Comic BomBom
Cover of the final issue of Comic BomBom | |
Categories |
Children's manga (elementary school boys) |
---|---|
Frequency | Monthly |
First issue | November 1981 |
Final issue | December 2007 |
Company | Kodansha |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Comic BomBom (コミックボンボン Komikku Bonbon) was a monthly Japanese manga magazine published by Kodansha and targeted at elementary school boys.[1] Each issue had 700+ pages, with 80 of them being full-color advertisements. Similar to its rival CoroCoro Comic, it featured tie-ins with game makers and toy makers but toward the end of its run had less of that.
History
The first issue was published on October 15, 1981. Mobile Suit Gundam was extremely popular at that time. Although the Gundam boom is centered at the higher age group, the fire slowly spread to the lower age group in the form of gunpla and thus it was decided to mainly publish gunpla content. Many popular series were published in Comic BomBom like the SD Gundam series, Rockman series and Medarot series, just to name a few.
In September 1996, Comic BomBom's popularity decline started once the Pokémon Boom began. CoroCoro Comic began to run manga based on popular franchises, such as Mushiking, Pokémon, and Beyblade. Meanwhile, BomBom stuck with Gundam and original manga. BomBom then fell into its Dark Age, with King of Bandit Jing being its most popular manga running.
In June 1997, Comic BomBom skyrocketed out of nowhere and began to rise to its Golden Age, due to the popularity of BomBom's new Medarot and Cyborg Kuro-chan manga. As years flew by, BomBom began to run more original manga than before. The magazine began to include small prizes in every issue. At one point, Comic BomBom's sales began to increase higher than the sales of CoroCoro Comic. But in 2005, sales and popularity began to decline again.
In the January 2006 issue, Comic BomBom underwent a renewal. It features a revamped logo and a size increase from A5 to B5. The price remains at 480yen.
Due to declining sales, the title ended in December 2007 and was replaced by Shōnen Rival.[2]
Featured manga
1980s
- Plamo Kyoshiro
- Fang of the Sun Dougram
- Aura Battler Dunbine
- Armored Trooper Votoms
- G.I. Joe
- Ginga Hyōryū Vifam
- Heavy Metal L-Gaim
- Ge Ge Ge no Kitaro
- Mobile Suit Gundam MS Senki
- Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam
- Mobile Suit Gundam ZZ
- Shin Plamo Kyoshiro
- Shin Yoroiden Samurai Troopers (New Ronin Warriors)
- Plamo Kyoshiro Musha Gundam
- SD Gundam Gaiden Knight Gundam Monogatari Lacoa no Yuusha
1990s
- Gundlander
- Kōryū Densetsu Villgust
- Mobile Suit Gundam F91
- Ultra Ninpocho series (1992–2001)
- Rockman X
- Daikaijū Monogatari
- Shin Musha Gundam Chou Kidou Daishougun
- Chou Musha Gundam Bushin Kirahagane
- Chou Musha Gundam Touba Daishougun
- Medarot series (1997–2003)
- Shin Iyahaya-kun
- SD Gundam Fullcolor Theater
- Cyborg Kuro-chan
- Chou Musha Gundam Tensei Shichinin Shuu
- Chou Musha Gundam Musha Senki Hikari no Hengen Hen
- Street Fighter II V
- Beast Wars II: Super Life-Form Transformers
- Super Life-Form Transformers: Beast Wars Neo
- Transformers: Beast Wars Transmetals
- Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
- Microman
- Jing: King of Bandits
- Doonto! Dragon Kid!
- Herohero-kun
- Shōkan-ō Rekusu
2000s
- SD Gundam Eiyuden
- SD Gundam Mushamaruden trilogy
- Crush Gear Turbo
- Shin Megami Tensei: Devil Children
- Shin Megami Tensei: Devil Children Light & Dark
- Do Suru Paradise
- Mr. Driller
- Crush Gear Nitro
- Magician Tantei A
- Taiko no Tatsujin
- SD Gundam Force
- Musharetsuden Bukabuka Hen
- SD Gundam Musha Banchō Fūunroku
- Spider-Man J
- Mobile Suit Gundam SEED Destiny
- Q Robo Transformers
- Transformers Galaxy Force
- Kikai Wakusei Garakutania
- Metroid Prime
- Metroid Samus & Joe
- Metroid Episode of Aether
- Ultra Ninja Manual Flash
- Big Bad Daddy
- Tarpan
- Angel's Frypan
- Deltora Quest
- Star of Happiness Haghal
- Goki-chan
- Roboo!
- Anzu-chan
- Negima!? neo
- Totsugeki Chicken!
- Umi no Tairiku NOA PLUS+
- Monster Soul
References
- ↑ "J-Magazine.or.jp on Comic BomBom" (in Japanese). Retrieved May 13, 2010.
- ↑ Yomiuri Online Retrieved 2007-8-15.
External links
Comic BomBom at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
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