Black God (manga)

Black God
Cover of the first English volume of kuro as released by Yen Press
黒神
(Kuro Kami)
Manga
Written byLim Dall-young
Illustrated byPark Sung-woo
Published bySquare Enix
English publisher
MagazineYoung Gangan
DemographicSeinen
Original runMarch 2005August 2012
Volumes19
Anime television series
Kurokami: The Animation
Directed byTsuneo Kobayashi
Produced by
  • Jun Yukawa
  • Noboru Sugiyama
  • Hiroyuki Satō
Written byReiko Yoshida
Music byTomohisa Ishikawa
StudioSunrise
Licensed by
Original networkTV Asahi
Original run January 8, 2009 June 18, 2009
Episodes24 (List of episodes)

Black God (Japanese: 黒神, Hepburn: Kuro Kami) is a Japanese-Korean manga series written by Dall-Young Lim and illustrated by Park Sung-woo. Square Enix published the manga in Japan's bi-monthly seinen magazine Young Gangan. The story is initially set in modern-day Tokyo, then changes to the island of Okinawa in the middle of the story. The word "Black" in the title refers to the character Kuro (), as it means black in Japanese. "God" in the title refers to the fact that Kuro is a superhuman, or "Tera Guardian". In France and other French-speaking countries and territories, the manga goes under the name Kurokami: Black God.

The manga is created entirely by a Korean manhwa team led by both Lim and Park. They would occasionally make fun of the fact that none of them were fluent in Japanese in omake segments drawn at the end of each manga volume.[1]

Black God was among four manga titles licensed by Yen Press along with Zombie-Loan, Alice on Deadlines and Spiral: The Bonds of Reasoning[2] when it was announced by their panel at the 2007 New York Comic Convention.[3] Nineteen volumes have been released in North America.

It has been adapted into an anime animated by Sunrise, and first aired in Japan and in the United States on January 8, 2009, while South Korea aired it on January 9, 2009.[4]

  1. ^ "Black God Review". Eye on Anime. Archived from the original on 2008-12-12. Retrieved 2008-12-14.
  2. ^ "Yen Press to Launch with New Chmakova; Licensed Manga". Publishers Weekly. 2007-02-24. Archived from the original on 2007-11-02. Retrieved 2008-12-14.
  3. ^ Yen Press (2008-12-30). "Yen Press New Releases, Yen Press". Yen Press. Retrieved 2009-02-09.
  4. ^ "Kurokami the Animation to Be Broadcast Simultaneously in Japan, U.S., and Korea". Anime News Network. 2008-12-14. Retrieved 2008-12-14.