Ghost Stories
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Ghost Stories
Summary
Ghost Stories is an anime television series[1]. It ranks in the top 5% of anime_television_series entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,170 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Ghost Stories's instance of is recorded as anime television series[3].
- Ghost Stories's genre is comedy anime and manga[4].
- Ghost Stories's genre is fantasy anime and manga[5].
- Ghost Stories's genre is horror anime and manga[6].
- Ghost Stories's genre is comedy drama anime and manga[7].
- Ghost Stories's genre is thriller anime[8].
- The original language of Ghost Stories was Japanese[9].
- Ghost Stories was distributed by video on demand[10].
- Ghost Stories's original broadcaster is recorded as Fuji Television[11].
- Ghost Stories's country of origin is recorded as Japan[12].
- Ghost Stories began on +2000-10-22T00:00:00Z[13].
- Ghost Stories ended on +2001-03-25T00:00:00Z[14].
- Ghost Stories's distributed by is recorded as Crunchyroll[15].
- Ghost Stories's official website is recorded as https://pierrot.jp/archive/2000/tv00_04.html[16].
- Ghost Stories's official website is recorded as https://en.pierrot.jp/archive/2000/tv00_04.html[17].
- Ghost Stories's main subject is elementary school student[18].
- Ghost Stories's number of episodes is recorded as {'amount': '+20'}[19].
- Ghost Stories's list of episodes is recorded as list of Ghost Stories (anime) episodes[20].
- Ghost Stories's Filmiroda rating is recorded as Category III[21].
- Ghost Stories's character designer is recorded as Masaya Ōnishi[22].
Body
Publication
The original language of Ghost Stories was Japanese[9]. Genres include comedy anime and manga[4], fantasy anime and manga[5], horror anime and manga[6], comedy drama anime and manga[7], and thriller anime[8]. It was distributed by video on demand[10].
Subject and Themes
Ghost Stories's main subject is elementary school student[18].
Why It Matters
Ghost Stories ranks in the top 5% of anime_television_series entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,170 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23] It is known by 28 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]