| Chobits | |
| ちょびっツ (Chobittsu) | | Demographic | Seinen | | Genre | Comedy , Romance, Science Fiction[1], Ecchi | | Manga | | Authored by | Clamp | | Publisher |
Kodansha | | Other publishers: |
Tokyopop
Editora JBC
Pika Éditions
Star Comics
Daiwon CI
Bonnier Carlsen
Norma Editorial
Editorial Vid
J.P.Fantastica
EMA Cover of Chobits manga, vol. ...
Seinen not to be confused with adult )) is a subset of manga that is generally targeted at an 18â30 year old male audience, but the audience can be much older with some comics aimed at businessmen well into their 40s. ...
The word comedy has a classical meaning (comical theatre) and a popular one (the use of humor with an intent to provoke laughter in general). ...
Romantic love is a form of sexual love that, ideally, transcends mere needs driven by sexual desire, or material and social gain, though these things play a role both in its arousal and its justification. ...
Science fiction is a form of speculative fiction principally dealing with the impact of imagined science and technology, or both, upon society and persons as individuals. ...
Ecchi (from the Japanese ã¨ãã etchi) is an English word deriving from a Japanese word meaning lewd or naughty when used as an adjective, and can refer to a pervert or sexual intercourse when used as a noun. ...
Manga ) (pl. ...
A group photo of Clamp. ...
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The head office of Kodansha Kodansha Limited ) is the largest Japanese publisher of literature and manga, headquartered in (Bunkyo), Tokyo. ...
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| | | Serialized in | Young Magazine | | Original run | 2001 – 2002 | | No. of volumes | 8[2] | | TV anime | | Directed by | Morio Asaka | | Studio | Madhouse | | Network | Animax, TBS, BS-I
Anione
Animax-Asia
Anime Network
Hyper | | Original run | 2 April 2002 – 24 September 2002 | | No. of episodes | 26[3] | | Specials | - Episode 9
- Episode 18
- Episode 27 (OVA)
| Chobits (ちょびっツ, Chobittsu?) is a Japanese manga and anime series created by CLAMP. Unlike most CLAMP stories, Chobits is a seinen series, specifically of the magical girlfriend variety. The manga is set in the same universe as Angelic Layer and takes place a few years after Angelic Layer. Young Magazine (ã¤ã³ã°ãã¬ã¸ã³ yangumagazin) is a Japanese manga magazine published weekly by Kodansha. ...
Year 2001 (MMI) was a common year starting on Monday (link displays the 2001 Gregorian calendar). ...
For album titles with the same name, see 2002 (album). ...
TankÅbon ) is the Japanese term for a compilation volume of a particular series (such as a manga or a novel series, magazine articles, essays, craft patterns, etc. ...
For other uses, see Television (disambiguation). ...
The main cast of the anime Cowboy Bebop (1998) (L to R: Spike Spiegel, Jet Black, Ed Tivrusky, Faye Valentine, and Ein the dog) For the oleo-resin, see Animé (oleo-resin). ...
Morio Asaka ) is a Japanese anime director and one of the best known members of the Japanese animation studio Madhouse. ...
Madhouse ) is a Japanese animation studio, founded in the early 1970s by ex-Mushi Pro animators including Masao Maruyama, Osamu Dezaki, Rintaro, and Yoshiaki Kawajiri. ...
Animax ) is a Japanese anime satellite television network, established and owned by Sony Corporation, and dedicated to broadcasting anime programming. ...
Tokyo Broadcasting System, Incorporated ) (TYO: 9401 ) or TBS, is a television network in Tokyo, Japan. ...
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The Anime Network, a subsidiary of A.D. Vision, Inc. ...
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See Also List of English suffixes Categories: Prefixes ...
April 2 is the 92nd day of the year (93rd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
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September 24 is the 267th day of the year (268th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
For album titles with the same name, see 2002 (album). ...
Manga ) (pl. ...
The main cast of the anime Cowboy Bebop (1998) (L to R: Spike Spiegel, Jet Black, Ed Tivrusky, Faye Valentine, and Ein the dog) For the oleo-resin, see Animé (oleo-resin). ...
A group photo of Clamp. ...
Seinen not to be confused with adult )) is a subset of manga that is generally targeted at an 18â30 year old male audience, but the audience can be much older with some comics aimed at businessmen well into their 40s. ...
This does not cite its references or sources. ...
Angelic Layer ), also called Battle Doll Angelic Layer ) (lit. ...
Plot
The story centers on the life of Hideki Motosuwa, a repeat student (rōnin) attempting to qualify for university by studying at the Seki prep school in Tokyo. Besides a girlfriend, the other thing he dreams of having is a Persocom. A Persocom is an android used as a personal computer; however, they are expensive, and Hideki has no money. In Japan, a rÅnin ) is a student who has graduated from middle school or high school but has failed to enter a school at the next level, and consequently is studying outside of the school system for entrance in a future year. ...
This article needs to be updated. ...
, literally Eastern capital) is a unique subnational administrative region of Japan with characteristics of both a prefecture and a city. ...
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On his way home one evening, he stumbles across a Persocom in the form of a beautiful girl with long blonde hair lying against a pile of trash bags. He first thinks this to be a murder but, realizing she was a Persocom, he carries her home. Upon turning it on, she instantly regards Hideki with adoration. The only word she seems capable of saying is "chi", and thus he names her Chi. Although Chi does not appear to have any programs installed in her, Hideki's friends surmise that she must have some sort of learning program installed, judging from her behaviour. A major part of the plot involves Hideki attempting to teach teach Chi words, concepts, and appropriate behaviours, in between cram school and work. At the same time, Chi seems to be developing feelings for Hideki, at an emotional depth, which Persocoms are not supposed to possess, and Hideki struggles with his feelings for her. The series explores the nature of Persocoms, human interactions with them, and the nature of love. All sorts of characters and their Persocoms are introduced, some of them loving Persocoms, and some of them considering them only as tools, and some of them hating them altogether. In the later part of the story, the characters start to explore Chi's mysterious past. Chi discovers a series of picture books of mysterious origin, that seem to awaken something deep inside of her. The book inspires her to find the "person just for me", a euphemism used in the series to refer to one's true love. Chi is also a very special Persocom, and towards the end of the story, together with Hideki, discovers her true identity, as well as what lies within her.
Themes Despite the comedic and ecchi moments, Chobits itself deals with several dualities concerning subject matter it shows. The most explored issue throughout the series is relationships shared between humans and persocoms. "Watashi", or "Atashi" (Japanese for I or me), a character drawn by the character "Hibiya", is a comic book used in the series to hint at the definition of reciprocated love to Chi, and is used to highlight issues with human-persocom relationships; drawing upon the fact that because persocoms can be programmed to imitate desirable human behavior, humans would opt-out of human relationships, resulting in obvious problems, such as the inability to further produce offspring. Ecchi (from the Japanese ã¨ãã etchi) is an English word deriving from a Japanese word meaning lewd or naughty when used as an adjective, and can refer to a pervert or sexual intercourse when used as a noun. ...
The series deals with issues and ideals of virginity, and sexual intercourse in that Chi is effectively incapable of sexual intercourse (in the manga) and must therefore only entrust her body to someone who cares for her well-being. The series also hints that Chi's particular placement of her "on switch" is added after Freya's death, since her father gave her "special abilities". Along with his goal to ensure all persocoms found happiness, the placement of Chi's on switch ensures that her personality will thrive only in a relationship in which she is loved without the pressure of sex. Persocoms, like women before the women's liberation, are view as objects that meet needs rather than to be loved. This is shown in the series, particularly when several males attempt to "interfere" with Chi. The idea of "love", as a concept is addressed for the denominator of the series, in several installments of "A City With No People"; this deals with issues particularly relating to searching, and subsequently waiting for someone who is what would be referred to as a "soul mate". This is in parallel to the story of Freya, who fell in love with her father and creator, and ultimately wished death due to heartache, and is used as a means of "aiding" Chi in her quest for "A Person Just For Me", or "My One and Only". Both Chi and her sister, Freya; Atashi being linked to Chi, and the companion, linked to Freya. This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
A City With No People ) is an allegorical fictional book mentioned in the of the anime and manga series Chobits. ...
Etymology The name "Chobits" comes from the fact that their father, Ichiro Mihara, used the word "Chobi" to describe anything he thought was "small and hopelessly adorable". Two Chobi become "Chobits". The word "Chobits" is an anagram of "Chitose Hibiya."[4], and is also the password given to Elda, Freya, Plum, and eventually Chi. The spelling of the title uses a mixture of hiragana ちょびっ Chobi[t] and katakana ツ tsu. The mixed letters were chosen because a persocom's password requires a mixture of hiragana, katakana and/or Latin alphanumeric characters for increased security. Similarly, the password チょびっつ Chobittsu for Plum (also known as "Sumomo"; "Sumomo" is Japanese for "plum"), set by Hideki in episode 19 of the TV series (entitled "Chi Helps Out"), mixes katakana (チ, Ch[i]?) and hiragana (ょびっつ, [y]obittsu?), although in TOKYOPOP's English translation of the manga, the password is "Chobits" (with a capital "C"). Japanese writing Kanji Kana Hiragana Katakana Hentaigana ManyÅgana Uses Furigana Okurigana RÅmaji Hiragana ) is a Japanese syllabary, one component of the Japanese writing system, along with katakana and kanji; the Latin alphabet is also used in some cases. ...
Katakana ) is a Japanese syllabary, one component of the Japanese writing system along with hiragana, kanji, and in some cases the Latin alphabet. ...
The Latin alphabet, also called the Roman alphabet, is the most widely used alphabetic writing system in the world today. ...
A password is a form of secret authentication data that is used to control access to a resource. ...
This article about Chobits characters is part of the Chobits group of articles. ...
Binomial name Prunus salicina Lindl. ...
This article is about capitalization in written language. ...
The word persocom (パソコン, pasocon?) is a Japanese contraction of personal computer (パーソナルコンピュータ, pāsonaru conpyūta?). In Japan, it is used to refer to personal computers in the same way as the initials PC are in English. In Chobits, it is used with no distinction between modern and humanoid computers. This may be in reference to the fact that "computer" used to mean a person who performed calculations. In traditional grammar, a contraction is the formation of a new word from two or more individual words. ...
Before mechanical and electronic computers, the term computer, in use from the mid 17th century, meant a human undertaking mathematical calculations. ...
Manga The original Chobits manga was written by Clamp, a famous group of four Japanese mangaka (manga artists) and was serialized in Kodansha's Young Magazine in Japan from February 2001 until the manga's completion in November 2002. Clamp often reuses (or parallels) various characters among their manga. Chobits is one of their first attempts at the seinen genre. Mangaka ) is the Japanese word for a comic artist. ...
The head office of Kodansha Kodansha Limited ) is the largest Japanese publisher of literature and manga, headquartered in (Bunkyo), Tokyo. ...
Young Magazine (ã¤ã³ã°ãã¬ã¸ã³ yangumagazin) is a Japanese manga magazine published weekly by Kodansha. ...
The manga is 88 chapters long and was collected into 8 volumes, which are published in English by TOKYOPOP. TOKYOPOP's translation is imported to Australia by Madman Entertainment. The Traditional Chinese manga is published by COMICSWORLD.COM (天下出版有限公司) under official authorization for Hong Kong only. In Singapore, the Simplified Chinese version is published by Chuangyi. Madman Entertainment is an Australian company that specialises in the distribution of Japanese anime and manga to Australia and New Zealand. ...
Anime - Further information: Chobits media information
The anime consists of 26 episodes and was broadcast across Japan, East Asia and Southeast Asia by the anime satellite television network, Animax and the terrestrial Tokyo Broadcasting System network. Episodes 9, 18, and an extra 27th OVA episode are used as "recap" episodes, looking back on the events that happened previously. The episodes were re-numbered for the DVD release; the original recap episodes were not included in sequence, instead being published together on the final DVD and re-numbered as 8.5, 16.5 and 24.5 making the series itself only 24 episodes. // Published by Tokyopop [1] Chobits Volume 1 â ISBN 1-931514-92-5 Chobits Volume 2 â ISBN 1-59182-005-7 Chobits Volume 3 â ISBN 1-59182-006-5 Chobits Volume 4 â ISBN 1-59182-007-3 Chobits Volume 5 â ISBN 1-59182-153-3 Chobits Volume 6 â ISBN 1-59182...
Artists impression of a Boeing 601 satellite, as configured for digital television transmission by SES Astra Satellite television is television delivered by way of communications satellites, as compared to conventional terrestrial television and cable television. ...
Animax ) is a Japanese anime satellite television network, established and owned by Sony Corporation, and dedicated to broadcasting anime programming. ...
Terrestrial television (also known as over-the-air, OTA or broadcast television) was the traditional method of television broadcast signal delivery prior to the advent of cable and satellite television. ...
Tokyo Broadcasting System, Incorporated ) (TYO: 9401 ) or TBS, is a television network in Tokyo, Japan. ...
A human ovum An ovum (loosely, egg or egg cell) is a female sex cell or gamete. ...
There is a 6-minute special episode: "Sumomo and Kotoko on a Quest", or "Chibits", concerning Sumomo and Kotoko. The series was directed by Morio Asaka and animated by Madhouse while Hisashi Abe acted as character designer and chief animation director. The ending to the anime series is different from the manga on many levels; perhaps the most notable being removal of all true allusion to Hideki never having Chi because of her switch location, and of Freya taking over Chi's body and asking her mother Chitose to shut them down, saying the Chobits series is a failure, and the activation of the program after all, although the effect on Persocoms is not the same as described in the manga. Morio Asaka ) is a Japanese anime director and one of the best known members of the Japanese animation studio Madhouse. ...
Madhouse ) is a Japanese animation studio, founded in the early 1970s by ex-Mushi Pro animators including Masao Maruyama, Osamu Dezaki, Rintaro, and Yoshiaki Kawajiri. ...
Hisashi Abe can refer to: Hisashi Abe (zoologist), professor at Hokkaido University Hakodate and author of various publications on East Asian zoology. ...
Games In 2002 Marvellous Entertainment Inc. released a Chobits game for the Nintendo Game Boy Advance. This game has not been released outside of Japan. The game was available bundled with a clear blue Game Boy Advance with a decal of Chi above the A+B buttons and a Chobits logo above the D-pad. [1] There is also a PlayStation 2 game that was released exclusively in Japan. Nintendo Company, Limited (任天å or ãã³ãã³ãã¼ NintendÅ; NASDAQ: NTDOY, TYO: 7974 usually referred to as simply Nintendo, or Big N ) is a multinational corporation founded on September 23, 1889[1] in Kyoto, Japan by Fusajiro Yamauchi to produce handmade hanafuda cards. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Look up Decal in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
Notes and References - ^ IMDB - Genres anime, comedy, drama, romance, sci-fi
- ^ Chobits (manga) at Anime News Network's Encyclopedia. Accessed 2007-02-25.
- ^ Chobits (anime) at Anime News Network's Encyclopedia. Accessed 2007-02-25.
- ^ Ichiro Mihara: "Chobi" means "little"... Two Chobi become "Chobits." It's a word I made up, since the password system won't take actual words. "Chobi" spelled in hiragana, with the last sound in katakana. Chitose Hibiya: Your daddy told me that anything he thinks is small and hopelessly adorable is "Chobi" to him. That's why you two are his "Chobits." Another thing... My Ichiro told me that the word "Chobits"... ... is special to him... ...because it's made up of the letters in my name - Chitose Hibiya. And that's why they're my children.Clamp [2001] (2003). "Chapter 87", in Jake Forbes: Chobits volume 8 (in English). Tokyopop, pages 113-116. ISBN 1591824095.
This article is being considered for deletion in accordance with Wikipedias deletion policy. ...
Year 2007 (MMVII) is the current year, a common year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar and the AD/CE era. ...
February 25 is the 56th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar. ...
This article is being considered for deletion in accordance with Wikipedias deletion policy. ...
Year 2007 (MMVII) is the current year, a common year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar and the AD/CE era. ...
February 25 is the 56th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Clamp may refer to: Look up Clamp in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
See also // Published by Tokyopop [1] Chobits Volume 1 â ISBN 1-931514-92-5 Chobits Volume 2 â ISBN 1-59182-005-7 Chobits Volume 3 â ISBN 1-59182-006-5 Chobits Volume 4 â ISBN 1-59182-007-3 Chobits Volume 5 â ISBN 1-59182-153-3 Chobits Volume 6 â ISBN 1-59182...
// Hideki Motosuwa Japanese Seiyū Tomokazu Sugita English Voice Actor Crispin Freeman Hideki Motosuwa ) is a 19-year-old (in the anime, 18) repeat student (ronin) attempting to get into university by studying at Seki cram school, which his parents have sent him to. ...
External links |