Death Note
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Death Note
Summary
Death Note is a manga series[1]. It ranks in the top 0.52% of manga_series entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (14,159 views/month, #16 of 3,049).[2]
Key Facts
- Death Note authored Tsugumi Ohba[3].
- Death Note's instance of is recorded as manga series[4].
- Death Note's illustrator is recorded as Takeshi Obata[5].
- Death Note was published by Shueisha[6].
- Death Note was published by Viz Media[7].
- Death Note was published by Elex Media Komputindo[8].
- Death Note was published by Comix-ART[9].
- Death Note was published by Culturecom Holdings Limited[10].
- Death Note was published by Tong Li Publishing[11].
- Death Note was published by Daewon C.I.[12].
- Death Note was published by Glénat Éditions[13].
- Death Note was published by Grupo Editorial Vid[14].
- Death Note was published by Madman Entertainment[15].
- Death Note was published by Editora JBC[16].
- Death Note was published by Kana[17].
- Death Note was published by LARP Editores[18].
- Death Note was published by Panini Comics[19].
- Death Note was published by Chuang Yi[20].
- Death Note was published by Nation Edutainment[21].
- Death Note was published by Japonica Polonica Fantastica[22].
- Death Note was published by Compupress[23].
- Death Note was published by Mangafan[24].
- Death Note was published by Egmont International Holding[25].
- Death Note was published by Comix-ART[26].
- Death Note's genre is mystery anime and manga[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Death Note authored Tsugumi Ohba[3]. Publishers include Shueisha[6], Viz Media[7], Elex Media Komputindo[8], Comix-ART[9], Culturecom Holdings Limited[10], and Tong Li Publishing[11].
Publication
Death Note's language of work or name is recorded as Japanese[28]. Genres include mystery anime and manga[27], supernatural anime and manga[29], thriller anime and manga[30], and drama anime and manga[31].
Why It Matters
Death Note ranks in the top 0.52% of manga_series entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (14,159 views/month, #16 of 3,049).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[32] It is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[33]