Tsugumomo | |
つぐもも | |
---|---|
Genre | |
Manga | |
Written by | Yoshikazu Hamada |
Published by | Futabasha |
English publisher | |
Imprint | Action Comics |
Magazine |
|
Demographic | Seinen |
Original run | November 20, 2007 – present |
Volumes | 31 |
Anime television series | |
Directed by | Ryōichi Kuraya |
Produced by | List
|
Written by | Ryōichi Kuraya |
Music by | Yasuharu Takanashi |
Studio | Zero-G |
Licensed by | Crunchyroll[a] |
Original network | Animax, Tokyo MX, BS11 |
Original run | April 3, 2017 – June 19, 2017 |
Episodes | 12 |
Original video animation | |
Directed by | Ryōichi Kuraya |
Produced by |
|
Written by | Ryōichi Kuraya |
Music by | Yasuharu Takanashi |
Studio | Zero-G |
Released | January 22, 2020 |
Runtime | 22 minutes |
Anime television series | |
Tsugu Tsugumomo | |
Directed by | Ryōichi Kuraya |
Produced by | List
|
Written by | Ryōichi Kuraya |
Music by | Yasuharu Takanashi |
Studio | Zero-G |
Original network | AT-X, Tokyo MX, Chūkyō TV, BS Fuji |
Original run | April 5, 2020 – June 21, 2020 |
Episodes | 12 |
Tsugumomo (Japanese: つぐもも) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Yoshikazu Hamada, started in 2007. Two volumes of the series were published in English by the now-defunct JManga service. An anime television series adaptation aired in 2017. A second season aired in 2020.
Kazuya Kagami, an ordinary boy, finds his life turned upside down when his late mother's obi transforms into a girl wearing a kimono named Kiriha. She happens to be a tsukumogami called a "tsugumomo," objects that have gained a soul through long years of harmony with their owners. Kazuya has no recollection of meeting Kiriha when she exclaims "Long time no see" to him. He nearly loses his life from an attacking "amasogi", premature spirits born only to fulfill impure wishes of certain people, and Kiriha defends him. With Kiriha's arrival, Kazuya enters a reality with gods and other tsukumogami and slowly discovers his dark past.
Tsugumomo is written and illustrated by Yoshikazu Hamada, who began serializing the manga on November 20, 2007.[1] The series was initially published in Futabasha's Comic Seed! web magazine, before being moved to their WEB Comic High! magazine on August 20, 2008.[8] It later switched to the publisher's new Monthly Action magazine with the first issue on May 25, 2013.[9]
The first volume of the series was one of the titles made available in English upon the launch of the digital manga publishing website JManga on August 17, 2011.[10] The second volume was added on March 22, 2012.[11] Those two volumes were the only ones published before the company shut down in May 2013.[12][1]
Main article: List of Tsugumomo episodes |
An anime adaptation of the series was announced via a wraparound band on the 18th volume of the manga on September 12, 2016,[1][2] and was later confirmed to be a television series.[46] It premiered in April 2017.[47] The anime television series is directed and had scripts written by Ryōichi Kuraya at studio Zero-G. Yasuharu Takanashi composed the music at Pony Canyon.[48] The anime aired from April 3 to June 19, 2017, on Animax, Tokyo MX and BS11.[49] The series ran for 12 episodes.[50] Prior to its acquisition by Sony Pictures Television, Crunchyroll licensed the series and streamed it in North America, Latin America, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa, with Funimation (which was renamed itself to Crunchyroll in 2022) dubbed it and released it on home video in North America.[51][52][53]
A 20-minute original video animation was also produced through crowdfunding.[54] It was bundled with the manga's 24th volume released on January 22, 2020.[55]
A second season titled Tsugu Tsugumomo aired from April 5 to June 21, 2020, with the staff and cast members reprising their roles.[56][7]
The 7th volume of the series ranked at 22nd place on the Oricon manga sales chart, selling 19,102 copies;[57] the 9th volume ranked at 29th place, with 23,470 copies sold;[58] the 10th volume also ranked at 29th, with 24,454 copies sold;[59] the 12th volume reached 16th place, with 22,500 copies sold;[60] the 13th volume ranked at 24th place, with 22,551 copies sold;[61] the 15th volume ranked at 42nd place, with 24,145 copies sold;[62] the 17th volume reached 45th place, with 17,843 copies sold,[63] and the 18th volume ranked at 44th place, with 19,563 copies sold.[64]