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Naruto: Games
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Shonen Jump Naruto Magazine Winter 2007/2008 This installment of Naruto Magazine features 112 pages that include an interview with creator Masashi Kishimoto, an anime poster, a board game, trivia, puzzles, brain benders and more! Imported. © VIZ Media
Naruto: Rise of a Ninja With Naruto, Ubisoft will develop for the first time a game based on a Japanese property. Naruto was first launched as part of Shueisha’s weekly manga magazine, Weekly Shonen Jump in 1999 and launched in the U.S. in the monthly Shonen Jump magazine in 2003. Naruto manga books have sold more than 59 million copies in Japan alone. Manga books are published in major territories in Europe as well.
Naruto is a long manga. The story is not finished yet. It is the second most-popular shōnen (boy's manga). Since it began, a lot of Naruto fansites (websites made by people who like it a lot) were made with detailed information, guides and forums about the show. There is ... a Naruto card game. There are many fan clubs and sites.
Aside from the new Naruto stories, the new issue of Shonen Jump includes an extra-powerful Yu-Gi-Oh! TCG card, the exclusive “The Wicked Dreadroot” card, and two pages of tips from experts. The issue ... delivers an exclusive first look at the new One Piece: Unlimited Adventure video game for the Nintendo Wii from Namco Bandai Games America where Captain Monkey D. Luffy and the rest of the Straw Hat Pirates embark on new and wild adventures.
In the Japanese versions, Naruto often ends his sentences with "dattebayo," and as such has a unique style of speech. In Japanese, an ending with no literal meaning can be added to make the tone sound tougher, childish, girlish, or many other changes depending on the many existing endings. "-ttebayo," which is not a well-known ending, has no literal meaning and cannot be translated, but carries the connotations of the speaker being uncultured, brusque, and seeming tougher than they really are. In the English anime and video games, he often says "Believe it!" to fit with the mouth movements of "-ttebayo."
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