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Future Diary | |
Cover of Future Diary volume 1 featuring Yukiteru Amano and Yuno Gasai. | |
未来日記 (Mirai Nikki) | |
---|---|
Genre | Mystery, psychological thriller, romance[1][2] |
Manga | |
Written by | Sakae Esuno |
Published by | Kadokawa Shoten |
English publisher | |
Demographic | Shōnen |
Magazine | Monthly Shōnen Ace |
Original run | January 26, 2006 – December 25, 2010 |
Volumes | 12 (List of volumes) |
Manga | |
Future Diary: Mosaic/Paradox/Redial | |
Written by | Sakae Esuno |
Published by | Kadokawa Shoten |
Demographic | Shōnen |
Magazine | Shōnen Ace |
Original run | November 26, 2008 – July 26, 2013 |
Volumes | 3 (List of volumes) |
Anime television series | |
Directed by | Naoto Hosoda |
Written by | Katsuhiko Takayama |
Music by | Tatsuya Kato |
Studio | Asread |
Licensed by | |
Original network | Chiba TV, TV Saitama |
Original run | October 10, 2011 – April 16, 2012 |
Episodes | 26 + OVA (List of episodes) |
Television drama | |
Future Diary: Another:World | |
Directed by | Michiko Namiki, Shogo Miyaki |
Produced by | Ryota Fujino |
Written by | Sayaka Kuwamura, Kaeko Hayafune |
Music by | Shuichiro Fukuhiro |
Original network | Fuji TV |
Original run | April 21, 2012 – June 30, 2012 |
Episodes | 11 |
Anime and Manga portal |
Future Diary (Japanese: 未来日記Hepburn: Mirai Nikki) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Sakae Esuno. It was serialized in Kadokawa Shoten's Shōnen Ace between January 26, 2006 and December 25, 2010, and has been collected into 12 tankōbon volumes. The plot depicts the Diary Game, a deadly battle royal between 12 different individuals who are given 'Future Diaries', special diaries that can predict the future, by Deus Ex Machina, the God of Time and Space, with the last survivor becoming his heir.
The manga has been licensed by Tokyopop, and ten of the English volumes were released, with a release for the last two now uncertain due to Tokyopop ceasing publishing in North America. A 'pilotanime' DVD was released with the 11th manga volume in December 2010. A 26-episode anime television series produced by Asread, aired in Japan between October 2011 and April 2012. Funimation has licensed the anime for distribution in North America. An 11-episode live-action television drama aired between April and June 2012.
Esuno has also authored three side-story manga, each one spanning five chapters: first Future Diary: Mosaic which focuses on another Diary Holder, Minene Uryu, and tells unrevealed plot points of the main story; in 2009-2010, Future Diary: Paradox (published in Young Ace), which tells the exploits of Aru Akise and Muru Muru set in an alternate timeline, and in 2013, Future Diary: Redial, which serves as an epilogue to the series.
Yukiteru Amano is a 14-year-old shy, daydreaming loner who observes life and jots down the events on his cell phone. His only friends are Deus Ex Machina, the God of Space and Time, and his assistant Muru Muru. Deus transforms Yukiteru's phone into a Future Diary, capable of predicting the future up to ninety days. Yukiteru discovers he and eleven others are part of a survival game orchestrated by Deus. The aim of this game is to eliminate the other diary holders, the winner succeeding Deus as god and can prevent the Apocalypse. Yukiteru finds himself protected by Yuno Gasai, a charming but psychopathic classmate who obsessively stalks him after they promised to go stargazing together a year before.
Two major players they encounter are terrorist Minene Uryu, who wants to destroy all religion after her parents died in a faith-fuelled war; and Keigo Kurusu, a police officer who wants to end the game. Later, Kurusu betrays Yukiteru and Yuno when he discovers his bed-ridden son is suffering from a terminal illness. He assassinates diary holder Karyuudo Tsukishima and frames Yukiteru and Yuno. Minene turns to detective Masumi Nishijima, exposing Kurusu's crime. In his shame, Kurusu eliminates himself from the game.
John Bacchus, the city's mayor and designer of the Future Diaries, tries to manipulate Yukiteru's debt-ridden father Kurou into stealing his son's diary. Kurou fails, unintentionally murdering his ex-wife Rea, and is then assassinated by Bacchus' men. Yukiteru vows to win the game and resurrect his parents. He and Yuno target the remaining diary holders, Minene, Bacchus, and Kamado Ueshita who runs an orphanage. Meanwhile, Yukiteru's astute friend Aru Akise, and Nishijima investigate the discovery of three corpses in Yuno's house, two being her parents, and the third identified as being Yuno Gasai, bringing her identity into question.
Kamado's diary, which can give others substitute diaries, is connected to a supercomputer, giving everyone in the city Future Diaries as part of Bacchus' plan to help humanity evolve. Yukiteru and Yuno, Minene, Nishijima, and Yukiteru's friends storm Bacchus' headquarters. He seals himself in a bank vault owned by Yuno's parents, her fingerprints the only way to access it. Minene sacrifices herself to destroy the vault but fails, only for Aru to witness Yuno access the vault and kill Bacchus. Wanting answers, Aru confronts Deus who reveals the boy is an artificial human designed to observe the game and keep it in balance, but confirms there is a conspiracy around Yuno.
Yukiteru murders his friends and then Kamado. Aru battles Yuno, destroying her diary but discovers she has a spare. Realising the truth, Aru shows a text to Yukiteru before Yuno decapitates him. As the days to the Apocalypse approach, Yukiteru and Yuno consummate their relationship. However, Yukiteru reveals Aru's suggestion that Yuno originates from another timeline and she immediately turns on him. Muru Muru, the true mastermind behind the game's course, confirms Aru's theory. Yukiteru died and Yuno won the game in another timeline but discovered not even the power of a god could bring back the dead. In her sorrow, Yuno went back in time, creating an alternate timeline, murdering and replacing her other self.
Yuno and Muru Muru go back in time again, creating a third world, pursued by Yukiteru and Minene, kept alive by Deus as a wild card and imbued with a portion of his power. Both parties battle to protect or kill the third world's Yuno and her parents. Yuno, unable to kill Yukiteru, traps him in a dream world where she doesn't exist, and then attacks her alternate self. Yukiteru remembers Yuno, escaping his prison aided by the second world's Muru Muru, and stops Yuno. Though Yukiteru asks Yuno to kill him so she can live, she instead eliminates herself and dies in his arms. Yukiteru becomes god and is dragged to the second world by Muru Muru.
Ten-thousand years later, a mournful Yukiteru has done nothing with his godly powers. He managed to cutoff all influences that the first and second worlds had with the third and prevents the third world's deus from dying. Yukiteru gazes at his diary, mourning that he will never see the first world Yuno, the only one he will ever love, ever again. However, the interdimensional walls are broken down by the third world Yuno, who possesses the first world's memories courtesy of an atoning Muru Muru. Yukiteru and Yuno reunite as gods of the second world and eternal lovers.
The manga was serialized in Kadokawa Shoten's Shōnen Ace magazine from January 26, 2006 to December 25, 2010[3][4] and was compiled into 12 volumes published by Kadokawa Shoten, plus two side-story manga, Future Diary: Mosaic and Future Diary: Paradox, compiled in one volume each. The manga was originally licensed in English by Tokyopop for North America, but only ten volumes were released before Tokyopop cease publishing operations on May 31, 2011. The series is currently licensed by Viz Media.[5]
An additional manga titled Future Diary: Redial (未来日記リダイヤルMirai Nikki Ridaiyaru) was previewed in the May 2013 issue of Shōnen Ace sold on March 26, 2013, and a single volume of Redial was released in July 2013.[6]
No. | Japanese release date | Japanese ISBN | English release date | English ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | July 26, 2006 | ISBN978-4-04-713839-1 | May 12, 2009 | ISBN978-1-4278-1557-6 |
2 | October 26, 2006 | ISBN978-4-04-713872-8 | June 9, 2009 | ISBN978-1-4278-1558-3 |
3 | March 26, 2007 | ISBN978-4-04-713912-1 | September 9, 2009 | ISBN978-1-4278-1559-0 |
4 | October 26, 2007 | ISBN978-4-04-713954-1 | December 1, 2009 | ISBN978-1-4278-1560-6 |
5 | February 26, 2008 | ISBN978-4-04-715026-3 | March 2, 2010 | ISBN978-1-4278-1561-3 |
6 | June 26, 2008 | ISBN978-4-04-715072-0 | June 1, 2010 | ISBN978-1-4278-1630-6 |
7 | November 26, 2008 | ISBN978-4-04-715130-7 | August 31, 2010 | ISBN978-1-4278-1751-8 |
Mosaic | November 26, 2008 | ISBN978-4-04-715129-1 | — | — |
8 | May 26, 2009 | ISBN978-4-04-715248-9 | November 2, 2010 | ISBN978-1-4278-1761-7 |
9 | November 26, 2009 | ISBN978-4-04-715323-3 | December 28, 2010 | ISBN978-1-4278-0520-1 |
10 | March 26, 2010 | ISBN978-4-04-715400-1 | April 12, 2011 | ISBN978-1-4278-0521-8 |
Paradox | March 26, 2010 | ISBN978-4-04-715412-4 | — | — |
11 | September 9, 2010 (limited edition) December 25, 2010 (regular edition) | ISBN978-4-04-900801-2 (limited edition) ISBN978-4-04-715580-0 (regular edition) | — | — |
12 | April 26, 2011 | ISBN978-4-04-715679-1 | — | — |
Redial | July 26, 2013 | ISBN978-4-04-120616-4 | — | — |
An anime television adaptation by Asread and directed by Naoto Hosoda began airing from October 10, 2011.[7] Character designs are done by Eiji Hirayama and Ruriko Watanabe. An eight-minute 'pilot' edition DVD was bundled with limited editions of the manga's eleventh volume, released on December 9, 2010.[8] The series uses four pieces of theme music: two opening themes and two ending themes. For the first 14 episodes, the opening theme is 'Kūsō Mesology' (空想メソロギヰKūsō Mesorogii, 'Fantasy Mesology') by Yōsei Teikoku, and the ending theme is 'Blood Teller' by Faylan. From episode 15 onwards, the opening theme is 'Dead End' by Faylan, and the ending theme is 'Filament' by Yōsei Teikoku. For the pilot, the main theme is 'The Creator' by Yōsei Teikoku. Funimation licensed the series for North American distribution, simulcasting the series on Niconico. They later announced they had acquired the rights for release on home video.[9]
An original video animation episode titled Future Diary: RedialUninvited guest torrent. acts as an epilogue to the television series. It received a special broadcast on Niconico on June 19, 2013. It was also bundled with the manga volume sequel of the same name. The opening theme for the OVA is 'Kyōki Chinden' (狂気沈殿, 'Madness Precipitation') by Yōsei Teikoku, and the ending theme is 'Happy End' by Faylan.
Kadokawa Shoten produced a visual novel based on the manga titled Future Diary: The 13th Diary Owner (未来日記 -13人目の日記所有者-Mirai Nikki 13-nin-me no Nikki Shoyūsha) for the PlayStation Portable, was released on January 28, 2010 in Japan.[10] A re-release with new graphics, artwork and featuring the voice actors from the anime was released on April 26, 2012.
An 11-episode live action drama titled Future Diary: Another:World aired between April 21 and June 30, 2012 on Fuji TV.[11] The TV series has an original plot line that differs from the manga and anime. The opening theme is 'Another World' by Ko Shibasaki.[12]
During mid-November 2008, the seventh volume of the Future Diary manga ranked as the twenty-first best selling manga in Japan.[13] The volume remained in the top 30 during the following week, though it dropped to twenty-fifth place.[14] As of April 2012, it has sold 4 million copies in Japan.[15]
The Japanese name of this series is the inspiration for the naming of the Mirai botnet program.[16]