
Sakura is aided by her teacher Kaho Mizuki, who was sent by Clow to ensure Sakura is able to pass the test, because he chose Sakura to be the cards' new master when he knew he was going to die. Yue is the true form of Yukito Tsukishiro, Sakura's crush and her brother's best friend. Once Sakura captures all the cards, she undergoes the Final Judgment, presided over by Yue, the cards' second guardian, who tests Sakura to determine if she is worthy of becoming the cards' true master.

Sakura's older brother Toya Kinomoto watches over her, while pretending that he is unaware of what is going on.Ī boy Sakura's age and descendant of Clow Reed, Syaoran Li, arrives from Hong Kong to recapture the cards himself, but finds his goal complicated as he comes to respect Sakura and begins aiding her instead. Cerberus acts as her guide, while her best friend and cousin Tomoyo Daidouji films her exploits and provides her with battle costumes. As she finds each card, she battles its magical personification and defeats it to seal it away. The guardian Beast of the Seal Cerberus emerges from the book and tells her it is now her responsibility to retrieve the missing cards. Each card has its own personality and characteristics and can assume alternate forms when activated. See also: List of Cardcaptor Sakura charactersĬardcaptor Sakura begins when ten-year-old fourth grader Sakura Kinomoto accidentally releases a set of magical cards called Clow Cards from the Clow Book, created and named after half-English, half-Chinese sorcerer Clow Reed. The Cardcaptors version was heavily panned by critics, who called the editing ridiculous and cutting out vital character backgrounds essential to understand the plot.
#Card captor wiki tv#
The TV anime won the Animage Grand Prix award for Best Anime in 1999. The artwork in the anime was also a focus of attention, described as above average for a late-1990s TV series, and Sakura's magic-casting scenes were complimented for being nearly unique, because of the regular costume changes. The TV anime adaptation was praised for its ability to transcend its target audience of young children and be enjoyable to older viewers too.
#Card captor wiki series#
The manga series was awarded the Seiun Award for Best Manga in 2001. The TV series and films were re-licensed by Geneon, which released them unedited with English subtitles.Ĭritics praised the manga for its creativity and described it as a quintessential shōjo manga, as well as a critical work for manga in general. Heavily edited and dubbed into 39 episodes, the series was renamed Cardcaptors and aired on Kids' WB, Cartoon Network and Teletoon. Nelvana licensed the anime TV series and first film for North American broadcast and distribution.
#Card captor wiki license#
After Tokyopop's license for Cardcaptor Sakura expired, Dark Horse Manga acquired the license and began releasing the series in omnibus editions starting in October 2010. Tokyopop released the manga in English in North America from March 2000 to August 2003. Kodansha published art books, picture books and film comics for the manga and anime series. Ten video games were produced based on the series.

Two anime films were produced by Madhouse in August 1999 and July 2000.

The series was adapted into a 70-episode anime TV series by Madhouse that aired in Japan on NHK between April 1998 and March 2000. She is then tasked with retrieving those cards in order to avoid an unknown catastrophe from befalling the world. The story focuses on Sakura Kinomoto, an elementary school student who discovers that she possesses magical powers after accidentally freeing a set of magical cards from the book in which they had been sealed for years. The manga was originally serialized monthly in Nakayoshi from the May 1996 until the June 2000 issue, and later published in 12 tankōbon volumes by Kodansha from November 1996 to July 2000. Cardcaptor Sakura ( カードキャプターさくら Kādokyaputā Sakura ?), abbreviated as CCS and also known as Cardcaptors, is a Japanese shōjo manga series written and illustrated by the manga artist group Clamp.
