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Obake no Q-tarō

Obake no Q-tarō
Obake.jpg
Obake no Q-tarō on the cover of Bessatsu Shōnen Sunday
オバケのQ太郎
(Q-tarō, the ghost)
Genre Comedy
Manga
Written by Fujiko Fujio
Published by Shogakukan
Demographic Shōnen
Magazine Weekly Shōnen Sunday, Shōnen Book, CoroCoro Comic, Bessatsu Shōnen Sunday
Original run 19641973
Volumes 6
Manga
Shin Q-tarō
Written by Fujiko Fujio
Published by Shogakukan
Demographic Shōnen
Magazine CoroCoro Comic
Volumes 4
Anime television series
Directed by Masaaki Osumi
Studio TMS Entertainment
Original network TBS
Original run 29 August 196528 June 1967
Episodes 96
Anime television series
Shin Obake no Q-tarō
Directed by Tadao Nagahama
Studio TMS Entertainment
Original network Nippon Television
Original run 1 September 197127 December 1972
Episodes 70 (140 segments)
Anime television series
Shin Obake no Q-tarō
Studio Shin-Ei Animation
Original network TV Asahi
Original run 1 April 198529 March 1987
Episodes 510
Game
Chubby Cherub
Developer TOSE
Publisher Bandai
Genre Action
Platform Nintendo Entertainment System
Released 1985
Anime film
Obake no Q-tarō: Tobidase! Bake Bake Daisakusen
Directed by Hiroshi Sasagawa
Music by Shunsuke Kikuchi
Studio Shin-Ei Animation
Released March 15, 1986
Runtime 120 minutes
Anime film
Obake no Q-tarō: Susume! 1/100 Daisakusen
Directed by Hiroshi Sasagawa
Music by Shunsuke Kikuchi
Studio Shin-Ei Animation
Released March 14, 1987
Runtime 15 minutes
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Obake no Q-tarō (オバケのQ(キュー)太郎 Obake no Kyū-tarō?), by Fujiko Fujio, is a Japanese manga about an obake, Qtarō (Sometimes also spelled as Q-tarō) who lives with the Ōhara family. Qtarō, also known as Q-chan or Oba-Q, is a mischief-maker who likes to fly around scaring people and stealing food, though he is deathly afraid of dogs.

The story is usually focused on the antics of Qtarō and his friends. The manga was drawn in 1964–1966 by Fujiko Fujio (Fujiko F. Fujio and Fujiko Fujio A) and in 1971–1974 by Fujiko F. Fujio.

There are three anime series of Qtaro. The first anime adaptation of Obake no Qtarō was shown on the Tokyo Broadcasting System (TBS) in black & white, and ran from 1965–1968. Machiko Soga was the voice of Qtarō. The series was especially popular preceding Doraemon. It also ran outside Japan, in Hong Kong under the name Q-tailong. The second series ran from 1971–1972 on Nihon TV, this time in color. The third series ran from 1985–1987 on TV Asahi. This adaptation is the only one of the three Obake no Q-taro anime to have a home video release.

In one house, this come one of obake.

Pac-Man creator Toru Iwatani cites the series as inspiration for the character design in the Pac-Man video game series.


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