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  • Yonkoma
  • Yonkoma
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  • A yonkoma is a four panel vertical gag comic strip. This format is used by mangas such as Lucky Star, Azumanga Daioh or K-On!. Yonkoma appear in many publications in Japan, such as magazines newspapers and graphic novels. More serious series such as in Death Note have used yonkoma strips to add non-canonical humor in places like extra volumes or at the end of canonical chapters.
  • Rakuten Kitazawa (who wrote under the name Yasuji Kitazawa) produced the first yonkoma in 1902. Entitled "Jiji Manga", it was thought to have been influenced by the works of Frank Arthur Nankivell and of Frederick Burr Opper. Jiji Manga appeared in the Sunday edition.
  • The first Yonkoma was produced by Rakuten Kitazawa (who wrote under the name Yasuji Kitazawa) in 1902. It was entitled Jiji Manga, and was thought to have been influenced by the works of Frank Arthur Nankivell and Frederick Burr Opper. Jiji Manga appeared in the Sunday edition.
  • Yonkoma is the term used for the four-panel comics which debuted during the series and were then later released in Death Note: How To Read 13. They were originally included in Shonen Jump 2004 #4/5 as a Christmas bonus, then appeared later in Akamaru Jump. The characters are given an introduction in Death Note: How To Read 13 because they are slightly different from their counterparts in the series. Of course, the yonkoma are for comical reasons, so even their introductions are semi-humorous.
  • thumb|Ejemplo de yonkomaYonkoma 「4コマ漫画 Yonkoma Manga?, Manga de 4 viñetas」 o 4-koma es un tipo de manga que se caracteriza por líneas de 4 viñetas del mismo tamaño que se leen horizontalmente. Dependiendo de la publicación a veces pueden estar horientadas verticalmente o en un híbrido de 2x2. Ejemplos de Yonkoma: * Charlotte * Azumanga Daioh * Lucky Star * Potemayo * Sazae-san * Di Gi Charat * K-ON! * Nono-chan * Baito-kun * Sazae-san
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abstract
  • Yonkoma is the term used for the four-panel comics which debuted during the series and were then later released in Death Note: How To Read 13. They were originally included in Shonen Jump 2004 #4/5 as a Christmas bonus, then appeared later in Akamaru Jump. In Death Note: How To Read 13, pgs. 216-224 cover all of the four-panel comics. Pages 216-217 show the yonkoma that were published in Akamaru Jump 2004 Spring. pages 218-219 show the yonkoma that were published in Akamaru Jump 2004 Summer. Pages 220-221 show the yonkoma that were published in Akamaru Jump 2005 Winter. Pages 222-223 show the yonkoma that were published in Akamaru Jump 2005 Spring. Page 224 has the Shonen Jump Gag Special 2005. The characters are given an introduction in Death Note: How To Read 13 because they are slightly different from their counterparts in the series. Of course, the yonkoma are for comical reasons, so even their introductions are semi-humorous. * Light: "The chosen brainiac with a knack for funny comments. His serious demeanor makes him the butt of jokes." * L: "Holder of the world's greatest mind and the powerful ability to act like a fool. It's like he was born to be mocked." * Misa: "Along with Sayu, one of the two heroines of our story. Check out her sexiness, which has received a power boost compared to the main series." * Ryuk: "A weird guy with a passion for apples. He may be the character that's least different from his series version."
  • A yonkoma is a four panel vertical gag comic strip. This format is used by mangas such as Lucky Star, Azumanga Daioh or K-On!. Yonkoma appear in many publications in Japan, such as magazines newspapers and graphic novels. More serious series such as in Death Note have used yonkoma strips to add non-canonical humor in places like extra volumes or at the end of canonical chapters.
  • thumb|Ejemplo de yonkomaYonkoma 「4コマ漫画 Yonkoma Manga?, Manga de 4 viñetas」 o 4-koma es un tipo de manga que se caracteriza por líneas de 4 viñetas del mismo tamaño que se leen horizontalmente. Dependiendo de la publicación a veces pueden estar horientadas verticalmente o en un híbrido de 2x2. La mayoría de estos comics están centrados en el humor, y en sketchs o pequeñas mini-historias que acaban en cada grupo de viñetas. Son por lo tanto parecidas a las tiras estadounidenses publicadas en periódicos como Garfield o Snoopy. También hay algunos yonkoma de trama más seria y continua, no son tan frecuentes, normalmente son narraciones que una sola tira se inician y terminan. Por lo general son utilizados en publicaciones manga, novelas gráficas, en las secciones dedicadas de los periódicos, revistas de juegos, revistas de cocina y otros. Ejemplos de Yonkoma: * Charlotte * Azumanga Daioh * Lucky Star * Potemayo * Sazae-san * Di Gi Charat * K-ON! * Nono-chan * Baito-kun * Sazae-san
  • Rakuten Kitazawa (who wrote under the name Yasuji Kitazawa) produced the first yonkoma in 1902. Entitled "Jiji Manga", it was thought to have been influenced by the works of Frank Arthur Nankivell and of Frederick Burr Opper. Jiji Manga appeared in the Sunday edition.
  • The first Yonkoma was produced by Rakuten Kitazawa (who wrote under the name Yasuji Kitazawa) in 1902. It was entitled Jiji Manga, and was thought to have been influenced by the works of Frank Arthur Nankivell and Frederick Burr Opper. Jiji Manga appeared in the Sunday edition.
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