Prince of Stride | |
プリンス・オブ・ストライド (Purinsu Obu Sutoraido) | |
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Genre | Sports |
Novel series | |
Written by | Shūji Sogabe (Original work) Naruki Nagakawa (Volume 1–3 text) Yō Asahi (Volume 3–7 text) |
Illustrated by | FiFS |
Published by | ASCII Media Works |
Imprint | Sylph Comics |
Original run | November 22, 2012 – August 21, 2017 |
Volumes | 7 |
Video game | |
Developer | Kadokawa Games, Vridge |
Publisher | Kadokawa Games, Dengeki Girl's Style |
Genre | Otome game, Sports game |
Platform | PlayStation Vita |
Released | July 30, 2015 |
Manga | |
Prince of Stride: Galaxy Rush | |
Written by | Teruko Arai |
Published by | ASCII Media Works |
Magazine | Dengeki Maoh |
Demographic | Seinen |
Original run | 27 November 2015 – present |
Volumes | 1 |
Anime television series | |
Prince of Stride: Alternative | |
Directed by | Atsuko Ishizuka |
Written by | Taku Kishimoto |
Music by | Yoshiaki Fujisawa |
Studio | Madhouse |
Licensed by |
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Original network | AT-X, Tokyo MX, Sun TV, KBS, TV Aichi, BS11 |
Original run | January 5, 2016 – March 22, 2016 |
Episodes | 12 |
Prince of Stride (プリンス・オブ・ストライド, Purinsu Obu Sutoraido) is a Japanese multimedia series by ASCII Media Works. The project was unveiled in April 2012 in Dengeki Girl's Style. It spawned a light novel, as well as an otome game adaptation developed by Kadokawa Games and Vridge for the PlayStation Vita. An anime television series adaptation developed by Madhouse entitled Prince of Stride: Alternative (プリンス・オブ・ストライド オルタナティブ, Purinsu Obu Sutoraido Orutanatibu) aired from January 5, 2016 to March 22, 2016.[1][2] A spin-off manga entitled Prince of Stride Galaxy Rush launched in November 2015 in Dengeki Maoh.[3] The series is based around the fictional extreme sport of "stride", where teams of six run a relay race including parkour elements through a town.