Manga Wiki

Thousands of manga articles have been imported over from Wikipedia. For a full list of their contributor's history search Wikipedia for an article by the same name.

READ MORE

Manga Wiki


Core Magazine Co. Ltd. (株式会社コアマガジン?) is a Japanese publishing company focused on adult material, such as adult magazines and hentai manga. It also publishes yaoi titles, such as Kirepapa.[2] The company was established in 1985 as Shōnen Shuppansha.[3] As of 2009, it is among top 5 ero-manga publishers in Japan.[4] Core Magazine owns a bookstore chain "Core Books" (コアブックス?).

In July 2002 a special issue of Bubka magazine featured unauthorized childhood photos of several female idols, including Norika Fujiwara, Kyoko Fukada, and Natsumi Abe. A suit was started against Core Magazine for privacy violation.[5]

Magazines published[]

  • Bubka (ブブカ?)
  • Comic Zero EX (コミック0EX?), a monthly magazine, which replaced Comic Mega Plus (コミックメガプラス?) in 2007.[6]
  • Comic Hotmilk (コミックホットミルク?)
  • Comic Mega GOLD (コミックメガGOLD?), bakunyū manga magazine
  • Comic MegaStore (コミックメガストア?)
  • drap, yaoi magazine
  • Comic Nyan2 Club GOLD (コミックニャン2倶楽部GOLD?)
  • Gekiga Madmax (劇画マッドマックス?)
  • Manga Bangaichi (漫画ばんがいち?)
Video games (eroge) magazines
  • MegaStore (メガストア?)
  • G-type
  • Voice-type

References[]

  1. "Information at the company's official website" (in Japanese). Core Magazine. Retrieved 2009-12-1.  Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  2. Aoki, Deb. "Readers' Choice: Yaoi Manga". About.com. Retrieved 10 February 2010. 
  3. "Core Magazine". Anime News Network. Retrieved 10 February 2010. 
  4. Mangaoh Club’s adult comics list
  5. "Court rules on Bubka appeal case". Tokyograph. October 16, 2008. Retrieved 10 February 2010. 
  6. "Comic Mega Plus to be Replaced by Comic 0 EX". ComiPress. 2007-12-06. Retrieved 10 February 2010. 


External links[]

File:PrefSymbol-Tokyo.svg Tokyo portal
File:Factory 1b.svg Companies portal

ru:Core Magazine