PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Spriggan (manga)
rdfs:comment
  • Spriggan(スプリガンSupurigan) is a manga series written by Hiroshi Takashige and illustrated by Ryōji Minagawa during the early 1990s. It was initially released as Striker in the North American English translation, as it is the English translation of the word Spriggan from Celtic. Spriggan was serialized in Shogakukan's manga magazines Weekly Shōnen Sunday and Shōnen Sunday Super. The manga was adapted into an anime film by Studio 4°C in 1998. A PlayStation game called Spriggan: Lunar Verse was also based on the manga with some material created for the game.
owl:sameAs
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:manga/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Platforms
Last
  • 1996
Runtime
  • 5400.0
Producer
  • Eiko Tanaka
  • Haruo Sai
  • Ayao Ueda
  • Kazuhiko Ikeguchi
  • Kazuya Hamana
ja kanji
  • スプリガン
Name
  • Spriggan
Genre
Type
  • film
  • manga
Volumes
  • 11
Caption
  • Spriggan Japanese manga cover by Shogakukan
First
  • 1989
Author
Demographic
  • Shōnen
Title
  • Spriggan: Lunar Verse
Music
  • Kuniaki Haishima
Ja romaji
  • Supurigan
Studio
volume list
  • List of Spriggan chapters
publisher en
  • VIZ Media
  • Chuang Yi
Illustrator
Released
  • 1998
  • 1999-06-17
Developer
  • From Liquid Mirror Software
Magazine
Licensor
  • ADV Films
Publisher
Director
abstract
  • Spriggan(スプリガンSupurigan) is a manga series written by Hiroshi Takashige and illustrated by Ryōji Minagawa during the early 1990s. It was initially released as Striker in the North American English translation, as it is the English translation of the word Spriggan from Celtic. Spriggan takes places in the last years of the Cold War where mysterious and unknown artifacts called out-of-place artifacts (OOPArt) are discovered in various parts of the world, leading to a secret war between various forces against the ARCAM Corporation, an organization that placed itself the guardians of the OOPArts in order to prevent them from being used as weapons. Spriggan was serialized in Shogakukan's manga magazines Weekly Shōnen Sunday and Shōnen Sunday Super. The manga was adapted into an anime film by Studio 4°C in 1998. A PlayStation game called Spriggan: Lunar Verse was also based on the manga with some material created for the game.
is Products of