{"id":"bakuman","platform":"nds","category":"main_game","titles":[{"text":"Bakuman","lang":"en","script":"Latn","region":"us","form":"official","source":"wikipedia_ja","verified":false},{"text":"バクマン。 マンガ家への道","lang":"ja","script":"Jpan","region":"jp","form":"official","source":"wikipedia_ja","verified":true}],"external_ids":{"wikidata":"Q11327594"},"descriptions":[{"text":"Japanese anime television series","lang":"en","source":"wikidata"},{"text":"série de manga","lang":"fr","source":"wikidata"},{"text":"日本電視動畫系列","lang":"zh","source":"wikidata"},{"text":"日本のアニメシリーズ","lang":"ja","source":"wikidata"},{"text":"série de televisão de anime japonesa","lang":"pt","source":"wikidata"},{"text":"Bakuman (バクマン。; stylized as BAKUMAN。) is a Japanese manga series written by Tsugumi Ohba and illustrated by Takeshi Obata, the same creative team responsible for Death Note. It was serialized in Shueisha's shōnen manga magazine Weekly Shōnen Jump from August 2008 to April 2012, with its 176 chapters collected into 20 tankōbon volumes. The story follows talented artist Moritaka Mashiro and aspiring writer Akito Takagi, two ninth grade boys who wish to become manga artists, with Mashiro as the illustrator and Takagi as the writer. Some characters resemble real authors and editors of Weekly Shōnen Jump, and many manga titles mentioned in Bakuman have actually been published in the magazine.\nIt is the first manga released online by Shueisha in multiple languages before becoming available in print outside Japan. In 2009, Viz Media licensed the manga for English release in North America. Besides releasing the series in collected volumes, they also released it in their online manga anthology Weekly Shonen Jump Alpha. A 75-episode anime television adaptation of the series by J.C.Staff was broadcast for three seasons on NHK Educational TV from October 2010 to March 2013. A live-action film ","lang":"en","source":"wikipedia_en"},{"text":"『バクマン。』は、大場つぐみと小畑健による同名の漫画を原作としたアニメ作品。","lang":"ja","source":"wikipedia_ja"}]}