Triage X | |
トリアージX (Toriāji Ikusu) | |
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Manga | |
Written by | Shōji Satō |
Published by | Fujimi Shobo |
English publisher | |
Magazine | Monthly Dragon Age |
Demographic | Shōnen |
Original run | April 9, 2009 – present |
Volumes | 28 + 1 |
Anime television series | |
Directed by | Akio Takami Takao Kato |
Produced by | Kenjiro Gomi |
Written by | Katsuhiko Takayama |
Music by | Makoto Miyazaki |
Studio | Xebec |
Licensed by | |
Original network | Tokyo MX, Sun TV, TVQ, CTC, tvk, TV Saitama, GBS, MTV, BS11 |
English network | |
Original run | April 8, 2015 – June 10, 2015 |
Episodes | 10 |
Original video animation | |
Directed by | Akio Takami Takao Kato |
Produced by | Kenjiro Gomi |
Written by | Katsuhiko Takayama |
Music by | Makoto Miyazaki |
Studio | Xebec |
Licensed by | |
Released | November 2, 2015 |
Runtime | 25 minutes |
Triage X (トリアージX, Toriāji Ikusu) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Shōji Satō. It has been serialized in Fujimi Shobo's shōnen manga magazine Monthly Dragon Age since 2009 and collected in 28 tankōbon volumes so far, as of June 2024. Yen Press publishes the manga in North America and has released 25 volumes as of June 20, 2023. There was also a Special volume released, entitled "Triage X Tribute" with little side stories about the Triage X main character cast drawn by friends and assistants of Shōji Satō to honor his work. A 10-episode anime television series adaptation by Xebec was broadcast on Tokyo MX from April 8, 2015 to June 10, 2015.[1] An anime OVA episode was bundled in the release of the series' twelfth volume in November 2015.[2]
In May 2015, Sentai Filmworks licensed Triage X for an English-language release in North America, though subtitled only. No official english dub exists while Animatsu Entertainment licensed the series for release in the United Kingdom.[3][4]