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Kashimashi: Girl Meets Girl

Kashimashi: Girl Meets Girl
Kashimashi - Girl Meets Girl volume 1.jpg
The first volume of Kashimashi: Girl Meets Girl, published by Seven Seas Entertainment, featuring Tomari (left), Hazumu (center), and Yasuna (right).
かしまし ~ガール・ミーツ・ガール~
(Kashimashi ~Gāru Mītsu Gāru~)
Genre Romantic comedy, Sci-fi, Yuri
Manga
Written by Satoru Akahori
Illustrated by Yukimaru Katsura
Published by MediaWorks
English publisher
Demographic Shōnen
Magazine Dengeki Daioh
Original run July 2004May 2007
Volumes 5 (List of volumes)
Light novel
Written by Mako Komao
Illustrated by Yukimaru Katsura
Published by MediaWorks
Demographic Male
Imprint Dengeki Bunko
Published January 10, 2006
Anime television series
Directed by Nobuaki Nakanishi
Studio Studio Hibari
Licensed by
Original network TV Tokyo
Original run January 11, 2006March 29, 2006
Episodes 12 (List of episodes)
Game
Kashimashi: Girl Meets Girl The First Summer Story
Developer Vridge
Publisher Marvelous Interactive
Genre Visual novel
Platform PlayStation 2
Released March 30, 2006 (original)
November 16, 2006 (re-release)
Original video animation
Directed by Nobuaki Nakanishi
Studio Studio Hibari
Licensed by
AnimeWorks
Released October 27, 2006
Runtime 27 minutes
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Kashimashi: Girl Meets Girl (かしまし ~ガール・ミーツ・ガール~ Kashimashi ~Gāru Mītsu Gāru~?) is a Japanese yuri manga series written by Satoru Akahori and illustrated by Yukimaru Katsura. The manga was originally serialized in Dengeki Daioh between the July 2004 and May 2007 issues, and later published in five bound volumes by MediaWorks from January 2005 to May 2007. The story focuses on Hazumu Osaragi, a normal, albeit effeminate high school boy who is killed when an alien spaceship crash lands on him, only to be restored to health as a girl. This results in a same-sex love triangle that Hazumu finds herself in with two of her best female friends.

A single light novel written by Mako Komao and illustrated by the manga's artist was published by MediaWorks under their Dengeki Bunko imprint in January 2006. The manga series was adapted into a twelve-episode anime television series plus a single original video animation (OVA) sequel by Studio Hibari. The anime aired in Japan on TV Tokyo between January and March 2006; the OVA was released in October 2006. A visual novel was created based on the series for the PlayStation 2 and was released in March 2006. Seven Seas Entertainment licensed the manga series for English-language publication in North America and released the five volumes between December 2006 and March 2008. Media Blasters licensed the anime series, including the OVA, and released three DVD volumes between June and October 2007 with English-subtitles. Media Blasters re-released the anime with an English dub.


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