Takahashi had varying degrees of involvement in the Yu-Gi-Oh! franchise’s movies. It will be published in Weekly Shōnen Jump in Japanese and English. In 2018, he wrote a short-form manga called The COMIQ, about a mangaka whose work is magical. Īfter Yu-Gi-Oh!, Takahashi designed Advent Heroes, a comic and card game, influenced by American comics. Takahashi compiled various Yu-Gi-Oh! illustrations he'd drawn into the book Duel Art which was published on December 16, 2011. Despite this, four subsequent series, Yu-Gi-Oh! ZEXAL, Yu-Gi-Oh! ARC-V, Yu-Gi-Oh! VRAINS, and Yu-Gi-Oh! SEVENS have been made. The production staff and TV board were long time associates and friends, who had spread Yu-Gi-Oh! to many people in the world, so Takahashi agreed, under the condition that this would be the last Yu-Gi-Oh! series. However, he was approached at the end of 2006 with the idea for Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's. Takahashi had promised himself that Yu-Gi-Oh! GX would be the last Yu-Gi-Oh! series. Shueisha, the publisher of the Weekly Shōnen Jump magazine, received so many letters and fan-mail asking about the Magic and Wizards game that Takahashi decided to extend it. The original format of the manga was set in episodic chapters with a different game being played in each chapter, and the Magic and Wizards card game was originally intended to only appear in two chapters. However, he never intended to focus his manga on the card game he created. Takahashi's popular Yu-Gi-Oh! manga started the creation of the Yu-Gi-Oh! cards, known within the series as Magic and Wizards and later Duel Monsters. Takahashi didn't find success until 1996 when he created Yu-Gi-Oh!. One of his earliest works was Tennenshokudanji Buray (天然色男児BURAY), which lasted for two volumes and was published from 1991 to 1992. His first work was Tokio no Tsuma, published in 1990. The editor he met was bothered by the size of his submission, but read through all of it and understood that Takahashi wanted to do a battle story. In 1990, he managed to create 100 pages of manga and 200 pages of sketches before bringing his first proposal to Weekly Shōnen Jump. Takahashi worked for a game company, but aspired to create manga. ![]() He considers that to be his debut, but for the next ten years he went through several publishers and had a lot of rejected stories. When he was 19, one of Takahashi's manga stories won a contest in a shonen manga magazine. As a child, Takahashi liked to draw, but did not start putting manga together until he was in high school.
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