Dragon Quest, one of Japanâs most beloved role-playing games, spawned more than sequel after sequel. A manga version ran for around seven years, and there was an anime in the early 1990s.
That doesnât necessarily mean thereâs going to be a Dragon Quest anime in the future. It also doesnât necessarily mean there wonât.
âThe players themselves have always been the main characters in the Dragon Quest series, and I think that each person who has played a game in the Dragon Quest series has a unique emotional experience,â Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker 2 producer Taichi Inuzuka. âWeâve tried to turn Dragon Quest and spin-offs of it into anime before, but I think itâs difficult to create an anime that can really resonate with each playerâs unique feelings.â
It is difficult, but itâs been done before, and it probably could be done againâespecially with Akira Toriyamaâs pedigree. While Square Enix doesnât seem to be working on an DQ anime, it recently finished up work on a live-action TV program.
This year, Square Enix teamed with TV Tokyo to create Yusha Yoshihiko to Maho no Shiro (Yoshihiko the Hero and the Evil Lordâs Castle), a live-action TV drama based on Dragon Quest. The show even had the blessing of Dragon Quest creator Yuji Horii.
âEveryone here, including Yuji Horii, thinks of the drama not as a copy but as an original creation that pays homage to the Dragon Quest series,â said Inuzuka. âAlso, Yuji Horii likes the types of jokes that appear in the drama.â
(Top photo: ĺč ă¨ăˇăăłă¨éçăŽĺ | TV Tokyo)
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