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Japanese manga magazine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Weekly Young Jump (Japanese: 週刊ヤングジャンプ, Hepburn: Shūkan Yangu Janpu) is a Japanese seinen manga magazine published by Shueisha. Launched in 1979, it is published under Shueisha's Jump line of magazines. The chapters of series that run in Weekly Young Jump are collected and published in tankōbon volumes under the "Young Jump Comics" imprint every four months. Many of the featured series are known to contain heavy violence and a fair amount of sexual content. The magazine is headquartered in Tokyo.[4]
Categories | Seinen manga[1][2] |
---|---|
Frequency | Weekly |
Circulation | 349,000 (January–December 2021)[3] |
Founded | May 1979 |
Company | Shueisha |
Country | Japan |
Based in | Tokyo |
Language | Japanese |
Website | Official website |
Young Jump was launched in May 1979 as a biweekly magazine, and switched to a weekly release schedule in 1981.[5] The "young" in its name denotes its target demographic as a seinen manga magazine, aimed at young adult men.[4] In 2008, an offshoot issue similar to Monthly Shōnen Jump was released called Monthly Young Jump;[6] the magazine was rebranded as Miracle Jump in 2011,[7] and was suspended in 2017.[8]
A spin-off website, titled Tonari no Young Jump (となりのヤングジャンプ, Tonari no Yangu Janpu), debuted on June 14, 2012, starting with Yusuke Murata's remake of One's series One-Punch Man.[9][10]
There are 22 manga titles being regularly serialized in Weekly Young Jump.
Series title | Author | Premiered |
---|---|---|
4Gun-Kun (kari) (4軍くん(仮)) | Yuuji Moritaka, Hikari Suehiro | August 2022 |
Batsu Hare (ハツハレ) | Minori Inaba | March 2022 |
Bungo | Yūji Ninomiya | December 2014 |
Catenaccio (カテナチオ) | Daisuke Morimoto | October 2022 |
Dogsred (ドッグスレッド) | Satoru Noda | July 2023 |
Gas-tō Norainu Tanteidan | Yugo Aosaki, Toshimitsu Matsubara | August 2023 |
Ilios (イリオス) | Masaki Enjoji | April 2022 |
Joyuu Meshi (女優めし) | Yotsuba Fujikawa, Nono Ueno | June 2022 |
Junket Bank (ジャンケットバンク) | Ikko Tanaka | July 2020 |
Kingdom (キングダム) | Yasuhisa Hara | January 2006 |
Kowloon Generic Romance (九龍ジェネリックロマンス) | Jun Mayuzuki | November 2019 |
Nanimo Shiranai kedo, Kimi ga Suki (何も知らないけど、キミが好き。) | Seigo Kishi | February 2023 |
Oshi no Ko (【推しの子】) | Aka Akasaka, Mengo Yokoyari | April 2020 |
Ouritsu Mahou Gakuen no Saikasei: Slum Agari no Saikyou Mahoushi, Kizoku darake no Gakuen de Musou suru (王立魔法学園の最下生~貧困街〈スラム〉上がりの最強魔法師、貴族だらけの学園で無双する~) | Yusura Kankitsu, Fumi Nagatsuki | January 2021 |
Real (リアル) | Takehiko Inoue | October 1999 |
Shadows House (シャドーハウス) | Somato | September 2018 |
Shin no Yasuragi wa Kono Yo ni Naku: Shin Kamen Rider – Shocker Side (真の安らぎはこの世になく -シン・仮面ライダー SHOCKER SIDE-) | Kyūri Yamada, Akeji Fujimura | December 2022 |
Snack Basue (スナックバス江) | Forbidden Shibukawa | July 2017 |
Terra Formars (テラフォーマーズ) | Yū Sasuga, Kenichi Tachibana | September 2011 |
The 100 Girlfriends Who Really, Really, Really, Really, Really Love You (君のことが大大大大大好きな100人の彼女) | Rikito Nakamura, Yukiko Nozawa | December 2019 |
The Days of Diamond (ダイヤモンドの 功罪, Diamond no Kōzai) | Ōhashi Hirai | February 2023 |
Uma Musume Cinderella Gray (ウマ娘 シンデレラグレイ) | Cygames, Junnosuke Itou, Masafumi Sugiura, Taiyou Kusumi | June 2020 |
Miracle Jump (ミラクルジャンプ, Mirakuru Janpu) is a spin-off issue of Weekly Young Jump, first published in January 2011. It includes one shots and Weekly Young Jump series' side stories, and a series that only serializes in Miracle Jump. Initially, it was scheduled to release bimonthly until June 25, 2013. From April 15, 2014, it was changed into monthly releases, and the number of serializations has increased ever since.
Young Jump Gold (ヤングジャンプGOLD, Yan Janpu Gorudo) is a spin-off issue of Weekly Young Jump, first published in July 2017. It includes one shots and Weekly Young Jump series' side stories.
Shueisha launched a spin-off magazine called Young Jump Battle in October 2019. It focuses on manga from the battle manga genre. The first issue will have five one-shots from Young Jump mangaka.[11]
A spin-off focused on romance manga called Young Jump Love launched on December 23, 2019.[11]
Year / Period | Weekly circulation | Magazine sales (est.) | Sales revenue (est.) | Issue price |
---|---|---|---|---|
1986 | 1,600,000[12] | 83,200,000[12] | ¥14,976,000,000 | ¥180[13] |
1987 | 1,860,000[12] | 96,720,000[12] | ¥17,409,600,000 | |
1988 | 2,000,000[12] | 104,000,000[12] | ¥18,720,000,000 | |
1989 to 1991 | 2,100,000[12] | 327,600,000[12] | ¥58,968,000,000 | |
1992 | 1,900,000[12] | 98,800,000[12] | ¥18,772,000,000 | ¥190[13] |
1993 | 1,850,000[12] | 96,200,000[12] | ¥18,278,000,000 | |
1994 | 1,900,000[12] | 98,800,000[12] | ¥20,748,000,000 | ¥210[13] |
1995 | 2,020,000[12] | 105,040,000[12] | ¥22,058,400,000 | |
1996 | 1,940,000[12] | 100,880,000[12] | ¥21,184,800,000 | |
1997 | 1,970,000[12] | 102,440,000[12] | ¥21,512,400,000 | |
1998 | 1,750,000[12] | 91,000,000[12] | ¥19,110,000,000 | |
1999 | 1,600,000[12] | 83,200,000[12] | ¥17,472,000,000 | |
2000 | 1,450,000[12] | 75,400,000[12] | ¥15,834,000,000 | |
2001 | 1,470,000[12] | 76,440,000[12] | ¥16,052,400,000 | |
2002 | 1,400,000[12] | 72,800,000[12] | ¥15,288,000,000 | |
2003 | 1,160,000[12] | 60,320,000[12] | ¥12,667,200,000 | |
2004 | 1,136,666[14] | 59,106,632[14] | ¥12,412,392,720 | |
2005 | 1,081,459[14] | 56,235,868[14] | ¥13,496,608,320 | ¥240[13] |
2006 | 1,006,875[14] | 52,357,500[14] | ¥12,565,800,000 | |
2007 | 967,250[15] | 50,297,000[15] | ¥12,071,280,000 | |
2008 | 939,896[16] | 48,874,592[16] | ¥11,729,902,080 | |
2009 | 852,938[17] | 44,352,776[17] | ¥10,644,666,240 | |
2010 | 768,980[18] | 39,986,960[18] | ¥9,596,870,400 | |
January 2011 to September 2011 | 705,405[19] | 27,510,795[19] | ¥6,602,590,800 | |
October 2011 to September 2012 | 656,250[20] | 34,125,000[20] | ¥8,190,000,000 | |
October 2012 to September 2013 | 609,375[21] | 31,687,500[21] | ¥7,605,000,000 | |
October 2013 to September 2014 | 596,667[22] | 31,026,684[22] | ¥7,446,404,160 | |
October 2014 to September 2015 | 576,250[23] | 29,965,000[23] | ¥7,191,600,000 | |
October 2015 to September 2016 | 557,143[24] | 28,971,436[24] | ¥6,953,144,640 | |
October 2016 to September 2017 | 536,979[25] | 27,922,908[25] | ¥6,701,497,920 | |
October 2017 to September 2018 | 517,813[26] | 26,926,276[26] | ¥6,462,306,240 | |
1986 to September 2018 | 1,328,354 | 2,262,186,927 | ¥468,720,863,520 ($5.742 billion) | ¥207 |
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