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Kirby Right Back At Ya Free Full English Episode Download UPDATED

Kirby Right Back At Ya Free Full English Episode Download

2001 anime series based on Nintendo'due south Kirby franchise

Kirby: Right Back at Ya!
Kirbygroupsmall.jpg

Japanese promotional poster

星のカービィ
( Hoshi no Kābī )
Genre One-act, fantasy
Created by Masahiro Sakurai
Anime television set series
Directed past Sōji Yoshikawa
Mitsuo Kusakabe
Yōichi Kotabe (supervisor)
Produced past Satoru Iwata (Nintendo)
Taihei Yamanashi (Dentsu)
Seiichi Hirano (A-United nations)
Takeyuki Okazaki (CBC)
Written by Sōji Yoshikawa
Music by Akira Miyagawa
Studio Studio Sign
Studio Comet (cooperation)
Licensed by

NA

4Kids Entertainment (2002-2009)

Original network TV Tokyo, TBS, Kids Station,
Tokyo MX
English language network

AU

Network 10

CA

Teletoon

UK

Pop

US

Fox (Fox Box/4Kids Goggle box), The CW (The CW4Kids)

Original run
  • JP: October 6, 2001 – September 27, 2003
  • NA: September 14, 2002 – December nine, 2006
Episodes 100 (List of episodes)
Wikipe-tan face.svg Anime and manga portal

Kirby: Correct Back at Ya! , known in Nippon as Kirby of the Stars ( 星のカービィ , Hoshi no Kābī , Japanese pronunciation: [hoɕi no kaːbʲiː]), is a Japanese anime series based on Nintendo'southward Kirby franchise. Produced by Chubu-Nippon Broadcasting, Dentsu, A-United nations Entertainment and Studio Sign, information technology was directed past Sōji Yoshikawa and Mitsuo Kusakabe, with Yoshikawa handling series composition, Miyuki Shimabukuro designing the characters, Kazuo Iimura serving as chief animation managing director, and Akira Miyagawa composing the music. The serial ran for one hundred episodes by TV Tokyo, from October 6, 2001 to September 27, 2003 every Saturday in Japan. In the Us, the show aired on Fob Box, beginning on September fourteen, 2002.[i] Episodes have too been released on the Kirby TV Channel for the Wii game console (only in Europe), and on the game compilation Kirby's Dream Collection (also for the Wii).

The anime follows Kirby, a pink, spherical, childlike beast who does non speak coherent words but possesses the power to have on new magical powers temporarily by sucking upwardly their owners. Kirby crash-lands on a planet chosen Popstar and quickly befriends 2 yellow-skinned siblings named Tiff and Tuff. Over the course of the serial, Kirby and his friends fight to bring downwardly evil emperor Nightmare, all the while evading King Dedede and his assistant Escargoon, who try to become rid of Kirby using numerous monsters provided by Night Mare Enterprises. Though largely aimed at a younger crowd, with childlike characters and battle scenes, the series also includes allegorical stories well-nigh environmental issues, serious stories, social satire, and other various elements and parodies that tin exist appreciated by adults.

Plot

Tens of thousands of years ago, an evil emperor of darkness known as Nightmare created a biological weapon in the form of armies of monsters, and sent it all over the universe to conquer it. However, as he kept creating them, some of them began to insubordinate confronting Nightmare. Then, Sir Meta Knight and other freedom- and peace-loving, righteous Star Warriors formed the Galaxy Soldier Army in club to bring down Nightmare and stood to gainsay his evil. Yet, the soldier army caves in under the inexhaustible supply of the monsters. While the few surviving Star Warriors were relegated to the fringes of the universe, they were looking for new ways to defeat Nightmare. Meanwhile, Nightmare established a corporate empire, Dark Mare Enterprises, which systematically and efficiently created monsters and expanded its own power by selling them to large and small villains and coin-hungry rich people throughout the universe.

Somewhen, somewhere in the milky way, the next generation of Star Warriors, Kirby, is built-in. Kirby was to gain strength against Nightmare equally he slept in a spaceship he had caused from parts unknown. However, the Star Warrior'south spacecraft has the ability to automatically go to the planet where the monsters are located, and when the spacecraft catches the presence of Planet Popstar's monsters, it wakes Kirby up two hundred years alee of schedule, and the inexperienced, clueless and baby-like Kirby, is unable to control the spacecraft as it crash-lands in Pupu Village (Cappy Town in the English language dub). Subsequently crash-landing, Kirby makes friends with siblings Tiff and Tuff in the English dub and others in Cappy Boondocks, and with their aid, he was assigned to fight the monsters to overthrow Nightmare.

The ruler of Dream Country, Rex Dedede, is jealous and suspicious of Kirby from the start. He and his correct-manus man Escargoon constantly try to get rid of Kirby with monsters provided by the company for a high fee, and ultimately, their plans always backfire when Kirby interferes. Merely every bit in the games, Kirby can inhale enemies and temporarily gain their powers, transforming into forms such as Burn down Kirby with the ability to spit flames, or Sword Kirby to literally slice foes into pieces.

Kirby grows and becomes stronger before his final battle with Nightmare. In the cease when Kirby and Tiff face Nightmare, which is in a dream, Tiff throws the Warp Star at Kirby, who swallows it and becomes Star Rod Kirby. Star Rod Kirby has the Star Rod which is Nightmare'due south sole weakness, allowing Kirby to defeat him.

Characters

Kirby ( カービィ , Kābī )
Phonation: Makiko Ohmoto
(Sure lines in English dub by Amy Birnbaum)
Kirby is a immature Star Warrior. He is spoken of in legend as Kirby of the Stars, because a Star Warrior'due south ship is designed to become wherever monsters are. Kirby's send detected the creatures Dedede was ordering and he was awakened 200 years before schedule. Due to this early on awakening he is withal but a child. He doesn't speak a give-and-take, mainly only saying "poyo." This is to avoid giving him a stock-still impression, as Kirby is a game grapheme whose image differs from one player to some other. However, he can speak unproblematic words, such as the names of people and food, in baby talk. In the original games (mainly in the instruction manual of the earlier games), he is merely established as "young", but in the anime, he is established every bit something close to a baby. He may shout the name of a special movement in gainsay, but this is set up as his internal voice getting through to him, not him actually speaking. Near of his combat techniques in the show are re-create abilities merely. There are a total of 29 types of abilities: 24 from the games, 4 originals created past the audience, (Baton, Water, Fe, and Tiptop) and 1 original from the special episode. (Kabuki)
Tiff ( フーム , Fūmu )
Japanese Voice: Sayuri Yoshida
English Voice: Kerry Williams
Tiff is the daughter of the Cabinet Minister. She has lived in Dedede'south castle her entire life due to the wealth of her parents. She's very intelligent for her age, with much of her interest being in the environment, with her favorite subject field being marine biology. She can also exist short-tempered and definitely speaks her mind on things, specially when she thinks King Dedede is upwards to no proficient, though sometimes her intelligence is scoffed by the fellow Cappies. Tiff is the but one who tin summon Kirby's Warp Star when he is in danger, for Meta Knight said that Kirby cannot continue it condom himself, so she tin control it because she truly cares for him.
Tuff ( ブン , Bun )
Japanese Voice: Rika Komatsu
English Voice: Kayzie Rogers
Tuff is the younger brother of Tiff, who sports shaggy hair with hidden cabalistic eyes (oddly never mentioned past his friends). He is in many ways her complete opposite, preferring to play outside rather than read books. He can be quite a troublemaker, even when he'south really trying to aid, commonly tending to autumn short to Dedede's schemes. He is typically impetuous and always getting into mischief, such as pulling pranks and peachy jokes only is now friends with Kirby, fifty-fifty though he gets jealous of him sometimes.
King Dedede ( デデデ大王 , Dedede Daiō )
Japanese Voice: Kenichi Ogata
English Vocalism: Ted Lewis
Rex Dedede is the self-proclaimed ruler of Dream Land. Despite the fact Dedede is greedy, scheming, jealous of Kirby, and even outright sadistic, even going equally far as to say that people'south suffering amuses him, no one has ever tried to degrade him, despite the fact that he likewise unremarkably threatens the children and surroundings. He'south actually harmless for the most part, but his intense dislike of Kirby compels him to purchase monsters from Holy Nightmare Inc. and cause mayhem for the people of Dream Land. He loves buying new "toys" and acts like a spoiled child, despite his historic period. He is often jealous of the attending Kirby gets, and while at showtime he fifty-fifty wanted to defeat Kirby, later he focuses more than on trying to kicking him out or just make him look bad. He is portrayed as someone who is essentially good in the original games, simply childish and selfish, but in the anime he is portrayed equally someone who can do some pretty bad deeds without hesitation. He is too depicted as a dictator who mostly abuses the absolute monarchy, only just similar in the games, he comes off equally gentle at eye. In addition, while the game version of Meta Knight has become more of an marry since the anime, King Dedede's personality has not inverse in the games.
Escargoon ( エスカルゴン , Esukarugon )
Japanese Voice: Naoki Tatsuta
English language Vox: Ted Lewis
Escargoon, an anthropomorphic snail, lived with his mother on a farm before leaving to go far large. But despite the fact Escargoon is well-educated, knowing a great deal about chemistry and electronics (even writing a book on phytology), he's been working for Dedede for many years as an assistant and punching purse. But it seems that he truly cares for the male monarch and is always concerned for his welfare, despite the corruption he receives from him on a daily basis. While Escargoon usually goes forth with what Dedede wants and helps him with his schemes, he may actually be a nice guy at heart who but acts mean because he wants Dedede's approval.
Meta Knight ( メタナイト , Meta Naito )
Japanese Voice: Atsushi Kisaichi
English Voice: Eric Stuart
Meta Knight works for Dedede as well, forth with his followers Sword Knight and Blade Knight. Still, it is revealed that Meta Knight is a Star Warrior similar Kirby, and ane of the only ones to survive the state of war with Nightmare. He carries the sacred sword Galaxia, which just a select few can wield, and is the 2nd strongest Star Warrior in the galaxy, subsequently Kirby. He is portrayed every bit one of the coolest characters in the anime, which is dominated by characters with comical appearances. Though he has appeared as an enemy in all of the earlier game titles, in the anime, he is an ally of Kirby and his friends (until the tertiary episode, he is portrayed as neither friend nor foe). The bat-similar wings shown in the original games and the true face under his mask are not shown in the series. In nearly of the scenes in which he appears, he wraps his lower body in his own cloak, and he is rarely shown with his cloak hanging down as in the games, and does not show his lower body, hands, or sword unless it is necessary for gainsay or other purposes. Also, while his personality in the games is cool and single-minded, in addition to those traits in the anime, he is occasionally portrayed as mischievous, light-headed, mysterious, and narcissistic. As mentioned to a higher place, the character has become more than of an ally since the anime.
Customer Service ( カスタマーサービス , Kasutamā Sābisu )
Japanese Voice: Banjō Ginga
English language Vocalisation: Dan Green
As the public face up of Nightmare Enterprises, he handles much of the visitor'due south sales (and advertising) from the center of Nightmare'south Fortress. In both the Japanese and English versions he tin be quite sarcastic, and enjoys finding ways to brand things difficult for King Dedede, although he is much more subtle about it in the original. In the English language dub, he went through a drastic personality change; his persona is more than that of the stereotypical "slimy used-car salesman", using a large amount of slang. In the original, his paradigm is that of a polite Japanese salesperson, using a large amount of honorific language (even when he insults customers like Dedede). The English dub makes it seem similar he wants nix more but to defraud or swindle Dedede for every nickel he has, rather than actually helping him.
Nightmare ( ナイトメア , Naitomea )
Japanese Voice: Banjō Ginga
English Vocalization: Andrew Rannells
Nightmare (known every bit eNeMeE in the English dub) is the main adversary of the series and the president of Nightmare Enterprises. Nightmare only appears in the shadows for most of the serial. His full grade is simply seen at the very cease of the penultimate episode and in the series finale. Very petty is known about him or his origins, just as his name suggests, he is a living nightmare. He thrives on suffering, creating monsters to sell in his company and employ in his armies to go on his conquest of the universe in order to bring himself more power. He likewise gives off the illusion of beingness invincible, since he can open his cloak and suck all attacks into the area where his stomach and chest should be.

Episodes

Production

The original creator of the franchise Masahiro Sakurai was in charge of supervising the series, and the planning and product of the project began around 2000, coinciding with the development of Super Boom Bros. Melee. In an interview with Famitsu, Sakurai said, "I've had a lot of interest in the production of the blitheness. Nosotros aim to create an anime that both parents and children tin can enjoy simply as much as the games. In the beginning, Kirby started out as a game that even beginners could relish. I retrieve that spirit has been carried over to the anime as well."[2] He became friends with the cast and staff, and they held a birthday party for him when the twenty-four hours of vocalisation recording for the final episodes happened to coincide with it.

Director Sōji Yoshikawa spoke at length about the challenges faced past the creators of the show. He expressed business organisation as nearly video game to anime adaptations practice not go well, simply as fourth dimension went on, he says he began to come across a grapheme with strength, and felt it could be successful. He adds how hard information technology was to accept a main graphic symbol who does not speak, too as coming up with entirely unique settings and characters. Kirby is unusual in that information technology has no humans in the cast, and he likens it to the Finnish series Moomins, which was quite popular in Japan.[3]

In the beginning, the groundwork music was all original anime music composed past Akira Miyagawa, merely from episode 34 onwards, BGM from previous games was also used. The songs that appeared most often came mainly from Kirby's Dream State and Kirby Super Star, arranged to fit the anime's style. Furthermore, around the time of the release of Kirby Air Ride, the background music for it was heavily used as well. In Air Ride, the original anime version of the BGM was reimported and afterwards used in Super Boom Bros. Ball (with Miyagawa credited). Some of the arranged songs are included in the Kirby & the Amazing Mirror Audio+ music CD. Afterwards the anime ended, some of its character and re-create ability-related traits were later used in the games.

The series occasionally makes use of 3DCG rendering for characters such equally Kirby, Male monarch Dedede and Escargoon. Those segments were created in Softimage 3D and handled by A-Un Entertainment, with employees from Overlord Inc. also moving to A-Un to help with production. By applying the advanced synthesis engineering that Nintendo and HAL Laboratory accept created in the development of video game software to the production of the anime, they were able to eliminate the uncanny valley effect caused by combining paw-drawn and 3DCG animation. For some of the episodes that Studio Comet participated in the production of as animation product support, the Studio Comet CG section produced some of the 3DCG segments on its own. While many anime works employ digital technology primarily to save money and shorten product time, this series makes the most of the new methods of expression afforded by digital tools. In the catastrophe credits of the last episode, the names of nigh of the people involved in A-Un's 3DCG production up to that bespeak appeared in the 3DCG-related staff section.

Before the principal series aired on TV, a single short episode was produced as a airplane pilot, and a DVD including information technology was distributed every bit a supplement in the game mag Famitsu Cube+Advance (a now defunct sister mag to Famitsu) to celebrate the release of Kirby Air Ride in Nippon. It was made entirely in 3DCG, except for the backgrounds and some furnishings. Compared to the master series, the content of the pilot was much more closely aligned with the original action games, with boss characters from the games that did not appear in the primary anime, and Meta Knight beingness an enemy. In add-on, Kirby'due south design is from the Kirby's Take a chance era, and the globe itself has a unlike await too. The pilot has no dialogue.

World and content

The earth of the anime is very different from that of the games. In the games, the story takes place on the faraway planet Popstar (peculiarly the entirety of the country of Dream Land/Pupupu Land, which is a part of Popstar) and its surrounding planets, while the anime takes place mainly in a village called "Pupu Village" (anime original) further inside Dream Land, which is somewhat limited. While the everyday scenes in Pupu Village are portrayed in a heartwarming and at-home lite, the story virtually the Star Warriors (Galaxy Soldier Army) is more serious. Due to the policy of non having humans (earthlings) in the show, most of the characters have comical one to three heads tall figures, with all just the principal characters resembling the haniwa figures. The characters (mainly the monsters) from the games come up from the original Kirby's Dream Land, Kirby's Adventure (and the port Nightmare in Dream Land), Kirby's Dream State 2, Kirby's Dream Country three, and Kirby Super Star, merely none of the characters from Kirby 64: The Crystal Shards make an appearance. Due to differences in style and worldbuilding, many of the characters that were introduced from the original games had their personalities drastically changed. This is especially true of Kirby and Rex Dedede, who appear virtually often.

The start few episodes are generally most battles with monsters and the secrets of the Star Warriors, but from episode four onwards, every bit Kirby spends his daily life in Pupu Village and grows in strength as a Star Warrior, we brainstorm to see more and more stories that are essentially the same social satire and parodies that are not directly related to the show's primary plot of confronting Nightmare. The anime's Dream Land has convenience stores, cars, and Television set sets, which bring it closer to the real world. Also, depending on the episode, various issues, such as dearth, global warming, ozone depletion, environmental issues, illegal dumping, teaching concerns, falsified information on TV shows, lack of tourist morale, abandoned pets going feral, restructuring, regime focusing on the structure of public buildings and the Japanese Paleolithic hoax, are set up in Dream Land to capitalize on the social satire elements.

The anime features parodies and homages that cover a broad range of genres, including such famous films as Psycho, Roman Holiday, Modern Times, Ikiru, Jurassic Park, Gone with the Wind, Mothra, and King Kong, every bit well every bit literary works such equally Don Quixote, Nineteen Eighty-Four, and Harry Potter and the Philosopher'due south Rock.

Furthermore, in add-on with the social satire, the series is also characterized past a keen deal of metafictional elements. Episode 49 deals with the harshness of the anime production scene and the degradation of the drawings' quality, while episode 89 satirizes the pass up of cel animation due to the development of 3DCG technology and the moe anime and otaku, which were not well known to the public at the time.

4Kids adaptation

The English dub often removed any visible text

The anime was licensed by 4Kids Productions and dubbed into English for North America nether the championship Kirby: Correct Back at Ya!. On the official English language website, in that location was too a manga based on the bodily anime, reminiscent of American comics at the time. In the accommodation process, the show was heavily edited: content that was deemed inappropriate for American and Canadian audiences, such every bit the scenes in episode 2 where King Dedede fires the cannon on an armored vehicle and Kirby works in the hamlet pub and prison, concluded up cut out completely. In that location are also several other deleted or shortened scenes, such as the scene where Tuff and his friends throw fireworks at Escargoon's parade in episode 13, the scene where the facility catches fire in episode 29 and 46, the scene where Rex Dedede burns a book in episode 38, the scene where Kirby and King Dedede are squeezed in episode 61, and the scene where Customer Service screams in the concluding episode. The Galaxy Soldier Army subplot was removed entirely, and all soldiers are referred to as Star Warriors. The final episodes (episodes 96 to 100 in Japan) were not aired on TV, only were released on DVD merely in the form of Kirby: Fearfulness to the Stop!!.

Some of the signs and writings, even those originally in English, were removed. The design of the armored car that Rex Dedede rode in episodes 1 to 34 had a military camouflage color scheme in Nippon, simply the American version has an orange and xanthous color scheme. Art works resembling Mona Lisa, Venus de Milo etc. in episode 77 have been changed so that it is difficult to associate them with them. A lot of dialogue has been inverse, for example in episode 29, Monsieur Goan now speaks normally, and the equivalents of intense spiciness have been changed to "volcano," "pepperoni," "Mexico," etc. The sounds of non-exact animals, such as the sheep on the village mayor's ranch, equally in Pocket Monsters, have also been dubbed. The sheep in the Japanese version make a "meh" sound, while in the American version they make a "baa" sound. Makiko Ohmoto's performance of Kirby is the only vocalization that was preserved in almost the entirety of the English dub, much like Ikue Ōtani'due south voicework as Pikachu.

The Japanese score was completely replaced by music produced locally and independently at 4Kids. In some cases, some songs from the shows that accept previously aired on 4Kids Television, were reused in this prove. Some of the sound furnishings take been replaced likewise, for example in episode threescore, the sound of Sirica's weapons (automobile guns, bazookas, etc.) firing has been changed, and conversely, during the Sirica vs. Meta Knight one-on-one fight scene, there is an additional metallic sound when their swords clash with each other.

Some episodes were aired out of their original order, sometimes to put a holiday-themed episode closer to that holiday or to coincide with an issue that was happening at the time. For case, "A Novel Approach", which parodied the Harry Potter books, was moved to air in conjunction with one of the real books' release. Sometimes episodes were aired earlier to advertise new Kirby games, one example took episodes 96 and 97, "Crunch of the Warp Star" from the finale of the serial and aired them near the eye as the television special "Air Ride in Mode" to advertise the Kirby Air Ride game for the Nintendo GameCube. Considering these episodes were at a major climax in the testify, certain scenes from the special were edited to make it look similar Tiff and Kirby were having a "prophetic dream" rather than the events actually happening. The episodes were placed in the original order and sans these edits for the Kirby: Fright to the Finish!! DVD of the concluding episodes.

Michael Haigney originally stated in an interview that the Fox Network would not let it air the episode "A Dental Dilemma" because information technology shows dentists in a bad light and could scare children (although it was meant to encourage children to castor their teeth and go to a dentist if they idea they had a cavity).[iv] This applied to all other countries that used the 4Kids dub likewise. The episode did eventually go dubbed, but it was aired under a tertiary season, forth with some other episodes in the line-up.

Broadcast history

In Japan, the series ran on CBC from Oct half-dozen, 2001 to September 27, 2003 for 100 episodes.[v] After a preview on September 1, 2002, 4Kids aired the series on 4Kids Tv set (formerly known as FoxBox) from September 14, 2002[6] to late 2006. The North American version of the anime was dubbed by 4Kids Entertainment, and distributed by 20th Goggle box (U.S.) and Nelvana Express (international).

The series began rebroadcasting in Nihon on June 28, 2007 on the Tokyo MX station, then on June 21, 2008 in the US, Saturday mornings at 11am EST on 4Kids Tv, and ended forth with all other 4Kids TV shows on December 27, 2008. On June half dozen, 2009, Kirby, along with Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Fast Forward, rebroadcast in the US once again, and aired at 7:30am EST on The CW4Kids. The series used to be seen on 4Kids's video on demand service and on world wide web.4Kids.tv. However, the show was removed from the 4Kids TV website in October 2009 as 4Kids Entertainment simply held the rights to the bear witness till September 2009.[7] A moderator on the 4Kids forums stated in Nov 2009 that 4Kids no longer holds the license.[viii] Since May 21, 2009, the Tokyo MX website has stated that the bear witness has been removed from the air.[9]

Since 2009, the serial was available for streaming via the Anybody'southward Theater Channel for the Wii in Japan only, with each episode worth 100 Wii Points,[10] merely on April thirty, 2012, Nintendo terminated broadcast of the Wii no Ma channel. On June 23, 2011, the show has made a improvement to Europe and Australian audiences on the Wii, for the beginning time every bit the Kirby Tv Channel, which expired on December 15, 2011. This service likewise returns in April 2012, all the same, the aforementioned episodes volition be bachelor, rather than the other half. A special CG animated episode, titled "Take information technology Downward!! The Crustation Monster Ebizou" ( 倒せ!!甲殻魔獣エビゾウ , Taose!! Kōkaku Majū Ebizou ) was released for the Wii no Ma service in Nihon on August 9, 2009.[xi] A stereoscopic 3D version of the episode was dubbed by Nelvana and streamed internationally in two parts on the Nintendo 3DS' Nintendo Video service in Jan 2012, under the title "Kirby 3D".[12] With the release of Kirby's Dream Collection for Kirby's 20th anniversary, three complete episodes are bachelor to lookout man on the Wii via that disc.[13]

Theme songs

Japanese
  • Openings
  1. "Kirby★March" ( カービィ★マーチ , Kābii★māchi )
    • October 6, 2001 - February 22, 2003
    • Lyricists: Shinji Miyake & Jian Hong / Composer & Arranger: Akira Miyagawa / Vocalist: Xiang Qi
    • Episode Range: ane-71
  2. "Kirby!" ( カービィ! , Kābii! )
    • March 1 - September 27, 2003
    • Lyricist: Shōko Fujibayashi / Composer: Kazuto Satō / Arrangers: Hiromi Suzuki & Yasumasa Satō / Vocaliser: Hiroko Asakawa
    • Episode Range: 72-100
  • Endings
  1. "First You Draw a Circle" ( きほんはまる , Kihon wa maru )
    • October 6, 2001 - February 22, 2003
    • Lyricist: Miwako Saitō / Composer: Akira Miyagawa / Arranger: Yō Shibano / Vocaliser: Xiang Qi
    • Episode Range: i-71
  2. "Kirby☆Footstep!" ( カービィ☆ステップ! , Kābii☆suteppu! )
    • March 1 - September 27, 2003
    • Lyricist: Yuka Kondō / Composer & Arranger: Akira Miyagawa / Singer: Konishiki Yasokichi
    • Episode Range: 72-100
English
"Kirby Kirby Kirby!" (Also used in the Northward American version of Donkey Konga equally "Kirby: Right Back At Ya!")
  • Composed past Ralph Schuckett, Manny Corallo, Wayne Sharpe, John VanTongeren, Louis Cortelezzi, Rusty Andrews, Peter Scaturro, Norman J. Grossfeld, Anne Pope, Liz Magro, John Sands, John Siegler, and Jonathan Lattif

Domicile video releases

North America

The series was released on DVD and VHS in the The states by 4Kids Domicile Video and FUNimation Entertainment.

  • Kirby: Right Back at Ya! Volume ane: Kirby Comes to Cappytown (Nov 12, 2002)[fourteen]
  • Kirby: Right Back at Ya! Volume 2: A Dark and Stormy Knight (Jan 7, 2003)[15]
  • Kirby: Correct Dorsum At Ya! Volume 3: Kirby's Egg-Cellent Adventure (November iv, 2003)[16]
  • Kirby: Fright to the Finish!! (June 14, 2005)[17]
  • Kirby's Adventures in Cappytown (Feb 19, 2008)
  • Kirby: Cappy New Yr & Other Kirby Adventures (December nine, 2008)

On May 6, 2010, the showtime 26 episodes were released on DVD in consummate season format in Taiwan.[18] [19]

Three episodes from the series were included in the 2012 video game compilation Kirby'south Dream Drove.[twenty]

Reception

The average viewership rating in Japan was 5%, with the highest rating existence 7%, which was i of the highest ratings attained for a morning slot anime, but TBS (which CBC is affiliated with) decided to end the projection in its second twelvemonth due to the lack of desired results, sales of the merchandise, and the fact that A-United nations, who were in accuse of production at the time, were on bargain auction, and then they chose to end information technology on a good annotation with the hundredth episode.

David Sanchez from GameZone found the show "awesome" and specifically praised Escargoon, whom he called "one of the all-time contributions to the Kirby franchise thanks to his dimwitted attitude and obvious stupidity" and suggested should be in the fourth Super Smash Bros. game.[21] Withal, Common Sense Media described the English dub every bit "a stab at educational value, but really all most fighting monsters",[22] Christina Carpenter from THEM Anime described the testify as "more pandering kiddy fluff from the Fox Box".[23] Bamboo Dong of Anime News Network cited Kirby: Right Back at Ya! as i of several examples of anime serial that "exist only to be made fun of" and stated that "the series really isn't that good at all" and would only be enjoyed past loyal Kirby fans.[24]

See too

  • F-Aught: GP Legend
  • Pokémon
  • Sonic X

References

  1. ^ Erickson, Hal (2005). Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 (2d ed.). McFarland & Co. pp. 482–483. ISBN978-1476665993.
  2. ^ "【NEWS】テレビでカービィの活躍が見られるぞ! アニメ『星のカービィ』制作発表会". Famitsu. August 21, 2001. Archived from the original on March 10, 2016. Retrieved November 12, 2014.
  3. ^ カービィを手がけた監督に直撃!アニメ界の大御所、吉川惣司監督インタビュー (in Japanese). Nintendo.co.jp. Archived from the original on August 18, 2014. Retrieved November 12, 2014.
  4. ^ "mr. michael haigney interview (4kids)". Anime Boredom. February 12, 2006. Archived from the original on March 24, 2007. Retrieved November 12, 2014.
  5. ^ "Archived re-create" 星のカービィ ストーリー (in Japanese). Chubu-Nippon Broadcasting. Archived from the original on June 1, 2017. Retrieved Nov 12, 2014. {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. ^ "Nintendo's Kirby Cartoon to Sneak Preview this Weekend". Gamers Hell. Baronial 31, 2002. Archived from the original on September 12, 2015. Retrieved October 31, 2014.
  7. ^ "4Kids Entertainment Almanac Report 2004" (PDF). March 16, 2005. p. vii. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 9, 2006. Retrieved September two, 2016.
  8. ^ "4kids forums: Where, oh Where, has Kirby Gone?". Nov 16, 2009. Archived from the original on March 1, 2012. Retrieved Dec 9, 2009.
  9. ^ "Tokyo MX's official site for Kirby of the Stars". MXTV. May 21, 2009. Archived from the original on June 19, 2013. Retrieved July three, 2010.
  10. ^ "The Wii no Ma's list of Kirby episodes". June 4, 2011. Archived from the original on March 16, 2012. Retrieved Jun 4, 2011.
  11. ^ "星のカービィ ~特別編~ 番組の紹介 「Wiiの間」ホームページ" (in Japanese). Archived from the original on Feb 11, 2010. Retrieved Nov 12, 2014.
  12. ^ "Kirby: Correct Dorsum At Ya! Volume one". Nintendo.com. Archived from the original on October 12, 2014. Retrieved November 12, 2014.
  13. ^ Osborne, Matthew (July 17, 2012). "Kirby's Dream Collection: Special Edition". Nintendo World Report. Archived from the original on February 18, 2013. Retrieved Nov 12, 2014.
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External links

  • Hoshi no Kirby official website (CBC)
  • Hoshi no Kirby official website (Nintendo)
  • Hoshi no Kirby official website (Tokyo MX)
  • Kirby: Right Back at Ya! at IMDb
  • Kirby: Right Back at Ya! (anime) at Anime News Network'southward encyclopedia

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