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2024年11月17日 17:48
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Doraemon
Japanese Name:ドラもえん
English name: Doraemon
Synonyms: Ammon, the Little Ding-Dong,
Place of Birth: Tokyo Song Chi Machinery Factory
Birthday: September 3, 2112 (Virgo)
Robot types: parental-type mechanical device
Model: No. 1293 robot cat
Quality: defective
Code: MS-903
Height: 129.3cm
Weight: 129.3kg
Bust: 129.3cm
Sitting height: 100.0cm
The overall shape: drums
Power: 129.3 hp (the strength of an adult is about 0.5 hp)
Met a high bounce when rats: 129.3cm
Met when the mouse speed to escape: 129.3km / h (normally run 50 meters to use 10 seconds)
(129.3 the figure in thebDoraemonirthday - 2112 Japan September 3 years are also used. It is said that this figure istDoraemonhe beginning of the story series, Japan's fourth-grade students in the average height. While attending Daxiong It is the fourth-grade year.)
Infra-red eyes: in the dark can be seen.
Infrared super computer:Doraemonsize is small, the ability to be amazing! It installed the emotional circuit, there are feelings like human beings
Strong nose: olfactory sensitivity is 20 times, have been failures, but still able to smell his favorite - Tongluo burning
Giant mouth: to lay down a large washbasin
Radar beard: the ability to detect distant objects, has been out of order
Convened by the bell the cat: had a malfunction, it is converted to store emergency items (time and space converter) box, small camera
Atomic furnace: what to eat into atomic energy, and do not waste.
Sucker hand: Although it is round, many things can
Four million pocket: the pocket space for direct access to four million, also fit more things. But because it is a defective,Doraemon so sometimes you want to find a tool, often confused in the critical moment.WDoraemonang and connectivity sleeve
Flat foot: walk do not have to say anything, and now have lost this feature. The soles of the feet and anti-gravity jet, 0.3 mm from the ground is always, so alwaysshoeDoraemons but the feet do not always dirty.
Tail: the start switch, a pull out, full stop of all activities (in the stealth of a focus as a switch). Hearts will be unhappy when gently shaken.
Skin: very hard steel skin, a city in the clouds had been damaged by brain cloud solvent. And anti-gravity function, for this reason that all the dust floating on the surface, regardless of appearance and more dirty, as long as the child gently holding a cloth to wipe out. But since they are high-level robot, so afraid of mosquitoes.
The masters of the past: the great-grandson Nobita Nobita Small World (alias: Shixiong than wild, wild world than repair)
Family members: the United States and you sister duo
Favorite food: Tongluo burning (reasons for this: in 2112 an examination testhiDoraemont, but has been very good at the time of the dance dancing robot - the encouragement of Miss Mimi, when Miss Mimi Tongluo to a burn to the then DoraemonLost Dream, was found burning Tongluo good taste, on falling in love with burning Tongluo)
The greatest fear: rats

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Doraemon

Doraemon
ドラえもん
Genre Comedy Science fiction
Manga
Author Fujiko F. Fujio
Publisher Shogakukan
English publisher Viz Media (cancelled)
Shogakukan
[show]Other publishers:
Ching Win Publishing

Tongli Publishing
Da Ran Culture
Renmin Fine Arts Press
Jilin Fine Arts Press
21 Century Press
Changchun Arts Press
Hungama TV
Seal Collection
Yok Long Holdings
Culturecom Holdings[1]
The branch of Ching Win Publishing in HK
Kana
Elex Media Komputindo
Daiwon C.I.
Tora Aman
Nation Edutainment

Kim Dong Publishing House

Demographic Kodomo
Magazine (various Shogakukan's kids magazines)
Original run December 1969 – 1996
Volumes 45
TV anime
Director Mitsuo Kaminashi
Studio TMS Entertainment
Network NTV
Original run 1973-04-01 – 1973-09-30
Episodes 52 (26 30-minute)
TV anime
Director Tsutomu Shibayama
Studio Shin-Ei Animation
Licensor Asatsu-DK
Viz Media
Network TV Asahi
[show]Other networks:
Rede Manchete

CCTV-1
Canal 13 (1983-1988), Chilevisión (2000)
M6, Fox Kids
TVB
Hungama TV
RCTI
Junior TV, Italia 1, Boing
ChampTV, AnioneTV
Ntv7 (2002-2008), RTM 1
GMA Network
RTP 1, Canal Panda
Channel 8
TV3, K3, Boomerang, Telemadrid, Canal Sur, Canal Sur 2, 7RM, TV Canaria, RTPA, TVG, IB3, Canal 9, ETB
CTS
Modern Nine TV (formerly Channel 9)
ITV (Thames Television; 1980)

VTV1, VTC1

Original run April 2, 1979 – March 25, 2005
Episodes 1787[2][3]
TV anime
Director Kozo Kusuba
Studio Studio Pierrot
Network TV Asahi
[show]Other networks:
TV9

MediaCorp TV12 okto
Nickelodeon Asia
TVB
Televicentro (Canal 2)
Canal Sur 2, Canal Sur

ABC Television

Original run April 15, 2005 – ongoing
Episodes 350
Related works
The Doraemons
Dorabase
Kiteretsu Daihyakka

Anime and Manga Portal
Doraemon (ドラえもん Doraemon?) is a Japanese manga series created by Fujiko F. Fujio (the pen name of Hiroshi Fujimoto) which later became an anime series and Asian franchise. The series is about a robotic cat named Doraemon, who travels back in time from the 22nd century to aid a schoolboy, Nobita Nobi (野比 のび太, Nobi Nobita?).

The series first appeared in December 1969, when it was published simultaneously in six different magazines. In total, 1,344 stories were created in the original series, which are published by Shogakukan under the Tentōmushi (てんとう虫?) manga brand, extending to forty-five volumes. The volumes are collected in the Takaoka Central Library in Toyama, Japan. Fujio was born in Toyama.

A majority of Doraemon episodes are comedies with moral lessons regarding values such as integrity, perseverance, courage, family and respect for elders. Several noteworthy environmental issues are often visited, including homeless animals, endangered species, deforestation, and pollution. Topics such as dinosaurs, the flat earth theory, wormhole traveling, Gulliver's Travels, and the history of Japan are often covered.

Doraemon was awarded the first Shogakukan Manga Award for children's manga in 1982,[4] and the first Osamu Tezuka Culture Award in 1997. In March 2008, Japan's Foreign Ministry appointed Doraemon as the nation's first "anime ambassador."[5] Ministry spokesman explained the novel decision as an attempt to help people in other countries to understand Japanese anime better and to deepen their interest in Japanese culture."[6] The Foreign Ministry action confirms that Doraemon has come to be considered a Japanese cultural icon. In 2002, the anime character was acclaimed as an Asian Hero in a special feature survey conducted by Time Asia magazine[7].

Contents [hide]
1 History
2 Plot summary
2.1 Series finale rumors
3 Characters
4 Episodes
5 Dōgu
6 Other appearances
7 Popularity
8 Anime
8.1 Television series
8.1.1 Foreign channels that air Doraemon
8.2 Feature films
8.3 Voice actors
8.4 Opening themes
8.5 Ending themes
9 Significance
10 References
11 See also
12 External links

[edit] History
In December 1969, the Doraemon manga appeared simultaneously in six different children's monthly magazines. The magazines were titled by the year of children's studies, which included Yoiko (good children), Yōchien (nursery school), and Shogaku Ichinensei (first grade of primary school) to Shogaku Yonnensei (fourth grade of primary school). By 1973, the series began to appear in two more magazines, Shogaku Gonensei (fifth grade of primary school) and Shogaku Rokunensei (sixth grade of primary school). The stories featured in each of the magazines were different, meaning the author was originally creating more than six stories each month. In 1977, CoroCoro Comic was launched as a magazine of Doraemon. Original manga based on the Doraemon movies were also released in CoroCoro Comic. The stories which are preserved under the Tentōmushi brand are the stories found in these magazines.

Since the debut of Doraemon in 1969, the stories have been selectively collected into forty-five books published from 1974 to 1996, which had a circulation of over 80 million in 1992. In addition, Doraemon has appeared in a variety of manga series by Shōgakukan. In 2005, Shōgakukan published a series of five more manga volumes under the title Doraemon+ (Doraemon Plus), which were not found in the forty-five Tentōmushi pipi volumes. Many other series have since been produced, some not from official supplies.

[edit] Plot summary

The first appearance of Doraemon, who came via the time machine.Doraemon is sent back in time by Nobita Nobi's great-great grandson Sewashi to improve Nobita's circumstances so that his descendants may enjoy a better future. In the original timeline, Nobita experienced nothing but misery and misfortune throughout his life. As a result of this, Nobita's failures in school and subsequently, his career, have left his family line beset with financial problems. In order to alter history and better the Nobi family's fortunes, Sewashi sent him a robot called Doraemon.

Doraemon has a pocket from which he produces many gadgets, medicines, and tools from the future. The pocket is called yojigen-pocket, or 4-dimensional pocket.

Although he can hear perfectly well, Doraemon has no ears: his robotic ears were eaten by a mouse, giving him a series-long phobia of the creatures.

The stories are formulaic, usually focused on the everyday struggles of fourth grader Nobita, the protagonist of the story. In a typical chapter, Nobita comes home crying about a problem he faces in school and/or the local neighborhood. After hearing him out, Doraemon always offers helpful advice to his problem(s), but that's never enough for Nobita, who is consistently looking for the "quick, easy" way out (which offers insight to the viewers as to why Nobita's life turned out the way it did). Finally, after Nobita's pleading and/or goading, Doraemon produces a futuristic gadget out of his aforementioned pouch to help Nobita fix his problem, enact revenge, or flaunt to his friends.

Nobita usually goes too far, despite Doraemon's best intentions and warnings, and gets into deeper trouble than before. Sometimes, Nobita's friends (usually Suneo or Jaian) steal the gadgets and end up misusing them. However, by the end of the story, there is usually retribution to the characters who end up misusing them, and a moral is taught.

[edit] Series finale rumors
There are three current and often quoted urban legends that started spreading in late 1980s of an ending to the Doraemon series.

The first and the most optimistic ending was made public by Nobuo Sato several years ago. Doraemon's battery power ran out, and Nobita was given a choice between replacing the battery inside a frozen Doraemon, which would cause it to reset and lose all memory, or await a competent robotics technician who would be able to resurrect the cat-robot one day. Nobita swore that very day to work hard in school, graduate with honours, and become that robotics technician. He successfully resurrected Doraemon in the future as a robotics professor, became successful as an AI developer, and thus lived happily ever after, thus relieving his progeny of the financial burdens that caused Doraemon to be sent to his space-time in the first place. A dōjin manga for this ending was made by a "Tajima T Yasue" in 2005, and it sold 13,000 copies before Shogakukan halted its publication. Tajima apologized to Shogakukan in 2007 and paid an undisclosed amount of money for settlement.[8].
The second, more pessimistic ending suggests that Nobita Nobi is suffering from autism and that all the characters (including Doraemon) are simply his delusion. The idea that Nobita was a sick and dying little boy who imagined the entire series on his sickbed to help him ease his pain and depression no doubt angered quite a lot of fans. Many Japanese fans staged a protest outside the headquarters of the publisher of the series after learning about this suggestion. The publisher had to issue a public statement that this is not true. (This ending actually correlates to the ending for the series St. Elsewhere, which ended in 1988.)
The third ending suggests that Nobita fell and hit his head on a rock. He fell into a deep coma, and eventually into a semi-vegetative state. To raise money for an operation to save Nobita, Doraemon sold all the tools and devices in his four-dimensional pocket. However, the operation failed. Doraemon sold all his tools except for one used as a last resort. He used it to enable Nobita to go wherever he wanted, whichever time or era he wished to go. In the end, the very place Nobita wanted to go was heaven.
The plausibility of these issues was discussed here and it was concluded that there is no ending to Doraemon. [9]
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