Detroit’s Huntington Place will be, as the Vapors sang, turning Japanese this weekend as the 19th annual Youmacon settles in for a four-day run through Sunday, Nov. 3. The gathering celebrates ...
Lucas Kloberdanz-Dyck is a writer for Collider. He grew up creating lists, stories, and worlds, which led to his love of anime and video games. He attended Sheridan College where he earned an Honours ...
Based in Scotland, Finn has been writing about Japanese pop culture for nine years now. He is also a gamer, hiker, and proud vegan. His passion is bringing news straight from Japan to you, in English, ...
Jacob Buchalter (he/him) is a full-time Staff Writer based in the US and is an all-around creative media-obsessed individual who truly cares a bit too much about pop culture media, art, and all things ...
Anime and gaming crossover, bringing joy to fans through references and easter eggs, creating a unique and special feeling! Various anime shows incorporate gaming references like Nintendo 3DS-style ...
Summer is almost here. That means San Japan — which touts itself as the largest anime and gaming convention in South Texas — is just a couple of months away. Convention organizers just announced the ...
Marvel and D.C. comics might have dominated entertainment for the best part of two decades, but the next generation of entertainment hits will come from anime and the video game worlds, Sony Pictures ...
Anime is a medium full of unforgettable stories and quirky concepts. It’s no surprise, then, that numerous video game adaptations of anime series like One Piece, My Hero Academia, and Dragon Ball have ...
Sometimes, when a video game does very well, it receives an anime spinoff. The most famous example of this is the Pokémon franchise, which began as a video game before turning into a worldwide anime ...
With Japanese animation forecast to become a $60 billion business by 2030, Sony is leveraging its assets behind the category: "We are very bullish about the overall growth of anime and what that means ...
Speaking at Mipcom, Sony Pictures Television chair Keith Le Goy said he believes that the next great wave of entertainment IP will come from anime and video games, not the comic book universes that ...