Issuu by otakumag Search results (of 94 hits) http://localhost:7080/otakumag/docs/recent.rss Sun, 22 Nov 2009 21:02:15 +0000 94 0 10 bookmark-allocate-080705035615-35cf0d99315a4f4c82be4ded2c0d1a9b-13 Otaku Pilot Issue - 66 pages from 124 pages OTAKU is the first quarterly magazine in Romania dedicated to the OTAKU culture which promotes artists from different fields (graphics, illustrations, design, toys, movie). The first issue features ARTICLES (Genshiken-esque, Atrocitati manga, Otaku Generation), REVIEWS (Crashomon), MOVIE (the most expected Asian movies in 2006), FASHION (Shubakiller, Costin George Benescu, Maria Guta, Rozalb de Mura, Karakiri, Vlad Gabriela-Maria, Anca Benera), DESIGN (Alexe Popescu), TOYS (Costin George Benescu, Reniform, Ciubi), INTERVIEWS (Tujico Noriko), ILLUSTRATIONS (Asra, Mistik, Reniform, Tehas, Hisshi, Uje), VIDEO GAMES (The New Super Mario Bros), MANGA MADE IN RO (Kaeru, Between, Asra ), OTAKU CULTURE INFLUENCE (Inkamon, Xiusha), MANGA-KA PROFILE (Tsutomu Nihei). The OTAKU magazine has 120 pages (full-colour and black and white), atypical format (close to A5), excellent graphic conditions. http://issuu.com/otakumag/docs/otakupilot/13 Sat, 07 Nov 2009 11:23:10 +0000 <table><tr valign="top"><td width="65"><a href="http://issuu.com/otakumag/docs/otakupilot/13"><img src="http://image.issuu.com/080705035615-35cf0d99315a4f4c82be4ded2c0d1a9b/jpg/page_13_thumb_medium.jpg" width="55" border="0"/></a></td><td> &nbsp; </td><td><img src="http://content.issuu.com/icons/label_bookmark.png" border="0"/><br /><span style="font-size: 12px;">OTAKU is the first quarterly magazine in Romania dedicated to the OTAKU culture which promotes artists from different fields (graphics, illustrations, design, toys, movie). The first issue features ARTICLES (Genshiken-esque, Atrocitati manga, Otaku Generation), REVIEWS (Crashomon), MOVIE (the most expected Asian movies in 2006), FASHION (Shubakiller, Costin George Benescu, Maria Guta, Rozalb de Mura, Karakiri, Vlad Gabriela-Maria, Anca Benera), DESIGN (Alexe Popescu), TOYS (Costin George Benescu, Reniform, Ciubi), INTERVIEWS (Tujico Noriko), ILLUSTRATIONS (Asra, Mistik, Reniform, Tehas, Hisshi, Uje), VIDEO GAMES (The New Super Mario Bros), MANGA MADE IN RO (Kaeru, Between, Asra ), OTAKU CULTURE INFLUENCE (Inkamon, Xiusha), MANGA-KA PROFILE (Tsutomu Nihei). The OTAKU magazine has 120 pages (full-colour and black and white), atypical format (close to A5), excellent graphic conditions. <br /><b>Bookmarked by:</b><a href="http://issuu.com/allocate"> allocate</a><br /><b>Created by:</b><a href="http://issuu.com/otakumag"> otakumag</a><br /></span></td></tr></table> recommendation-2fast4u-otakumag otakumag http://issuu.com/otakumag Sun, 01 Nov 2009 11:50:55 +0000 <table><tr valign="top"><td width="65"><a href="http://issuu.com/otakumag"><img src="http://photo.issuu.com/otakumag/photo.jpg" width="55" border="0"/></a></td><td> &nbsp; </td><td><img src="http://content.issuu.com/icons/label_favorite.png" border="0"/><span style="font-size: 12px;"><br /><b><a href="http://issuu.com/otakumag">otakumag</a> favorite of </b><b><a href="http://issuu.com/2fast4u"> 2fast4u</a></b><br /></span></td></tr></table> bookmark-evalace-080524110043-92d7edf8f74c487a85ac5aa106380bb1-18 Otaku Kaidan (preview - 48 pages from160 pages) KAIDAN is the term used for the Japanese ghost stories, and, extensively, for the J-Horror culture. The Buddhist moralizing stories were rapidly transformed into international shockers; people wanted more frightening monstrosities and oddness, with no direct connection with the Western horror. Manga, anime, movies and the subcultures developed around them competed in shicks and panic. If you really want to know why on the Japanese horror movies is written 18+, take a look at the next issue of Otaku Magazine. Nevertheless, is our duty to warn you that all who looked inside certain pages of this issue have disappeared shortly after. Still, it might be just a story to send the children to sleep for good. http://issuu.com/otakumag/docs/om4-preview/18 Sat, 17 Oct 2009 20:42:29 +0000 <table><tr valign="top"><td width="65"><a href="http://issuu.com/otakumag/docs/om4-preview/18"><img src="http://image.issuu.com/080524110043-92d7edf8f74c487a85ac5aa106380bb1/jpg/page_18_thumb_medium.jpg" width="55" border="0"/></a></td><td> &nbsp; </td><td><img src="http://content.issuu.com/icons/label_bookmark.png" border="0"/><br /><span style="font-size: 12px;">KAIDAN is the term used for the Japanese ghost stories, and, extensively, for the J-Horror culture. The Buddhist moralizing stories were rapidly transformed into international shockers; people wanted more frightening monstrosities and oddness, with no direct connection with the Western horror. Manga, anime, movies and the subcultures developed around them competed in shicks and panic. If you really want to know why on the Japanese horror movies is written 18+, take a look at the next issue of Otaku Magazine. Nevertheless, is our duty to warn you that all who looked inside certain pages of this issue have disappeared shortly after. Still, it might be just a story to send the children to sleep for good.<br /><b>Bookmarked by:</b><a href="http://issuu.com/evalace"> evalace</a><br /><b>Created by:</b><a href="http://issuu.com/otakumag"> otakumag</a><br /></span></td></tr></table> bookmark-iblis-080524110043-92d7edf8f74c487a85ac5aa106380bb1-50 Otaku Kaidan (preview - 48 pages from160 pages) KAIDAN is the term used for the Japanese ghost stories, and, extensively, for the J-Horror culture. The Buddhist moralizing stories were rapidly transformed into international shockers; people wanted more frightening monstrosities and oddness, with no direct connection with the Western horror. Manga, anime, movies and the subcultures developed around them competed in shicks and panic. If you really want to know why on the Japanese horror movies is written 18+, take a look at the next issue of Otaku Magazine. Nevertheless, is our duty to warn you that all who looked inside certain pages of this issue have disappeared shortly after. Still, it might be just a story to send the children to sleep for good. http://issuu.com/otakumag/docs/om4-preview/50 Mon, 12 Oct 2009 16:02:38 +0000 <table><tr valign="top"><td width="65"><a href="http://issuu.com/otakumag/docs/om4-preview/50"><img src="http://image.issuu.com/080524110043-92d7edf8f74c487a85ac5aa106380bb1/jpg/page_50_thumb_medium.jpg" width="55" border="0"/></a></td><td> &nbsp; </td><td><img src="http://content.issuu.com/icons/label_bookmark.png" border="0"/><br /><span style="font-size: 12px;">KAIDAN is the term used for the Japanese ghost stories, and, extensively, for the J-Horror culture. The Buddhist moralizing stories were rapidly transformed into international shockers; people wanted more frightening monstrosities and oddness, with no direct connection with the Western horror. Manga, anime, movies and the subcultures developed around them competed in shicks and panic. If you really want to know why on the Japanese horror movies is written 18+, take a look at the next issue of Otaku Magazine. Nevertheless, is our duty to warn you that all who looked inside certain pages of this issue have disappeared shortly after. Still, it might be just a story to send the children to sleep for good.<br /><b>Bookmarked by:</b><a href="http://issuu.com/iblis"> iblis</a><br /><b>Created by:</b><a href="http://issuu.com/otakumag"> otakumag</a><br /></span></td></tr></table> bookmark-gpmanga-080705035615-35cf0d99315a4f4c82be4ded2c0d1a9b-1 Otaku Pilot Issue - 66 pages from 124 pages OTAKU is the first quarterly magazine in Romania dedicated to the OTAKU culture which promotes artists from different fields (graphics, illustrations, design, toys, movie). The first issue features ARTICLES (Genshiken-esque, Atrocitati manga, Otaku Generation), REVIEWS (Crashomon), MOVIE (the most expected Asian movies in 2006), FASHION (Shubakiller, Costin George Benescu, Maria Guta, Rozalb de Mura, Karakiri, Vlad Gabriela-Maria, Anca Benera), DESIGN (Alexe Popescu), TOYS (Costin George Benescu, Reniform, Ciubi), INTERVIEWS (Tujico Noriko), ILLUSTRATIONS (Asra, Mistik, Reniform, Tehas, Hisshi, Uje), VIDEO GAMES (The New Super Mario Bros), MANGA MADE IN RO (Kaeru, Between, Asra ), OTAKU CULTURE INFLUENCE (Inkamon, Xiusha), MANGA-KA PROFILE (Tsutomu Nihei). The OTAKU magazine has 120 pages (full-colour and black and white), atypical format (close to A5), excellent graphic conditions. http://issuu.com/otakumag/docs/otakupilot Sat, 10 Oct 2009 20:59:21 +0000 <table><tr valign="top"><td width="65"><a href="http://issuu.com/otakumag/docs/otakupilot"><img src="http://image.issuu.com/080705035615-35cf0d99315a4f4c82be4ded2c0d1a9b/jpg/page_1_thumb_medium.jpg" width="55" border="0"/></a></td><td> &nbsp; </td><td><img src="http://content.issuu.com/icons/label_bookmark.png" border="0"/><br /><span style="font-size: 12px;">OTAKU is the first quarterly magazine in Romania dedicated to the OTAKU culture which promotes artists from different fields (graphics, illustrations, design, toys, movie). The first issue features ARTICLES (Genshiken-esque, Atrocitati manga, Otaku Generation), REVIEWS (Crashomon), MOVIE (the most expected Asian movies in 2006), FASHION (Shubakiller, Costin George Benescu, Maria Guta, Rozalb de Mura, Karakiri, Vlad Gabriela-Maria, Anca Benera), DESIGN (Alexe Popescu), TOYS (Costin George Benescu, Reniform, Ciubi), INTERVIEWS (Tujico Noriko), ILLUSTRATIONS (Asra, Mistik, Reniform, Tehas, Hisshi, Uje), VIDEO GAMES (The New Super Mario Bros), MANGA MADE IN RO (Kaeru, Between, Asra ), OTAKU CULTURE INFLUENCE (Inkamon, Xiusha), MANGA-KA PROFILE (Tsutomu Nihei). The OTAKU magazine has 120 pages (full-colour and black and white), atypical format (close to A5), excellent graphic conditions. <br /><b>Bookmarked by:</b><a href="http://issuu.com/gpmanga"> gpmanga</a><br /><b>Created by:</b><a href="http://issuu.com/otakumag"> otakumag</a><br /></span></td></tr></table> recommendation-gpmanga-otakumag otakumag http://issuu.com/otakumag Fri, 09 Oct 2009 01:37:15 +0000 <table><tr valign="top"><td width="65"><a href="http://issuu.com/otakumag"><img src="http://photo.issuu.com/otakumag/photo.jpg" width="55" border="0"/></a></td><td> &nbsp; </td><td><img src="http://content.issuu.com/icons/label_favorite.png" border="0"/><span style="font-size: 12px;"><br /><b><a href="http://issuu.com/otakumag">otakumag</a> favorite of </b><b><a href="http://issuu.com/gpmanga"> gpmanga</a></b><br /></span></td></tr></table> recommendation-cs74-otakumag otakumag http://issuu.com/otakumag Mon, 05 Oct 2009 06:00:06 +0000 <table><tr valign="top"><td width="65"><a href="http://issuu.com/otakumag"><img src="http://photo.issuu.com/otakumag/photo.jpg" width="55" border="0"/></a></td><td> &nbsp; </td><td><img src="http://content.issuu.com/icons/label_favorite.png" border="0"/><span style="font-size: 12px;"><br /><b><a href="http://issuu.com/otakumag">otakumag</a> favorite of </b><b><a href="http://issuu.com/cs74"> cs74</a></b><br /></span></td></tr></table> bookmark-givemeendorphin-080524110043-92d7edf8f74c487a85ac5aa106380bb1-50 Otaku Kaidan (preview - 48 pages from160 pages) KAIDAN is the term used for the Japanese ghost stories, and, extensively, for the J-Horror culture. The Buddhist moralizing stories were rapidly transformed into international shockers; people wanted more frightening monstrosities and oddness, with no direct connection with the Western horror. Manga, anime, movies and the subcultures developed around them competed in shicks and panic. If you really want to know why on the Japanese horror movies is written 18+, take a look at the next issue of Otaku Magazine. Nevertheless, is our duty to warn you that all who looked inside certain pages of this issue have disappeared shortly after. Still, it might be just a story to send the children to sleep for good. http://issuu.com/otakumag/docs/om4-preview/50 Wed, 30 Sep 2009 08:11:45 +0000 <table><tr valign="top"><td width="65"><a href="http://issuu.com/otakumag/docs/om4-preview/50"><img src="http://image.issuu.com/080524110043-92d7edf8f74c487a85ac5aa106380bb1/jpg/page_50_thumb_medium.jpg" width="55" border="0"/></a></td><td> &nbsp; </td><td><img src="http://content.issuu.com/icons/label_bookmark.png" border="0"/><br /><span style="font-size: 12px;">KAIDAN is the term used for the Japanese ghost stories, and, extensively, for the J-Horror culture. The Buddhist moralizing stories were rapidly transformed into international shockers; people wanted more frightening monstrosities and oddness, with no direct connection with the Western horror. Manga, anime, movies and the subcultures developed around them competed in shicks and panic. If you really want to know why on the Japanese horror movies is written 18+, take a look at the next issue of Otaku Magazine. Nevertheless, is our duty to warn you that all who looked inside certain pages of this issue have disappeared shortly after. Still, it might be just a story to send the children to sleep for good.<br /><b>Bookmarked by:</b><a href="http://issuu.com/givemeendorphin"> givemeendorphin</a><br /><b>Created by:</b><a href="http://issuu.com/otakumag"> otakumag</a><br /></span></td></tr></table> bookmark-givemeendorphin-080524110043-92d7edf8f74c487a85ac5aa106380bb1-44 Otaku Kaidan (preview - 48 pages from160 pages) KAIDAN is the term used for the Japanese ghost stories, and, extensively, for the J-Horror culture. The Buddhist moralizing stories were rapidly transformed into international shockers; people wanted more frightening monstrosities and oddness, with no direct connection with the Western horror. Manga, anime, movies and the subcultures developed around them competed in shicks and panic. If you really want to know why on the Japanese horror movies is written 18+, take a look at the next issue of Otaku Magazine. Nevertheless, is our duty to warn you that all who looked inside certain pages of this issue have disappeared shortly after. Still, it might be just a story to send the children to sleep for good. http://issuu.com/otakumag/docs/om4-preview/44 Wed, 30 Sep 2009 08:11:32 +0000 <table><tr valign="top"><td width="65"><a href="http://issuu.com/otakumag/docs/om4-preview/44"><img src="http://image.issuu.com/080524110043-92d7edf8f74c487a85ac5aa106380bb1/jpg/page_44_thumb_medium.jpg" width="55" border="0"/></a></td><td> &nbsp; </td><td><img src="http://content.issuu.com/icons/label_bookmark.png" border="0"/><br /><span style="font-size: 12px;">KAIDAN is the term used for the Japanese ghost stories, and, extensively, for the J-Horror culture. The Buddhist moralizing stories were rapidly transformed into international shockers; people wanted more frightening monstrosities and oddness, with no direct connection with the Western horror. Manga, anime, movies and the subcultures developed around them competed in shicks and panic. If you really want to know why on the Japanese horror movies is written 18+, take a look at the next issue of Otaku Magazine. Nevertheless, is our duty to warn you that all who looked inside certain pages of this issue have disappeared shortly after. Still, it might be just a story to send the children to sleep for good.<br /><b>Bookmarked by:</b><a href="http://issuu.com/givemeendorphin"> givemeendorphin</a><br /><b>Created by:</b><a href="http://issuu.com/otakumag"> otakumag</a><br /></span></td></tr></table> bookmark-givemeendorphin-080524110043-92d7edf8f74c487a85ac5aa106380bb1-41 Otaku Kaidan (preview - 48 pages from160 pages) KAIDAN is the term used for the Japanese ghost stories, and, extensively, for the J-Horror culture. The Buddhist moralizing stories were rapidly transformed into international shockers; people wanted more frightening monstrosities and oddness, with no direct connection with the Western horror. Manga, anime, movies and the subcultures developed around them competed in shicks and panic. If you really want to know why on the Japanese horror movies is written 18+, take a look at the next issue of Otaku Magazine. Nevertheless, is our duty to warn you that all who looked inside certain pages of this issue have disappeared shortly after. Still, it might be just a story to send the children to sleep for good. http://issuu.com/otakumag/docs/om4-preview/41 Wed, 30 Sep 2009 08:11:19 +0000 <table><tr valign="top"><td width="65"><a href="http://issuu.com/otakumag/docs/om4-preview/41"><img src="http://image.issuu.com/080524110043-92d7edf8f74c487a85ac5aa106380bb1/jpg/page_41_thumb_medium.jpg" width="55" border="0"/></a></td><td> &nbsp; </td><td><img src="http://content.issuu.com/icons/label_bookmark.png" border="0"/><br /><span style="font-size: 12px;">KAIDAN is the term used for the Japanese ghost stories, and, extensively, for the J-Horror culture. The Buddhist moralizing stories were rapidly transformed into international shockers; people wanted more frightening monstrosities and oddness, with no direct connection with the Western horror. Manga, anime, movies and the subcultures developed around them competed in shicks and panic. If you really want to know why on the Japanese horror movies is written 18+, take a look at the next issue of Otaku Magazine. Nevertheless, is our duty to warn you that all who looked inside certain pages of this issue have disappeared shortly after. Still, it might be just a story to send the children to sleep for good.<br /><b>Bookmarked by:</b><a href="http://issuu.com/givemeendorphin"> givemeendorphin</a><br /><b>Created by:</b><a href="http://issuu.com/otakumag"> otakumag</a><br /></span></td></tr></table>