Kobo, the Li'l Rascal
- View a machine-translated version of the Japanese article.
- Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
- Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
- You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is
Content in this edit is translated from the existing Japanese Wikipedia article at [[:ja:コボちゃん]]; see its history for attribution.
- You may also add the template
{{Translated|ja|コボちゃん}}
to the talk page. - For more guidance, see Wikipedia:Translation.
Kobo, the Li'l Rascal | |
コボちゃん (Kobo-chan) | |
---|---|
Genre | Comedy, slice of life |
Manga | |
Written by | Masashi Ueda |
Published by | Soyosha (strip) Houbunsha (current volumes) |
English publisher |
|
Magazine | Yomiuri Shimbun |
Demographic | Seinen |
Original run | April 1, 1982 – present |
Volumes | 60 (Soyosha) 40 (Houbunsha) |
Anime television series | |
Directed by | Hiromitsu Morita |
Produced by | Michihiko Suwa, Tatsuo Ono |
Studio | Eiken |
Licensed by | Crunchyroll |
Original network | NNS (YTV, NTV) |
Original run | October 19, 1992 – March 21, 1994 |
Episodes | 63 |
Kobo, the Li'l Rascal, also known as Kobo-chan (コボちゃん), is a manga created by Masashi Ueda.[1] Kodansha published three volumes of the manga as a bilingual Japanese-English editions, and Kodansha America distributed the book in the United States.[2][3]
Kobo-chan began publication in the newspaper Yomiuri Shimbun on April 1, 1982. Beginning in December of that year, Soyosha published the series in book form.[4] Yomiuri TV began airing the Kobo-chan strip on television on September 15, 1990. The weekly anime series ran on said channel from October 19, 1992, to March 21, 1994. Yomiuri had published 6,000 Kobo-chan strips by March 1999.[5] Soyosha published Volume 60 on October 22, 2003.[6] Houbunsha began publishing volumes on May 6, 2004.[7] Its most recently volume, the 40th, was published on February 7, 2018.[8]
The anime used to be available subtitled on Crunchyroll.[9]
Characters
- Kobo Tabata (田畑 小穂, Tabata Kobo, Kobo コボちゃん Kobo-chan) - The namesake of the series.
- Sanae Yamakawa (田畑 早苗, Yamakawa Sanae) - Kobo's mother.
- Koji Tabata (田畑 耕二, Tabata Kōji) - Kobo's father, Takeo's cousin-in-law, Iwao and Mine's son-in-law
- Miho Tabata (田畑 美穂, Tabata Miho) - Kobo's younger sister
- Iwao Yamakawa (山川 岩夫, Yamakawa Iwao) - Kobo's maternal grandfather, Takeo's maternal uncle, Koji's father-in-law, and Sanae's father
- Mine Yamakawa (山川 ミネ, Yamakawa Mine) - Kobo's maternal grandmother, Koji's mother-in-law, and Sanae's mother
- Takeo Omori (大森 竹男, Ōmori Takeo, タケオ Takeo) - Takeo is Iwao's nephew, Sanae's cousin, and Koji's cousin-in-law
- Sakiko Omori (大森 咲子, Ōmori Sakiko) - Takeo's wife, Iwao's niece-in-law, and Sanae's cousin-in-law
- Pochi (ポチ) - family dog
- Mi (ミー) - family cat
International broadcast
- RCTI (2001-2003), Spacetoon (2010-2018)
- Astro Ceria (2004-2005)
- (1998-2000)
References
- ^ "(10) コボちゃんで作文の一歩." Yomiuri Shimbun. Retrieved on October 1, 2009.
- ^ Kobo, the Li'l Rascal. Volume 2 Bilingual. August 2001. Kodansha International. ISBN 4-7700-2663-3, ISBN 978-4-7700-2663-7
- ^ "9784770026644: Kobo, the Li'L Rascal (Kodansha Bilingual Comics) - AbeBooks - Ueda, Masashi: 4770026641". Abebooks.com. Retrieved 26 December 2021.
- ^ コボちゃん (1) (Soyosha comics) [Kobo-chan (1) (Soyosha comics)] (in Japanese). ASIN 4915579018.
- ^ Kobo, the Li'l Rascal. Volume 1 Bilingual. August 2001. Kodansha International. ISBN 4-7700-2662-5, ISBN 978-4-7700-2662-0. Book cover inlet.
- ^ コボちゃん (60) (Soyosha comics) [Kobo-chan (60) (Soyosha comics)] (in Japanese). ASIN 491557962X.
- ^ "Works" (in Japanese). Houbunsha. Retrieved 2014-02-07.
- ^ "Works" (in Japanese). Houbunsha. Retrieved 2014-12-07.
- ^ "Kobo chan". Crunchyroll.com. Retrieved 26 December 2021.
External links
- Kobo, the Li'l Rascal (manga) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Kobo, the Li'l Rascal (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- v
- t
- e
- Sennin Buraku (1963)
- Gigantor (1963)
- 8 Man (1963)
- Super Jetter (1965)
- Space Boy Soran (1965)
- Prince Planet (1965)
- Yūsei Kamen (1966)
- Bōken Gabotenjima (1967)
- Skyers 5 (1967)
- The Cricket on the Hearth (1967)
- Sasuke (1968)
- Ninpū Kamui Gaiden (1963)
- Sazae-san (1969 – current)
- Kamui Gaiden (1969)
- Dōbutsu-mura Monogatari (1970)
- Bakuhatsu Gorō (1970)
- Norakuro (1970)
- Shin Skyers 5 (1971)
- Onbu Obake (1972)
- Bōken Korobokkuru (1973)
- Jim Button (1974)
- Iruka to Shōnen (1975)
- Hokahoka Kazoku (1976–1982)
- UFO Senshi Diablon (1976)
- UFO Senshi Diablon 2 (1976)
- Captain (1980)
- Captain (1981)
- Donbē Monogatari (1981)
- Captain (1983)
- Glass Mask (1984)
- Ginga Patrol PJ (1984)
- Dotanba no Manā (1984–1987)
- Musashi no Ken (1985–1986)
- Musashi no Ken (1986)
- Kotowaza House (1987–1994)
- Hai Akko Desu (1988–1992)
- Shīton Dōbutsuki (1989–1990)
- Kobo-chan Special: Filled with Autumn (1990)
- Kobo-chan Special: Filled with Dreams!! (1991)
- Micro Patrol (1991)
- Kobo-chan (1992–1994)
- Cooking Papa (1992–1995)
- Kobo-chan Special: Filled with Festivals! (1994)
- Oyako Club (1994–2013)
- Ijiwaru Bā-san (1996–1997)
- Kiko-chan Smile (1996–1997)
- Otoko wa Tsurai yo: Torajirō Wasure na Kusa (1998)
- Kobo-chan Special: The Promised Magic Day (1998)
- Suteki! Sakura Mama! (2000)
- Go! Go! Itsutsugo Land (2001–2002)
- Gokiburi-chan (2005)
- Play Ball (2005)
- Play Ball 2nd (2006)
- Tetsujin 28-go Gao! (2013–2016)
- Bonobono (2016–current)
- 8-Man Infinity (TBA)
This manga-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e