Pokémon: Black & White: Rival Destinies
0 sources
Pokémon: Black & White: Rival Destinies
Summary
Pokémon: Black & White: Rival Destinies is an anime television series[1]. It draws 557 Wikipedia views per month (anime_television_series category, ranking #202 of 1,237).[2]
Key Facts
- Pokémon: Black & White: Rival Destinies's instance of is recorded as Black & White: Rival Destinies — instance of (P31): anime television series[3].
- Pokémon: Black & White: Rival Destinies is part of Black & White: Rival Destinies — part of (P361): Pokémon the Series: Black & White[4].
- The original language of Pokémon: Black & White: Rival Destinies was Black & White: Rival Destinies — original language of film or TV show (P364): Japanese[5].
- Pokémon: Black & White: Rival Destinies's original broadcaster is recorded as Black & White: Rival Destinies — original broadcaster (P449): TV Tokyo[6].
- Pokémon: Black & White: Rival Destinies's country of origin is recorded as Black & White: Rival Destinies — country of origin (P495): Japan[7].
- Pokémon: Black & White: Rival Destinies began on September 22, 2011[8].
- Pokémon: Black & White: Rival Destinies ended on October 4, 2012[9].
- Pokémon: Black & White: Rival Destinies's voice actor is recorded as Black & White: Rival Destinies — voice actor (P725): Christa Lips[10].
- Pokémon: Black & White: Rival Destinies's number of episodes is recorded as {'amount': '+49'}[11].
- Pokémon: Black & White: Rival Destinies's list of episodes is recorded as Black & White: Rival Destinies — list of episodes (P1811): list of Pokémon: Black & White: Rival Destinies episodes[12].
Body
Publication
The original language of Pokémon: Black & White: Rival Destinies was Black & White: Rival Destinies — original language of film or TV show (P364): Japanese[5]. It is part of Black & White: Rival Destinies — part of (P361): Pokémon the Series: Black & White[4].
Why It Matters
Pokémon: Black & White: Rival Destinies draws 557 Wikipedia views per month (anime_television_series category, ranking #202 of 1,237).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[13]