Manga (magazine)

Manga magazine, formerly known as Takuhai, is a free quarterly magazine published by Tokyopop, which gives preview chapters of a selection of the company's new manga titles, as well as fan art, interviews, and short articles. The magazine is intended as a publicity vehicle, similar to Tokyopop Sneaks, free preview compilations of Tokyopop titles.[1]

History and profile

It was first published in the summer of 2005. The magazine's original title, Takuhai meant "home delivery" in Japanese, but this was changed when Tokyopop discovered that many readers were accessing it through bookstores, comic stores, and newsstands.[2][3] The magazine retitled to Manga in September 2005.[2]

The magazine has two parts, each with its own cover page. The front half is read left-to-right, while the back half is read in Japanese style, right-to-left. Manga also includes an online issue with completely different material to the printed publication, and which is updated every month.

gollark: I write C by hand with the type checker turned off.
gollark: As someone who never makes any mistakes, I don't need a programming language to hold my hand!
gollark: And the thing (a mobile bee deployment platform) needs that DMP thing to track its orientation.
gollark: The code is all running on an RPi, but the "DMP" features in the MPU6050 are poorly documented and the reverse engineered drivers are in C++.
gollark: Unfortunately, I'm working on a robotics thing for which I have to use C++ due to bad drivers for an accelerometer/gyroscope chip.

References

  1. "More On Tokyopop Takuhai". Anime News Network. 9 March 2005. Retrieved 12 March 2013.
  2. "Takuhai Changes to Manga Magazine". Anime News Network. 7 October 2005. Retrieved 12 March 2013.
  3. "'Takuhai' Becomes 'Manga Magazine'". ICv2. 12 October 2005. Retrieved 12 March 2013.


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