 2's Ending Sequence, After Conceding Similarities to Previous Work"
.
Anime News Network
. Retrieved
5 January
2021
.
- ^
Miller, Evan (24 January 2007).
"Shougakukan Manga Awards Announced"
.
Anime News Network
. Retrieved
10 December
2019
.
- ^
Hodgkins, Crystalyn (8 December 2017).
"
Kono Manga ga Sugoi!
Reveals 2018's Series Ranking for Female Readers"
.
Anime News Network
. Retrieved
10 December
2019
.
- ^
Ressler, Karen (27 April 2018).
"
Kemono Friends
,
Re:Creators
,
ID-0
,
KADO - The Right Answer
Nominated for Seiun Sci-Fi Awards"
.
Anime News Network
. Retrieved
10 December
2019
.
- ^
"Introduction"
.
7 Seeds Official Anime Website
(in Japanese)
. Retrieved
11 December
2019
.
- ^
Loo, Egan (6 February 2008).
"Japanese Comic Ranking, January 29?February 4"
.
Anime News Network
.
Archived
from the original on 18 September 2008
. Retrieved
12 September
2008
.
- ^
Loo, Egan (18 July 2008).
"Japanese Comic Ranking, July 8?14"
.
Anime News Network
.
Archived
from the original on 8 September 2008
. Retrieved
12 September
2008
.
External links
[
edit
]
|
---|
Current
| |
---|
1970s
| |
---|
1980s
| |
---|
1990s
| |
---|
2000s
| |
---|
2010s
| |
---|
Related
| |
---|
† Indicates titles that continued serialization in
Flowers
in 2002; ‡
Monkey High!
was initially serialized in
Deracomi
in 2004
|
|
---|
Current
| |
---|
2000s
| |
---|
2010s
| |
---|
&Flower
| |
---|
Related
| |
---|
|
|
---|
1970s
| |
---|
1980s
| |
---|
1990s
| |
---|
2000s
| |
---|
2010s
| |
---|
2020s
| |
---|
|
|
---|
Television series
| |
---|
Films
| |
---|
OVAs/ONAs
| |
---|
Video games
| |
---|
Related
| |
---|
|
|
---|
Television series
| |
---|
ONAs
| |
---|
OVAs
| |
---|
|
|
---|
Since 2016
| |
---|
Since 2017
| |
---|
Since 2018
| Live-action
| |
---|
Non-fiction
| |
---|
Animation
| |
---|
|
---|
Since 2019
| Live-action
| |
---|
Non-fiction
| |
---|
Animation
| |
---|
|
---|
Since 2020
| Live-action
| |
---|
Non-fiction
| |
---|
Animation
| |
---|
|
---|
Since 2021
| Live-action
| |
---|
Non-fiction
| |
---|
Animation
| |
---|
|
---|
Since 2022
| Live-action
| |
---|
Non-fiction
| |
---|
Animation
| |
---|
|
---|
Since 2023
| Live-action
| |
---|
Non-fiction
| |
---|
Animation
| |
---|
|
---|
Since 2024
| Live-action
| |
---|
Non-fiction
| |
---|
Animation
| |
---|
|
---|
|
|
---|
TV
| First released
2013?2015
| |
---|
First released 2016
| |
---|
First released 2017
| |
---|
First released 2018
| |
---|
First released 2019
| |
---|
First released 2020
| |
---|
First released 2021
| |
---|
First released 2022
| |
---|
First released 2023
| |
---|
First released 2024
| |
---|
Upcoming
| |
---|
|
---|
Films
| Original released films
| |
---|
Other released films
| |
---|
Interactive
| |
---|
Upcoming
| |
---|
|
---|
|