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| - Wolf Guy(ウルフガイ) is a Japanese manga series of two volumes published in 1970 by Bunkasha. Originally written by Kazumasa Hirai and illustrated by Hisashi Sakaguchi (坂口尚), the series has been readapted with a more violent and mature setting in 2007 by Yoshiaki Tabata and Yuuki Yugo. This new adaptation, also known as Wolf Guy - Ookami no Monshou, has been released as eight volumes by Akita Shoten.
- Wolf Guy 「ウルフガイ Urufu Gai?」 es un manga japonés sin serie de dos volúmenes publicados en 1970 por Bunkasha. Escrito originalmente por Kazumasa Hirai y ilustrado por Hisashi Sakaguchi (坂口 尚), la serie ha sido readaptada con un ambiente más violenta y madura en 2007 por Yoshiaki Tabata y Yuuki Yugo.
- Wolf Guy - Wolfen Crest (Wolf Guy - Ookami no Monshou) is a Seinen manga by Tabata Yoshiaki and Yugo Yuuki, the same guys behind Akumetsu. Like Akumetsu, it's a pretty violent series with a mysterious male protagonist, though with a more supernatural bent. Flash-forward to the next day, where she is dropped off at the school by the police. By the way, guess who's her new transfer student?... The series finished with 117 chapters, 12 collected Volumes. Character sheet is here.
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abstract
| - Wolf Guy(ウルフガイ) is a Japanese manga series of two volumes published in 1970 by Bunkasha. Originally written by Kazumasa Hirai and illustrated by Hisashi Sakaguchi (坂口尚), the series has been readapted with a more violent and mature setting in 2007 by Yoshiaki Tabata and Yuuki Yugo. This new adaptation, also known as Wolf Guy - Ookami no Monshou, has been released as eight volumes by Akita Shoten.
- Wolf Guy - Wolfen Crest (Wolf Guy - Ookami no Monshou) is a Seinen manga by Tabata Yoshiaki and Yugo Yuuki, the same guys behind Akumetsu. Like Akumetsu, it's a pretty violent series with a mysterious male protagonist, though with a more supernatural bent. According to TheOtherWiki, however, Wolf Guy Wolfen Crest is actually one of the many remakes of a short shonen manga from The Seventies, originally written by Kazumasa Hirai and illustrated by Hisashi Sakaguchi, but it takes a few notes from Hirai's later novel entitled Adult Wolf Guy as well. The manga even had an OAV series in the early nineties, with famous seiyuu Toshiyuki Morikawa voicing the male lead, Inugami Akira (here you can watch the OP song). Yuuki and Tabata took the basic concept of the oldie manga, re-set it in modern times, and gave it a really Darker and Edgier spin. The story goes like this. Akiko Aoshika, a beleaguered and incredibly hot middle school teacher, is stumbling home from an evening at the bar after another day of hell at work. She comes across a young man, Inugami Akira who keeps her from falling flat on her face. After arguing back and forth about her being a teacher or not, he tells her to beat feet, for a storm's a brewin'... Unsurprisingly, Aoshika follows him anyway, whereupon he walks smack into a large gang. They proceed to beat the tar out of the boy, while the teacher looks on in horror. Not that it matters, as he springs back up five minutes later. The gang leader decides to be more thorough and employs Car Fu to take the boy down. This seems to work so they turn their attention to back Ms. Aoshika, who is in the early stages of Heroic BSOD due flashbacks of her own troubled youth. Eventually she just faints. When she wakes up, all of the gang members have been beaten up and she is completely unhurt. Flash-forward to the next day, where she is dropped off at the school by the police. By the way, guess who's her new transfer student?... The series finished with 117 chapters, 12 collected Volumes. Character sheet is here.
- Wolf Guy 「ウルフガイ Urufu Gai?」 es un manga japonés sin serie de dos volúmenes publicados en 1970 por Bunkasha. Escrito originalmente por Kazumasa Hirai y ilustrado por Hisashi Sakaguchi (坂口 尚), la serie ha sido readaptada con un ambiente más violenta y madura en 2007 por Yoshiaki Tabata y Yuuki Yugo.
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