fbpx
Wikipedia

Peacock King

Peacock King (Japanese: 孔雀王, Hepburn: Kujaku Ō) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Makoto Ogino. It was serialized in Shueisha's seinen manga magazine Weekly Young Jump from 1985 to 1989, with its chapters collected in 17 tankōbon volumes. It spawned four other manga series. The original manga was licensed in North America in 2020 by Manga Planet.

Peacock King
Cover of the first tankōbon volume, featuring Kujaku
孔雀王
(Kujaku Ō)
GenreAction, fantasy[1]
Manga
Written byMakoto Ogino
Published by
English publisher
  • NA: Manga Planet (digital)[2]
Magazine
  • Weekly Young Jump (1985–2009)
  • Monthly Young Jump (2009–2010)
  • Comic Ran Twins (2012–2016)
  • Comic Ran (2016–2019)
DemographicSeinen
Original run19852019
Volumes45
Series titles
  1. Kujaku Ō (1985–1989, 17 volumes)
  2. Taimaseiden (1990–1992, 11 volumes)
  3. Magarigamiki (2006–2010, 12 volumes)
  4. Sengoku Tensei (2012–2019, 5 volumes)
Original video animation
Spirit Warrior
Directed by
Written by
  • Shō Aikawa (#1–3)
  • Leo Natsuki (#1–3)
  • Kazuhiro Inaba (#4–5)
  • Tatsuhiko Urahata (#4–5)
Music by
Studio
Licensed by
Released 1988 1994
Runtime50 minutes
Episodes5
Live-action film
Directed byLam Ngai Kai
Written by
  • Izō Hashimoto
  • Kazuki Sekizumi
Music byMicky Yoshino
Studio
ReleasedDecember 10, 1988
Runtime96 minutes
Live-action film
Saga of the Phoenix
Directed byLam Ngai Kai
Written byHirohisa Soda
Music byPhilip Chan Fei-Lit
Studio
  • Toho
  • Orange Sky Golden Harvest
  • Golden Harvest
Released1990
Runtime93 minutes
Manga
Kujaku Ō: Rising
Written byMakoto Ogino
Published byShogakukan
MagazineMonthly Big Comic Spirits
DemographicSeinen
Original runOctober 30, 2012July 30, 2019
Volumes10

Peacock King was adapted into a 5-episode original video animation (OVA), released from 1988 to 1994, and licensed in North America by U.S. Manga Corps, under the title Spirit Warrior. Two live-action films were released in 1988 and 1990.

Story edit

Kujaku is a Buddhist monk who specializes in exorcism and devil hunting. He is a member of Ura-Kōya, a secret organization in Japan that specializes in demon hunting. Kujaku confronts Rikudoshu (六道衆), a secret evil organization led by the Teachers of Eight Leaves (八葉の老師). The goal of the Teachers of Eight Leaves is to revive Peacock King and Snake Queen, and allow them to fight each other to give birth to the ultimate Dark Vairocana (闇の大日如来). During the story, the Teachers of Eight Leaves tried various methods to achieve their goal, but were ultimately defeated by Kujaku and his friends.

Characters edit

Kujaku (孔雀)
Voiced by: Toshihiko Seki (1st OVA), Kōji Tsujitani (2nd OVA) (Japanese); Edward Morrisson Garland (English)
Portrayed by: Hiroshi Mikami (1st film) (Japanese); Hiroshi Abe (2nd film) (English)
A Kōya Hijiri monk in his twenties and the hero of the story. His real name is Akira (), the son of a monk named Jikaku and a female pilgrim or Ksitigarbha (地蔵菩薩, Jizō Bosatsu). He is the reincarnation of Mahamayuri (孔雀明王, Kujaku Myō-ō), Lucifer, and Melek Taus, which grants him an immense spiritual power. Most of the time, however, Kujaku behaves like the young man he is, being carefree, lecherous and a glutton. He uses a vajra in exorcisms.
Ashura (阿修羅)
Voiced by: Arisa Andō (1st OVA), Miki Itō (2nd OVA) (Japanese); Alissa Stein (English)
Portrayed by: Gloria Yip
A girl chosen by the god Asura King (阿修羅王, Ashura Ou). She was found by Ura-Kouya in a village, where she was hated and feared by her spiritual powers. Being 12 to 15 years old through the story, Ashura is usually rebellious and feisty, and also has a crush on Kujaku, which makes her jealous in several instances. She also loves fashion and often changes her appearance from her natural blond hair. She has pyrokinetic abilities and can generate a great amount of spiritual energy to transfer to her allies.
Tarōja Onimaru (王仁丸 太郎邪, Onimaru Tarōja)
Voiced by: Hiroya Ishimaru (1st OVA, episode #1), Tesshō Genda (1st OVA, episodes #2–3), Yūsaku Yara (2nd OVA) (Japanese); Michael Schwartz (English)
Kujaku's greatest rival, a half-demon half-human Jukondō master who works as a mercenary. He is superhumanly strong and has regenerative abilities, and specializes in controlling evil spirits. Although he and Kujaku were enemies in their first encounter, they quickly became friends, which turned Onimaru into somewhat of a recurrent reinforcement ally for Kujaku and his friends. His guardian god is Mahakala (大暗黒天, Daiankokuten).
Kō Kaihō (黄 海峰)
Voiced by: Kazuhiko Inoue (1st OVA), Norio Wakamoto (2nd OVA) (Japanese); Dan Truman (English)
Kujaku's second rival, the young heir of a Chinese clan of sorcerers named Hakka Sendo. He is a master of Huáng-jiā Xiāndào (黄家仙道) and uses the sword Shikoken (獅咬剣). Like Onimaru, he started as an enemy to Kujaku before joining forces with him and developing an uneasy friendship with him. He later falls in love with Kujaku's sister Tomoko, which causes him to give in to darkness in order to try to save her from her fate. After being saved by Kujaku, he marries Tomoko and has a son with her.
Jikū Ajari (慈空 阿闍梨)
Voiced by: Gorō Naya (1st OVA), Ichirō Nagai (2nd OVA) (Japanese); Matthew Harrington (English)
Portrayed by: Ken Ogata (1st film), Shintaro Katsu (2nd film)
Kujaku's old master. He knew Kujaku's father and was entrusted with him. Despite his wisdom and age, he is a bit of an alcoholic and as perverted as his apprentice.
Nikkō (日光)
Voiced by: Akira Kamiya (1st OVA), Ken Yamaguchi (2nd OVA) (Japanese); Ed Kissel (English)
Head priest of Ura-Kōya and Kujaku's senpai. He tries to be much more serious about their work. His guardian god is Mahāvairocana (大日如来, Dainichi Nyorai).
Tomoko (朋子)
Voiced by: Noriko Hidaka
Kujaku's sister, an incarnation of the Rahu (天蛇王, Tenjaō). She became separated from Kujaku as a child and was brought up by a Neo-Nazi cult, which tried to wake up her spiritual power to use her as a weapon.
Tsukuyomi (月読)
Voiced by: Miina Tominaga (1st OVA), Hiromi Tsuru (2nd OVA) (Japanese); Denise Gottwald (English)
The mistress of the women's prayer room at Ura-Kōya. She is in love with Kujaku. Her guardian god is Candraprabha (月光菩薩, Gakkou Bosatsu)

Publication edit

Peacock King, written and illustrated by Makoto Ogino, was first serialized in Shueisha's seinen manga magazine Weekly Young Jump from 1985 to 1989.[3] Its chapters were collected in seventeen tankōbon volumes, released from July 1, 1986,[4] to May 1, 1990.[5]

A sequel, Kujaku Ō: Taimaseiden (孔雀王 退魔聖伝), was serialized in Weekly Young Jump from 1990 to 1992.[6] Shueisha collected its chapters in eleven tankōbon volumes, released from February 1, 1991,[7] to December 1, 1993.[8]

A second sequel, Kujaku Ō: Magarigamiki (孔雀王 曲神紀), was serialized in Weekly Young Jump from March 23, 2006, to October 22, 2009,[a] and later in Monthly Young Jump from November 17, 2009, to February 16, 2010.[b] Shueisha collected its chapters in twelve tankōbon volumes, released from August 18, 2006, to March 19, 2010.[13][14]

A spin-off series, Kujaku Ō: Rising (孔雀王 ライジング), was serialized in Shogakukan's Monthly Big Comic Spirits from March 27, 2012,[15] to June 27, 2019.[16] Shogakukan collected its chapters in ten tankōbon volumes, released from October 30, 2012,[17] to July 30, 2019.[18]

A third sequel, Kujaku Ō: Sengoku Tensei (孔雀王 ~戦国転生~) was published in Leed's Comic Ran Twins from October 26, 2012,[19] to June 27, 2016,[20] and later in Comic Ran from October 27, 2016,[21] to June 27, 2019.[22] Leed collected the chapters in five tankōbon volumes, released from December 27, 2013,[23] to July 30, 2019.[24]

Adaptations edit

Films edit

The manga has been adapted into two Hong Kong live action films, Peacock King and Saga of the Phoenix, both directed by Lam Ngai Kai. The former, released in 1988, stars Hiroshi Mikami and Yuen Biao as the two monks (Kujaku and a new character Kǒngquè, respectively), and Gloria Yip as Ashura. Gordon Liu, Kara Wai and Philip Kwok appear in supporting roles.

Video games edit

Family Computer edit

  • Kujaku Ō (孔雀王, Peacock King)
The first of two Family Computer (Famicom) adventure games. In it the player takes the role of a band of heroes fighting against evil demons. The player interacts with the story by selecting actions from a list of options on screen (look, take, talk etc) and by a simple 'point-and-click interface. The game was released only in Japan for the Famicom on September 21, 1988 by Pony Canyon.
  • Kujaku Ō II (孔雀王II, Peacock King II)
A graphic/point-and-click adventure. The player interacts with the story by selecting actions from a list of options on screen (look, take, talk etc) and by a simple 'point-and-click interface. The graphics have been improved over its predecessor. It is also available on the MSX Japanese computer. Released on the Nintendo Famicom by Pony Canyon in Japan on August 21, 1990.

Sega edit

  • Kujaku Ō (孔雀王, Peacock King)
Sega Mark III, September 23, 1988 (Released as SpellCaster in western markets)
  • Kujaku Ō 2: Gen'eijō (孔雀王2 幻影城, Peacock King 2: Castle of Illusion)
Mega Drive, November 25, 1989 (Released as Mystic Defender in western markets)

Notes edit

  1. ^ Issues: #17 2006–#47, 2009,[6] (dates of each issue:[9][10])
  2. ^ Issues: December 2009–March 2010,[6] (dates of each issue:[11][12])

References edit

  1. ^ Jake L Godek. "Peacock King". THEM Anime Reviews. from the original on May 8, 2019. Retrieved May 10, 2019.
  2. ^ Mateo, Alex (July 29, 2020). "Manga Planet Licenses Salary Man Kintaro, Charge!! Men's School, Peacock King More Manga". Anime News Network. from the original on August 3, 2020. Retrieved July 30, 2020.
  3. ^ 荻野真「孔雀王」最終決戦を原稿サイズで単行本化、「独鈷杵」付きセットも. Natalie (in Japanese). Natasha, Inc. August 18, 2020. from the original on April 29, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  4. ^ 孔雀王 1 (in Japanese). ASIN 4088615417.
  5. ^ 孔雀王 17 (in Japanese). ASIN 4088615573.
  6. ^ a b c 神々の戦いは歴史や時空までも歪めてしまう! 「孔雀王」の世界に迫る!. music.jp (in Japanese). April 12, 2016. from the original on May 30, 2016. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  7. ^ 孔雀王:退魔聖伝 1 (in Japanese). ASIN 408861271X.
  8. ^ 孔雀王:退魔聖伝 11 (in Japanese). ASIN 4088617959.
  9. ^ バックナンバー 2006年. youngjump.jp (in Japanese). Shueisha. from the original on May 28, 2019. Retrieved July 22, 2019.
  10. ^ バックナンバー 2009年. youngjump.jp (in Japanese). Shueisha. from the original on February 15, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  11. ^ 連載化決定済み読み切り「鬼童子」序章、月刊YJに掲載. Natalie (in Japanese). Natasha, Inc. November 17, 2009. from the original on April 30, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  12. ^ 月刊YJ、「EVIL HEART」武富智2年ぶりの新作「Yell」掲載. Natalie (in Japanese). Natasha, Inc. February 16, 2010. from the original on April 29, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  13. ^ 孔雀王曲神紀 1 (in Japanese). ASIN 4088771303.
  14. ^ 孔雀王曲神紀 12 (in Japanese). ASIN 4088778200.
  15. ^ 「孔雀王」新シリーズ、孔雀の修行時代を月スピで描く. Natalie (in Japanese). Natasha, Inc. March 27, 2012. from the original on April 29, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  16. ^ 精神科が舞台の新連載が月スピで開幕、荻野真「孔雀王ライジング」最終回も. Natalie (in Japanese). Natasha, Inc. June 27, 2019. from the original on January 4, 2022. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  17. ^ 孔雀王ライジング 1 (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Archived from the original on April 29, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  18. ^ 孔雀王ライジング 10 (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Archived from the original on April 29, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  19. ^ 「孔雀王」新作が戦国武将列伝で連載、転生した孔雀の戦い. Natalie (in Japanese). Natasha, Inc. October 26, 2012. from the original on April 29, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  20. ^ 戦国を題材にした時代劇誌「戦国武将列伝」が休刊、「セキガハラ」など完結. Natalie (in Japanese). Natasha, Inc. June 27, 2016. from the original on April 29, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  21. ^ コミック乱 (2016年12月号) (in Japanese). Books Kinokuniya. Archived from the original on April 29, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  22. ^ 高浜寛「ニュクスの角灯」が完結、荻野真「孔雀王~戦国転生~」の最終回も. Natalie (in Japanese). Natasha, Inc. June 27, 2019. from the original on November 25, 2022. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  23. ^ 【12月27日付】本日発売の単行本リスト. Natalie (in Japanese). Natasha, Inc. December 27, 2013. from the original on October 24, 2021. Retrieved November 14, 2021.
  24. ^ 【7月30日付】本日発売の単行本リスト. Natalie (in Japanese). Natasha, Inc. July 30, 2019. from the original on October 25, 2021. Retrieved November 14, 2021.

External links edit

peacock, king, japanese, 孔雀王, hepburn, kujaku, japanese, manga, series, written, illustrated, makoto, ogino, serialized, shueisha, seinen, manga, magazine, weekly, young, jump, from, 1985, 1989, with, chapters, collected, tankōbon, volumes, spawned, four, othe. Peacock King Japanese 孔雀王 Hepburn Kujaku Ō is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Makoto Ogino It was serialized in Shueisha s seinen manga magazine Weekly Young Jump from 1985 to 1989 with its chapters collected in 17 tankōbon volumes It spawned four other manga series The original manga was licensed in North America in 2020 by Manga Planet Peacock KingCover of the first tankōbon volume featuring Kujaku孔雀王 Kujaku Ō GenreAction fantasy 1 MangaWritten byMakoto OginoPublished byShueisha parts 1 3 Leed part 4 English publisherNA Manga Planet digital 2 MagazineWeekly Young Jump 1985 2009 Monthly Young Jump 2009 2010 Comic Ran Twins 2012 2016 Comic Ran 2016 2019 DemographicSeinenOriginal run1985 2019Volumes45 Series titlesKujaku Ō 1985 1989 17 volumes Taimaseiden 1990 1992 11 volumes Magarigamiki 2006 2010 12 volumes Sengoku Tensei 2012 2019 5 volumes Original video animationSpirit WarriorDirected byKatsuhito Akiyama 1 3 Ichirō Itano 2 Rintaro 4 5 Written byShō Aikawa 1 3 Leo Natsuki 1 3 Kazuhiro Inaba 4 5 Tatsuhiko Urahata 4 5 Music byYas Kaz 1 3 Toshiyuki Honda 4 5 StudioAIC 1 3 Studio 88 2 Madhouse 4 5 Licensed byNA U S Manga Corps expired Released1988 1994Runtime50 minutesEpisodes5 Live action filmDirected byLam Ngai KaiWritten byIzō HashimotoKazuki SekizumiMusic byMicky YoshinoStudioTohoGolden HarvestReleasedDecember 10 1988Runtime96 minutes Live action filmSaga of the PhoenixDirected byLam Ngai KaiWritten byHirohisa SodaMusic byPhilip Chan Fei LitStudioTohoOrange Sky Golden HarvestGolden HarvestReleased1990Runtime93 minutes MangaKujaku Ō RisingWritten byMakoto OginoPublished byShogakukanMagazineMonthly Big Comic SpiritsDemographicSeinenOriginal runOctober 30 2012 July 30 2019Volumes10 Peacock King was adapted into a 5 episode original video animation OVA released from 1988 to 1994 and licensed in North America by U S Manga Corps under the title Spirit Warrior Two live action films were released in 1988 and 1990 Contents 1 Story 2 Characters 3 Publication 4 Adaptations 4 1 Films 4 2 Video games 4 2 1 Family Computer 4 2 2 Sega 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksStory editKujaku is a Buddhist monk who specializes in exorcism and devil hunting He is a member of Ura Kōya a secret organization in Japan that specializes in demon hunting Kujaku confronts Rikudoshu 六道衆 a secret evil organization led by the Teachers of Eight Leaves 八葉の老師 The goal of the Teachers of Eight Leaves is to revive Peacock King and Snake Queen and allow them to fight each other to give birth to the ultimate Dark Vairocana 闇の大日如来 During the story the Teachers of Eight Leaves tried various methods to achieve their goal but were ultimately defeated by Kujaku and his friends Characters editKujaku 孔雀 Voiced by Toshihiko Seki 1st OVA Kōji Tsujitani 2nd OVA Japanese Edward Morrisson Garland English Portrayed by Hiroshi Mikami 1st film Japanese Hiroshi Abe 2nd film English A Kōya Hijiri monk in his twenties and the hero of the story His real name is Akira 明 the son of a monk named Jikaku and a female pilgrim or Ksitigarbha 地蔵菩薩 Jizō Bosatsu He is the reincarnation of Mahamayuri 孔雀明王 Kujaku Myō ō Lucifer and Melek Taus which grants him an immense spiritual power Most of the time however Kujaku behaves like the young man he is being carefree lecherous and a glutton He uses a vajra in exorcisms Ashura 阿修羅 Voiced by Arisa Andō 1st OVA Miki Itō 2nd OVA Japanese Alissa Stein English Portrayed by Gloria Yip A girl chosen by the god Asura King 阿修羅王 Ashura Ou She was found by Ura Kouya in a village where she was hated and feared by her spiritual powers Being 12 to 15 years old through the story Ashura is usually rebellious and feisty and also has a crush on Kujaku which makes her jealous in several instances She also loves fashion and often changes her appearance from her natural blond hair She has pyrokinetic abilities and can generate a great amount of spiritual energy to transfer to her allies Tarōja Onimaru 王仁丸 太郎邪 Onimaru Tarōja Voiced by Hiroya Ishimaru 1st OVA episode 1 Tesshō Genda 1st OVA episodes 2 3 Yusaku Yara 2nd OVA Japanese Michael Schwartz English Kujaku s greatest rival a half demon half human Jukondō master who works as a mercenary He is superhumanly strong and has regenerative abilities and specializes in controlling evil spirits Although he and Kujaku were enemies in their first encounter they quickly became friends which turned Onimaru into somewhat of a recurrent reinforcement ally for Kujaku and his friends His guardian god is Mahakala 大暗黒天 Daiankokuten Kō Kaihō 黄 海峰 Voiced by Kazuhiko Inoue 1st OVA Norio Wakamoto 2nd OVA Japanese Dan Truman English Kujaku s second rival the young heir of a Chinese clan of sorcerers named Hakka Sendo He is a master of Huang jia Xiandao 黄家仙道 and uses the sword Shikoken 獅咬剣 Like Onimaru he started as an enemy to Kujaku before joining forces with him and developing an uneasy friendship with him He later falls in love with Kujaku s sister Tomoko which causes him to give in to darkness in order to try to save her from her fate After being saved by Kujaku he marries Tomoko and has a son with her Jiku Ajari 慈空 阿闍梨 Voiced by Gorō Naya 1st OVA Ichirō Nagai 2nd OVA Japanese Matthew Harrington English Portrayed by Ken Ogata 1st film Shintaro Katsu 2nd film Kujaku s old master He knew Kujaku s father and was entrusted with him Despite his wisdom and age he is a bit of an alcoholic and as perverted as his apprentice Nikkō 日光 Voiced by Akira Kamiya 1st OVA Ken Yamaguchi 2nd OVA Japanese Ed Kissel English Head priest of Ura Kōya and Kujaku s senpai He tries to be much more serious about their work His guardian god is Mahavairocana 大日如来 Dainichi Nyorai Tomoko 朋子 Voiced by Noriko Hidaka Kujaku s sister an incarnation of the Rahu 天蛇王 Tenjaō She became separated from Kujaku as a child and was brought up by a Neo Nazi cult which tried to wake up her spiritual power to use her as a weapon Tsukuyomi 月読 Voiced by Miina Tominaga 1st OVA Hiromi Tsuru 2nd OVA Japanese Denise Gottwald English The mistress of the women s prayer room at Ura Kōya She is in love with Kujaku Her guardian god is Candraprabha 月光菩薩 Gakkou Bosatsu Publication editPeacock King written and illustrated by Makoto Ogino was first serialized in Shueisha s seinen manga magazine Weekly Young Jump from 1985 to 1989 3 Its chapters were collected in seventeen tankōbon volumes released from July 1 1986 4 to May 1 1990 5 A sequel Kujaku Ō Taimaseiden 孔雀王 退魔聖伝 was serialized in Weekly Young Jump from 1990 to 1992 6 Shueisha collected its chapters in eleven tankōbon volumes released from February 1 1991 7 to December 1 1993 8 A second sequel Kujaku Ō Magarigamiki 孔雀王 曲神紀 was serialized in Weekly Young Jump from March 23 2006 to October 22 2009 a and later in Monthly Young Jump from November 17 2009 to February 16 2010 b Shueisha collected its chapters in twelve tankōbon volumes released from August 18 2006 to March 19 2010 13 14 A spin off series Kujaku Ō Rising 孔雀王 ライジング was serialized in Shogakukan s Monthly Big Comic Spirits from March 27 2012 15 to June 27 2019 16 Shogakukan collected its chapters in ten tankōbon volumes released from October 30 2012 17 to July 30 2019 18 A third sequel Kujaku Ō Sengoku Tensei 孔雀王 戦国転生 was published in Leed s Comic Ran Twins from October 26 2012 19 to June 27 2016 20 and later in Comic Ran from October 27 2016 21 to June 27 2019 22 Leed collected the chapters in five tankōbon volumes released from December 27 2013 23 to July 30 2019 24 Adaptations editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Peacock King news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message Films edit The manga has been adapted into two Hong Kong live action films Peacock King and Saga of the Phoenix both directed by Lam Ngai Kai The former released in 1988 stars Hiroshi Mikami and Yuen Biao as the two monks Kujaku and a new character Kǒngque respectively and Gloria Yip as Ashura Gordon Liu Kara Wai and Philip Kwok appear in supporting roles Video games edit Family Computer edit Kujaku Ō 孔雀王 Peacock King The first of two Family Computer Famicom adventure games In it the player takes the role of a band of heroes fighting against evil demons The player interacts with the story by selecting actions from a list of options on screen look take talk etc and by a simple point and click interface The game was released only in Japan for the Famicom on September 21 1988 by Pony Canyon Kujaku Ō II 孔雀王II Peacock King II A graphic point and click adventure The player interacts with the story by selecting actions from a list of options on screen look take talk etc and by a simple point and click interface The graphics have been improved over its predecessor It is also available on the MSX Japanese computer Released on the Nintendo Famicom by Pony Canyon in Japan on August 21 1990 Sega edit Kujaku Ō 孔雀王 Peacock King Sega Mark III September 23 1988 Released as SpellCaster in western markets Kujaku Ō 2 Gen eijō 孔雀王2 幻影城 Peacock King 2 Castle of Illusion Mega Drive November 25 1989 Released as Mystic Defender in western markets Notes edit Issues 17 2006 47 2009 6 dates of each issue 9 10 Issues December 2009 March 2010 6 dates of each issue 11 12 References edit Jake L Godek Peacock King THEM Anime Reviews Archived from the original on May 8 2019 Retrieved May 10 2019 Mateo Alex July 29 2020 Manga Planet Licenses Salary Man Kintaro Charge Men s School Peacock King More Manga Anime News Network Archived from the original on August 3 2020 Retrieved July 30 2020 荻野真 孔雀王 最終決戦を原稿サイズで単行本化 独鈷杵 付きセットも Natalie in Japanese Natasha Inc August 18 2020 Archived from the original on April 29 2021 Retrieved April 29 2021 孔雀王 1 in Japanese ASIN 4088615417 孔雀王 17 in Japanese ASIN 4088615573 a b c 神々の戦いは歴史や時空までも歪めてしまう 孔雀王 の世界に迫る music jp in Japanese April 12 2016 Archived from the original on May 30 2016 Retrieved April 29 2021 孔雀王 退魔聖伝 1 in Japanese ASIN 408861271X 孔雀王 退魔聖伝 11 in Japanese ASIN 4088617959 バックナンバー 2006年 youngjump jp in Japanese Shueisha Archived from the original on May 28 2019 Retrieved July 22 2019 バックナンバー 2009年 youngjump jp in Japanese Shueisha Archived from the original on February 15 2021 Retrieved April 29 2021 連載化決定済み読み切り 鬼童子 序章 月刊YJに掲載 Natalie in Japanese Natasha Inc November 17 2009 Archived from the original on April 30 2021 Retrieved April 29 2021 月刊YJ EVIL HEART 武富智2年ぶりの新作 Yell 掲載 Natalie in Japanese Natasha Inc February 16 2010 Archived from the original on April 29 2021 Retrieved April 29 2021 孔雀王曲神紀 1 in Japanese ASIN 4088771303 孔雀王曲神紀 12 in Japanese ASIN 4088778200 孔雀王 新シリーズ 孔雀の修行時代を月スピで描く Natalie in Japanese Natasha Inc March 27 2012 Archived from the original on April 29 2021 Retrieved April 29 2021 精神科が舞台の新連載が月スピで開幕 荻野真 孔雀王ライジング 最終回も Natalie in Japanese Natasha Inc June 27 2019 Archived from the original on January 4 2022 Retrieved April 29 2021 孔雀王ライジング 1 in Japanese Shogakukan Archived from the original on April 29 2021 Retrieved April 29 2021 孔雀王ライジング 10 in Japanese Shogakukan Archived from the original on April 29 2021 Retrieved April 29 2021 孔雀王 新作が戦国武将列伝で連載 転生した孔雀の戦い Natalie in Japanese Natasha Inc October 26 2012 Archived from the original on April 29 2021 Retrieved April 29 2021 戦国を題材にした時代劇誌 戦国武将列伝 が休刊 セキガハラ など完結 Natalie in Japanese Natasha Inc June 27 2016 Archived from the original on April 29 2021 Retrieved April 29 2021 コミック乱 2016年12月号 in Japanese Books Kinokuniya Archived from the original on April 29 2021 Retrieved April 29 2021 高浜寛 ニュクスの角灯 が完結 荻野真 孔雀王 戦国転生 の最終回も Natalie in Japanese Natasha Inc June 27 2019 Archived from the original on November 25 2022 Retrieved April 29 2021 12月27日付 本日発売の単行本リスト Natalie in Japanese Natasha Inc December 27 2013 Archived from the original on October 24 2021 Retrieved November 14 2021 7月30日付 本日発売の単行本リスト Natalie in Japanese Natasha Inc July 30 2019 Archived from the original on October 25 2021 Retrieved November 14 2021 External links editKujaku Oh manga at Anime News Network s encyclopedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peacock King amp oldid 1197179881 Films, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.