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Sengoku Collection

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Alternative Titles

English: Sengoku Collection
Japanese: 戦国コレクション

Information

Episodes: 26
Aired: Apr 6, 2012 to Sep 28, 2012
Broadcast: Fridays at 01:45 (JST)
Licensors:Nozomi Entertainment
Source: Game
Genres:FantasyFantasy, ParodyParody, SamuraiSamurai
Rating: PG-13 - Teens 13 or older

Statistics

Ranked: #59872
2 based on the top anime page. Please note that 'Not yet aired' and 'R18+' titles are excluded.
Members: 20,358

Reviews

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Preliminary
26 of 26 episodes seen
ryanxwonbin(All reviews)
24 people found this review helpful
Overall6
Story5
Animation3
Sound7
Character6
Enjoyment7
Despite some decent sales and a large number of fan art in pixiv of Sengoku Collection, this little show has gone relatively unnoticed. Practically no advertisement, unappealing art, and other shows taking the spotlight and it isn't too much of a surprise. That said I'd still like to make a decent review for people who might want to try it out.
The show is overall mediocre. One of the main problems of Sengoku Collection is that it lacks any appealing or interesting plot. Sengoku warlords come to our world; they live their lives, some wish to stay while others want go back to the old world, like Oda Nobunaga. A good concept lies here but it is not executed well. Each episode is centers around a Sengoku-period warlord and each episode deals with said character's problem and how they cope with their new life. The problem is that the episodes are very loosely related to each other nor do they serve much semblance to main story, leaving the viewer with a show that is practically just slice-of-life. And really, some people might be fine with that, but why even attempt a main plot when you choose to not properly work on it? There is a certain nagging feeling once you finish the show that tells you this show could have been much more.
The episodes and characters themselves are problematic as well. Some of the episodes are fantastic, some are mediocre, and some are just plain awful and a chore to go through. The good thing is that you might find a jewel of an episode you love while going through the muck; but you have to go through that said muck. The same can be said of the characters, some of which are horribly written and have so little relevance to their Sengoku image that they might as well not have been a Sengoku expy at all, while others are created with good thought and creativity.
You may notice a number of parodies throughout the show as this was the little gimmick the show tries to play out. Probably something a lot of people will recognize is the Bowling for Columbine parody, one of the fewer funny and good episodes of the series. A lot of the parodies however are Japanese-related media so the average English viewer most likely will not get references.
It probably doesn't need to be said that the animation and art is pretty low-tier. Just look at Kanetsugu Naoe's face and tell me you can actually take that seriously. It's even noticeable that in some episodes the production values and art drastically drop. Expect harsh disappointment for those who need grand visuals to keep you entertained.
The music is fair and good in most regards. Dependent on the episode and parodies the music will have different styles and ensemble, and diversity is always a good thing. If you bother with the character songs that are still being released, they are pretty standard J-pop.
Overall, Sengoku Collection is just average. There are episodes you will love and episodes that will having you sleeping from boredom. With poor visuals it makes it hard for an average viewer to be interested in finishing the whole 26 episodes. It really isn't something I can recommend to someone that doesn't have free time to spend.
26 of 26 episodes seen
Synchrogayzer(All reviews)
4 people found this review helpful
Overall8
Story6
Animation10
Sound6
Character9
Enjoyment9
Sengoku Collection is a series of mostly unrelated short stories about samurai from another world wreaking havoc in this one. They do this not by fighting, but by being extremely eccentric.
Each episode focuses on one character who is usually not seen again after that, but they are all complete stories, so this is not really an issue.
There is an overarching plot, but it's sort of in the background for the most part.
Sengoku collection is full of yuri, so steer clear if you don't like that. Otherwise, it's a beautiful, if strange show, and I highly recommend it.
26 of 26 episodes seen
BriefEd(All reviews)
3 people found this review helpful
Overall6
Story4
Animation5
Sound8
Character6
Enjoyment6
The posted plot synopsis from Crunchyroll is way off the mark really, first off their ages range from 4 to probably 30 and calling it some kind of friendship development story is stretching it halfway to the moon.
What you can expect is a ton of females designed to appeal to every fairly common taste so everyone has something to look forward to, then they mostly get an episode each to do something amusing relating to their personalities and Oda Nobunaga shows up and defeats them in some entertaining manner. There is very little real violence going on, the selling point of the show is the comedy, which is nothing impressive but at least I giggled pretty frequently through the whole season.
The art is all over the place with some characters looking like those horrid 2005 anime characters appearing to have downs syndrome but there are also opposite extremes with very stylish adult looks with high realism factor, I have no idea what in a bucket of soapy rubber ducks is going on with that but it sort of annoyed me a little. The sound is quite a lot better, in fact so good I can't find anything to complain about in the slightest!
I spent a good while deciding between a 6 and a 7 for this show, it ultimately ended up with only a 6 but if you're just looking for something to make noise and pictures on your TV while you knit a scarf it's a good choice until you suddenly laugh and accidentally stab yourself.
2 of 26 episodes seen
Andyis(All reviews)
4 people found this review helpful
Overall6
Story4
Animation8
Sound8
Character7
Enjoyment5
If you were expecting a battle showdown with nobunaga getting legendary powers and destroying all the enemies in a parallel world expect to be disappointed ( like me)
Story -4
Ok I expected that to get the treasures to return back to the past Nobunaga would fight and destroy enemies and obtain the treasures and end up fighting some super boss dude who set them up to go to the future. Who knows, I may be right. However from reading the sytopsis and checking the number of main characters(25) I would bet that I am wrong. Basically there is just a bunch of random stories about different girls accepting their positions in the new worlds and nearly no action.
Art -8
Ok the characters designs are not my favorite but not bad either. 8 for quite nice
Character-7
Switching to a new main character every single episode could get on to some people's nerves. Well I got to 3 and I just assumed it would be like that but I really couldn't care less about the backstories of random girls.
Enjoyment-5
I enjoyed the first episode and expected greatness but the next episode was cute but not exactly what I wanted. Then I started the third episode and I couldn't bare to watch anymore.
Overall-j6
It really depends on your tastes. If you want to watch 25 different backstories of random girls from the sengoku period- go ahead. It has cute gitls and moderate humor and ecchi. However if you are expecting more of a plot( as I was) expect to be disappointed. I personally cannot stand things without a plot but everyone has their different tastes.
26 of 26 episodes seen
LegendAqua(All reviews)
3 people found this review helpful
Overall5
Story5
Animation4
Sound4
Character5
Enjoyment5
The Daily Lives of Sengoku Girls
Sengoku Collection is an anime by in large, slice of life genred with a jack all of genres but master of none approach to it's plot structure. Sengoku Collection goes through MANY genre changes depending on the Sengoku girl that it's focusing on the episode, whether it be shounen, mystery, 'horror', shoujo ai, idol, sci-fi and even space adventure, however how they present and execute it is rather lackluster and is only means to give the Sengoku girl at hand something to do.
In terms of characters, considering the HUGE cast, almost 3/4's of the cast get at best one episode tops for thier episode focus, the only characters that matter in terms of a narrative focus for LA at least were Oda Nobunaga voiced by Rumi Ookubo (Oda Nobunaga coming into other character's end scenes to collect their secret treasure so occasionally appears here and there), Masamune Date voiced by Ayumi Tsunematsu and Mitsuhide Akechi voiced by Yoko Hisaka and all three get three episodes at best for thier story 'arc'. In terms of character development, the episodic nature of the anime can either give most of the charcacters stock cliches tropes or genre-fueled tropes for the Sengoku girls at hand and because of that, their character development especially the characters given one or two episodes worth of 'development' is miniscule at best thus making those Sengoku girls' prescences feel rather worthless and filler.
LA's favourite episodes of this anime were Episode 18, 19, 20 and 22 by the way and LA has some guilty pleasure towards Episode 23 for it's creative take on a documentary narrative through a kindergarten's sandbox takeover. On the side of the spectrum LA got quickly bored of epsiodes 2, 7, 12 and 21. The only 2 episodes LA thought was in middle of all this was Episode 13 and 16.
In terms of animation by Brain's Base, the animation has inconstistency concerning the character designs clashing with the background, as the background animation is very detailed using bright pastel and watercolored background work (special note goes to Episode 18 making it look like a depressing children's book style) that clashes heavily with the traditional yet equally bright character designs (with facial and character animation derps abound), LA would praise Brain's Base doing something unique using the background animation but equally fault them for having inconsistent character designs, animation errors (Exception goes to Masamune Date's character design as it fits with her with no animation errors either) and to be frank when there are battles between the Sengoku girls or battle scenes in general feel janky and stiff, the animation overall is inconsistent at best, lazy at worst.
In terms of voice acting, considering the vast cast list, LA will give it that there are some level of 'squeak' in the voice cast. But aside from that major props for voice acting goes to Rumi Ookubo as Oda Nobunaga (playing up the abrasive and slight tsundere type), Ayumi Tsunemastu as Masamune Date and Yoko Hisaka as Mitsuhide Akechi especially (as thier episodes were where LA gave any investment to characters in the series).
The ending had the common decency to bring us something of what LA was expecting from this anime, 'Sengoku girls fighting it out with the slice of life tones to it' and at least they gave something of a epilogue to the huge cast of characters EXCEPT Oda Nobunaga's main narrative plotline, essentially saying it's never gonna get resolved, at least giving us how the other Sengoku girls are is a slight bonus???..-sigh-.
Sengoku Collection, well LA will say it again, a jack of all genres but master of none and LA WILL give anime some grace as it IS a slice of life anime with Sengoku girls as it's focus but outside of it's 'slice of life' genre to be perfectly honest LA got bored of this series quickly as it had no narrative hook to keep LA interested with the 'one episode Sengoku girls' being essentially worthless to the overall narrative of Oda Nobunaga or Masamune's. On a off hand note, LA thought the premise of Sengoku girls being transported to the modern day although a good concept, it's execution lacked at any meat to it's product (and no not for being a slice of life), they could have done ALOT more to it (the closest it got was Masamune's story arc).
Sengoku Collection like it's title is a collection of Sengoku girls with a character-centred slice of life anime, if you like that and want something more laxxed (which was why LA watched this anime in the first place) then it's an ok choice, however if you wanted to see Sengoku girls going crazy with swords shounen style and go to war in modern day Japan..then it's better to look at the reverse-concept anime 'Oda Nobuna no Yabou' as that had a better concept and execution.

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Sengoku Collection
Cover of first DVD volume of the anime series, depicting Oda Nobunaga and Tokugawa Ieyasu.
戦国コレクション
(Sengoku Korekushon)
GenreAction, Historical
Game
DeveloperKonami
PublisherKonami
GenreCard game
PlatformiOS, Android, Mobile
ReleasedDecember 21, 2010
Anime television series
Directed byKeiji Gotoh
Music byTomoki Kikuya
StudioBrain's Base
Licensed by
Original networkTV Tokyo
Original run April 5, 2012 September 27, 2012
Episodes26 (List of episodes)
The names of characters based on historical figures are listed family name first. The names of other characters and all staff and cast members are written in standard English order.

Sengoku Collection (戦国コレクション, Sengoku Korekushon) is a mobile social networking game created by Konami, which was launched for the Mobage service in December 2010. The series features female representations of feudal lords from the Sengoku period. An anime television series produced by Brain's Base based on the game aired on TV Tokyo between April 5, 2012 and September 27, 2012.[1][2]

Plot[edit]

Game

The story is set in the tumultuous Sengoku Era of historical Japan, when military masters circle the figurative throne of Japan's first shogunate. In the game, 'God of War Cards' have been sealed in six hidden treasures, and fighting breaks out among those who seek the treasures. As a new military master, the player embarks on a journey to obtain the treasures by clearing quests and fighting bosses.

Anime

In a different timeline, female versions of generals from the Sengoku period vie for power. One day, a mysterious light sends Oda Nobunaga and several other generals to the modern day world. As each of the generals adapts to this new lifestyle, Nobunaga goes on a quest to seek out the other generals and retrieve their secret treasures in order to return home.

Characters[edit]

Generals[edit]

Sweet Little Devil Oda Nobunaga (小悪魔王・織田信長)
Voiced by: Rumi Ōkubo
The feudal lord who is mysteriously transported to the Modern World. Wanting to return to the Sengoku World, she goes on a quest to retrieve the secret treasures hidden inside the other feudal lords so that she can return home.
Vengeful Fang Akechi Mitsuhide (復讐ノ牙・明智光秀)
Voiced by: Yōko Hikasa
Nobunaga's servant who was often faithful to her. When she believed Nobunaga to be favouring Hideyoshi over her, she was consumed by jealousy and attempted to assassinate Nobunaga, causing the phenomenon that sent everyone to the Modern World. She had lost her memory upon arriving, but regained it after recovering from a coma.
Peaceful Empress Tokugawa Ieyasu (泰平女君・徳川家康)
Voiced by: Kana Hanazawa
A peace-loving feudal lord who enjoys singing and dancing. After coming to admire an idol, she becomes an idol herself.
Pure Angel Naoe Kanetsugu (純愛天使・直江兼続)
Voiced by: Mai Nakahara
Kenshin's retainer who is in love with her, wanting to fulfil her dream of conquering the land. She has wings which let her view the battlefield. When she is transported to the Modern World, she goes colorblind but regains her ability to see color when she realises how much Kenshin wants her by her side.
Holy Maiden Uesugi Kenshin (聖乙女・上杉謙信)
Voiced by: Mamiko Noto
A feudal lord who is always beside Kanetsugu. Whilst constantly battling in the Sengoku World, Kenshin came to love the peaceful modern world and became a model.
One-eyed Dragon Date Masamune (独眼竜姫・伊達政宗)
Voiced by: Ayumi Tsunematsu
A feudal lord who was often dependant on her servant, Kojūrō Katakura. Upon arriving in the Modern World, she was tricked by the Yakuza and arrested, but managed to escape and get revenge, and now seeks out Kojuro.
Sword Maiden Tsukahara Bokuden (斬神・塚原卜伝)
Voiced by: Sayuri Hara
A small and cheeky but powerful general who runs a kendo dojo.
Knowledge Master Hiraga Gennai (識神・平賀源内)
Voiced by: Haruka Kudou
A self-proclaimed genius who enjoys inventing things, hoping to make a time machine to take her to the future.
Refined Bard Matsuo Bashō (風流人・松尾芭蕉)
Voiced by: Asuka Nishi
A wandering poet who speaks only in haikus (俳句).
Regent Girl Toyotomi Hideyoshi (太閤娘・豊臣秀吉)
Voiced by: Kaori Nazuka
A carefree girl who loves to eat rice.
Ambitious Princess Hōjō Sōun (野心姫・北条早雲)
Voiced by: Ryō Hirohashi
A girl who aspires to become a general.
Brutal Maiden Matsunaga Hisahide (凶悪乙女・松永久秀)
Voiced by: Atsuko Tanaka
A con artist who carries a large scythe.
Dancing Blossom Maeda Keiji (舞桜・前田利益)
Voiced by: Masumi Asano
A maiden with a strong sense of justice. By day, she appears to be an absent-minded store clerk. However, on Saturday nights, she rides her motorbike and punishes delinquents under the guise of 'Saturday Night Rider'.
Silver Hornet Sugitani Zenjubō (銀蜂・杉谷善住坊)
Voiced by: Miyuki Sawashiro
An assassin who has never missed a target.
Gold Peony Kondō Isami (金牡丹・近藤勇)
Voiced by: Chiaki Takahashi
Novel Deciders (Shinsengumi, 新撰組)
A dormitory leader of Shinsenryō (深浅寮). She has attended a boarding school for girls in the Modern World, and lives a high school girl's life for her age.
Black Bellflower Hijikata Toshizō (黒桔梗・土方歳三)
Voiced by: Akeno Watanabe
Novel Deciders (Shinsengumi, 新撰組)
A sub dormitory leader of Shinsenryō. She has a habit of overusing a celebrated sword Izumi no Kami Kanesada (和泉守兼定).
White Lotus Okita Sōji (白蓮・沖田総司)
Voiced by: Akemi Kanda
Novel Deciders (Shinsengumi, 新撰組)
A follower of Kondō and Hijikata lives in Shinsenryō. She looks fragile, but is really scary in reality.
Annihilate Princess Mogami Yoshiaki (殲滅姫・最上義光)
Voiced by: Sumire Uesaka
Date Masamune's young aunt, even she hates being call that, and is afraid of ghosts. She shares the same name as Ashikaga Yoshiteru's daughter, Yoshiaki (which she pointed out).
Blade Adept Ashikaga Yoshiteru (剣聖・足利義輝)
Voiced by: Rina Satō
A shogun of the Warring State and a representative of the Samurai. She has a grudge against Yagyū Sekishūsai for playing pranks on her, but in reality she really likes and admires her. She is a student of Bokuden.
Sword Maiden Yagyū Sekishūsai (斬神・柳生石舟斎)
Voiced by: Haruka Kimura
An heir of a new kind of swordsmanship and was one of Bokuken's student. She constantly play pranks on Ashikaga, but reveal that she did it to get her attention and that she admire her.
Sunshine Ruler Liu Bei (春陽愛君・劉備)
Voiced by: Yui Horie
A maid-for-hire who is inflicted with a curse which causes her to turn into a pig after sunset. The only character that comes from the Three Kingdoms Period instead of the Sengoku Period.
Four Leaves Ōtani Yoshitsugu (四ツ葉・大谷吉継)
Voiced by: Haruka Shiraishi
A quiet girl wrapped in bandages who often experiences a lot of bad luck.
Cavalry Queen Takeda Shingen (戦騎女王・武田信玄)
Voiced by: Ryōko Shintani
A famous for the Cavalry Queen in the Sengoku World who is transported to 'Nakhodka' the space station of a certain country. She can wield powerful elemental attacks but is apparently bad at maths.
The Splendor Katakura Kojūrō (華麗・片倉小十郎)
Voiced by: Asami Imai
Masamune's faithful servant, but she joins police and chases Masamune.
The Dune Amago Tsunehisa (お砂場・尼子経久)
Voiced by: Eri Kitamura
A kindergarten child who has ambition to build a big castle on a sandbox.
Marshal Princess Imagawa Yoshimoto (元帥姫・今川義元)
Voiced by: Ai Shimizu
A famous warrior maiden and Oda Nobunaga's rival that lost to her, which led to her declining reputation.

Shrine Maidens[edit]

Fox Maiden (きつね巫女, Kitsune-Miko)
Voiced by: Yui Hasegawa (Sweety)
Rabbit Maiden (うさぎ巫女, Usagi-Miko)
Voiced by: Aya Takenouchi (Sweety)
Cat Maiden (ねこ巫女, Neko-Miko)
Voiced by: Rika Gaoitomo (Sweety)

Other characters[edit]

Pretty Girl Mori Ranmaru (可愛・森蘭丸)
Voiced by: Rei Matsuzaki
Nobunaga's servant.
Sword Maiden Itō Ittōsai (斬神・伊藤一刀斎)
Voiced by: Mikako Komatsu
A challenger to Bokuden for a title of the strongest.
Tea Way Sen no Rikyū (お茶道・千利休)
Voiced by: Saori Hayami
A master of tea.
Lady Teacher Taigen Sessai (女教師・太原雪斎)
Voiced by: Sakiko Kawai
Yoshimoto's servant.
Ninja Girl Fūma Kotarō (クノイチ・風魔小太郎)
Voiced by: Ami Koshimizu
Yoshimoto's servant.
Seiichi Ōta (太田 生一)
Voiced by: Kousuke Toriumi
A boy who Nobunaga encounters upon arriving in the modern world. He helps Nobunaga out before she begins her search for the hidden treasures.
Rosary (ロザリー)
Voiced by: Yuka Terasaki
The top star of singing and dancing in the modern world.
A manager (マネージャー)
Voiced by: Daisuke Hirakawa
Ieyasu's manager.
A chief (社長)
Voiced by: Binbin Takaoka
An owner of the agency that Ieyasu belongs.
Daigorō Katakura (片倉だいごろう)
Voiced by: Kōtaro Nakamura
A mafia boss who employed Masamune.
Mike Morse (マイク・モース)
Voiced by: Masashi Ebara
A documentary producer.
A boy (少年)
Voiced by: Yumi Igarashi
A boy who takes care of Gennai. Gennai calls him 'Assistant'.
Marie (真理恵)
Voiced by: Kimiko Saitō
A barkeeper of Saihate Cafe (さいはてカフェ).
Ai (亜衣)
Voiced by: Ai Nonaka
Marie's daughter.
Satoshi (さとし)
Voiced by: Shūhei Sakaguchi
A dancer of shemale who teaches dance in the cafe.
Kyōichi (恭一)
Voiced by: Hisayoshi Suganuma
An artist of the cafe's regular customer.
Noriko (紀子)
Voiced by: Ikumi Hayama
An elementary school girl who lives with Hideyoshi.
Human Rice (米人間)
Voiced by: Kōsuke Kobayashi, Yōhei Azakami, Hiroshi Shimozaki
The people in the wonderland who has the shape of a grain of rice.
A scarecrow (かかし)
Voiced by: Takeshi Mori
A talking scarecrow in the wonderland.
Jun Takahashi (高橋純)
Voiced by: Kanako Kondō
An ordinary high school girl who lives with Sōun.
Teacher Matsuura (松浦先生)
Voiced by: Risa Mizuno
A female teacher.
Sarah (サラ)
Voiced by: Yū Shimamura
An ambassador's daughter who relies on Hisahide to ruin the casino.
Yamaguchi (山口)
Voiced by: Hitomi Nabatame
A serious woman who works with Keiji in a convenience store.
Ageha (アゲハ)
Voiced by: Kana Ueda
A homeless girl who came up to Tokyo from the country. Zenjubō's first friend in the modern world.
Mao (真緒)
Voiced by: Mai Kadowaki
Yoshiaki's classmate.
Yumi (由美)
Voiced by: Manami Numakura
Yoshiaki's classmate.
Murata (村田)
Voiced by: Chigusa Ikeda
Yoshiaki's classmate.
Tae Kasuga (春日タエ)
Voiced by: Sayuri Sadaoka
An elderly former actress who employs Liu Bei to a maid.
Angel (エンジェル)
Voiced by: Tomosa Murata
Yoshitsugu's pen friend.
Inspector Hirata (平田警部)
Voiced by: Takashi Nagasako
The chief investigator of the murder case who is Akechi's acquaintance.
Всад29 (Всадник) (フサード29, Fusādonīkyū)
Voiced by: Tōru Ōkawa
An old-type support droid which is a shape of an electric water boiler, and has a face doodling and a message on his top. He can move independently by wheels or jets, and work by a manipulator inside him.
Весна9000 (ヴィスナー9000, Visunā9000)
Voiced by: Takako Honda
A perfect AI which rises in revolt against humans.
Higurashi (日暮)
Voiced by: Daisuke Endō
A police detective who arrested Masamune. After that, he joins the Sengoku Busho Countermaersure Department and chase Masamune who became a prison breaker, with Kojūrō.
Shimizu-kun (清水くん)
Voiced by: Hitomi Hase
A kindergarten child who is polite and honest. Tsunehisa finds out his talent for assisting the king, and he place himself under her order.
Matsuda-kun (松田くん)
Voiced by: Yukari Kokubun
A kindergarten child who is a leader of Matsuda-kun group.
Enya-kun (塩谷くん)
Voiced by: Mariya Ise
A kindergarten child who is a leader of Enya-kun group.
Misawa-chan (三沢ちゃん)
Voiced by: Rie Kugimiya
A kindergarten child who is a leader of Misawa-chan group.
A female manager (女子マネージャー)
Voiced by: Tamari Hinata
Ieyasu's new manager who is an able woman but so severe.
Kaoru Taniyama (谷山薫)
Voiced by: Tsubasa Yonaga
A fan of Ieyasu who takes peeping videos her. He was given an accusation video from a lady, and runs away with Ieyasu from the chasers who aim for the camera.
Tatsuya Sugimura (杉村達也)
Voiced by: Kenyū Horiuchi
An outstanding actor who co-stars with Ieyasu in a drama.
A lady of red dress (赤いドレスの女)
Voiced by: Satomi Arai
A lady wearing a red dress who collided with Kaoru. She recorded a video that accuses Tatsuya Sugimura but was killed by a syndicate.
Beethoven (ベートーベン)
Voiced by: You Kikkawa
A girl that just arrived to the modern world of Japan.

Media[edit]

Game[edit]

The Sengoku Collection social game launched for mobile devices via Yahoo!'s Mobage service in December 2010. The game is a card battle game in which players can collect up to 600 trading cards in order to become a Shogun general. The game has had over 2.5 million registered users.[3]

Anime[edit]

An anime adaptation by Brain's Base aired in Japan on TV Tokyo between April 5, 2012 and September 27, 2012 and was also simulcast on Crunchyroll. For the first 13 episodes, the opening theme is 'Close Your Eyes and Hold Me' (目をとじてギュッしよ, Me o Tojite Gyusshiyo) by Abcho whilst the ending theme is 'Unlucky Girl!!' by Sweety. For episode 14 onwards, the opening theme is 'Back into my world' by Sweety, whilst the ending theme is 'Darling and Madonna' (ダーリンとマドンナ, Dārin to Madonna) by You Kikkawa. Insert songs used in episode 2 are 'Love Scope' by Kana Hanazawa and 'Misty Moon' by Yuka Terasaki. Right Stuf Inc. has licensed the series for DVD and digital release in North America in 2014 under its Lucky Penny label.[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^'Konami's Sengoku Collection TV Anime Slated for April'. Anime News Network. 2012-01-29. Retrieved 2012-01-30.
  2. ^'Konami's Sengoku Collection Social Game Gets TV Anime (Updated)'. Anime News Network. 2011-12-20. Retrieved 2012-01-30.
  3. ^'Konami's Sengoku Collection To Be Adapted Into TV Anime'. 2011-12-24. Retrieved 2015-03-29.
  4. ^'Right Stuf Adds Cat's Eye, Princess Nine, Campanella, Sengoku Collection Anime'. Anime News Network. 2013-07-05. Retrieved 2015-03-29.

External links[edit]

  • Official website(in Japanese)
  • Official anime website at TV Tokyo(in Japanese)
  • Sengoku Collection (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
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