is a weekly shà Ânen manga anthology published in Japan by Shueisha under the Jump line of magazines. The manga series within the magazine consist of many action scenes and a fair amount of comedy. Chapters of the series that run in Weekly Shà Ânen Jump are collected and published in volumes under the Jump Comics imprint every two to three months. It is one of the longest-running manga magazines, with the first issue being released with a cover date of August 1, 1968.
The magazine has sold over 7.5billion copies since 1968, making it the best-selling comic/manga magazine, ahead of competitors such as Weekly Shà Ânen Magazine and Weekly Shà Ânen Sunday. The mid-1980s to the mid-1990s represents the era when the magazine's circulation was at its highest, 6.53million copies per week, with a total readership of people in Japan. Throughout 2021, it had an average circulation of over copies per week. Many of the best-selling manga seriesâÂÂincluding One Piece, Dragon Ball, Naruto, ', Slam Dunk, and ', all of which are among the top ten best-selling manga of all timeâÂÂoriginate from Weekly Shà Ânen Jump.
Weekly Shà Ânen Jump has sister magazines such as Jump SQ, V Jump, Saikyà  Jump, and digital counterpart Shà Ânen Jump+ which boasts its own exclusive titles. The magazine has also had several international counterparts, including the North American Weekly Shonen Jump. It also spawned a crossover media franchise including anime and (since Famicom Jump) which bring together various Shà Ânen Jump characters.
Weekly Shà Ânen Jump was launched by Shueisha on July 11, 1968, to compete with the already-successful Weekly Shà Ânen Magazine and Weekly Shà Ânen Sunday. Weekly Shà Ânen Jumps sister publication was a manga magazine called Shà Ânen Book, which was originally a male version of the short-lived shà Âjo manga anthology Shà Âjo Book. Prior to issue 20, Weekly Shà Ânen Jump was originally called simply Shà Ânen Jump as it was originally a bi-weekly magazine. In 1969, Shà Ânen Book ceased publication at which time Shà Ânen Jump became a weekly magazine and a new monthly magazine called Bessatsu Shà Ânen Jump was made to take Shà Ânen Books place. This magazine was later rebranded as Monthly Shà Ânen Jump before eventually being discontinued and replaced by Jump SQ.
Hiroki Goto was appointed chief editor in 1986 and remained in the position until 1993. His tenure saw significant increases in circulation, and the serialization of numerous popular series. When asked about the period, Goto stated: "We only tried to create manga that everybody can enjoy. There were no specific rules. Idol and tabloid magazines dominated in the Media & Entertainment industry at that time and we aimed to stand out from the crowd by using only manga as our weapon." ', released in 1988 for the Family Computer was produced to commemorate the magazine's 20th anniversary. It was followed by a sequel: ' in 1991, also for the Family Computer. Shà Ânen Jump's circulation continued to increase year on year until 1995, peaking at 6.53 million copies. By 1998, circulation had dropped to 4.15 million copies, a decline in part ascribed to the conclusion of popular manga series Dragon Ball and Slam Dunk. The magazine peaked with a total readership of people in Japan during the early 1990s.
Circulation for the magazine continued to decline through the early 2000s, before reaching some stability around 2005, well below its earlier peak. In 2000, two more games were created for the purpose of commemorating the magazine's anniversaries. A crossover fighting game titled Jump Super Stars was released for the Nintendo DS in 2005. It was followed by Jump Ultimate Stars in 2006. Due to the 2011 TÃ Âhoku earthquake and tsunami, the shipment of the 15th issue of 2011 was delayed in some areas of Japan. In response, Shueisha published the series included in that issue for free on its website from March 23 to April 27.
On July 11, 2013, the Namco Bandai Group opened an amusement park themed around Weekly Shà Ânen Jump series. Titled J-World Tokyo, it is located on the third floor of the Sunshine City World Import Mart Building in Ikebukuro and is 1.52 acres. In celebration of the magazine's 45th anniversary in 2013, Shueisha began a contest where anyone can submit manga in three different languages, Japanese, English and Chinese. Judged by the magazine's editorial department, four awards will be given, a grand prize and one for each language, each including 500,000 yen (about US$4,900) and guaranteed publication in either Jump, its special editions, North American edition, China's OK! Comic, or Taiwan's Formosa Youth.
A mobile phone app titled "Jump Live" was launched in August 2013, it features exclusive content from the artists whose series run in Weekly Shà Ânen Jump. On September 22, 2014, the free mobile app and website was launched in Japan. It sells digital versions of the Weekly Shà Ânen Jump magazine, simultaneous with its print release, and volumes of individual Jump series past and present. However, it also has large samples of the manga that can be read for free. There are also series that are serialized exclusively on the app, such as Marvel àShà Ânen Jump+ Super Collaboration; unlike those in Weekly Shà Ânen Jump, these series may be aimed at adult men or women. These exclusive series are later published in print volumes under the Jump Comics+ imprint. In 2019, the Shà Ânen Jump+ website and app had about 2.4 million active users. As of January 2020, the app had been downloaded more than 13 million times.
As the magazine shifted towards digital provision, print circulation once again began to decline. By 2017, print circulation was down to under two million, less than a third of its peak during the golden age. This decline follows similar trends seen by other magazines in the sector.
A new crossover game, J-Stars Victory Vs., was released in 2014 for the PlayStation 3 and PlayStation Vita to commemorate Jump's 45 anniversary. In June 2018, a limited 50th Anniversary Shà Ânen Jump Edition of the Famicom Mini (NES Classic Edition) game console was released in Japan. It sold 110,000 units in two days.
On January 28, 2019, Shueisha launched the global English-language version of Shà Ânen Jump+, titled Manga Plus. It is freely available in every country except China and South Korea, which have their own separate services. A Spanish-language version was launched in February 2019, and has a different library of content. Like the Japanese app, it has large samples of manga that can be read for free including all the current titles of Weekly Shà Ânen Jump, a sizeable number of titles from Shà Ânen Jump+ and some titles from Jump Square. However, unlike the Japanese version, the latest chapters of current Weekly Shà Ânen Jump manga are made available free for a limited-time and it does not sell content.
Weekly Shà Ânen Jump, in association with parent company Shueisha, holds annual competitions for new or up and coming manga artists to create one-shot stories. The best are put to a panel of judges (including manga artists past and present) where the best are given a special award for the best of these new series. The Tezuka Award, named for manga pioneer Osamu Tezuka, is given for all different styles of stories. The Akatsuka Award, named for gag manga pioneer Fujio Akatsuka, is a similar competition for comedy and gag manga. Many Weekly Shà Ânen Jump manga artists have gotten their start either winning or being acknowledged by these competitions.
WSJ is also the center of the Shueisha's branding of its main manga products due to the popularity and recognition of the series and characters published in it. Although the manga are published both in the main magazine as well as in the Jump Comics imprint line of , they also are republished in various other editions such as kanzenban and "Remixes" of the original work, usually publishing series older or previously established series. The Jump brand is also used on the released of their manga series, related drama CDs, and at "Jump Festa", a festival showing off the people and products behind the Weekly Shà Ânen Jump manga titles.
Weekly Shà Ânen Jump is the bestselling manga magazine in Japan. In 1982, Weekly Shà Ânen Jump had a circulation of 2.55 million. By 1995, circulation numbers swelled to 6.53 million. The magazine's former editor-in-chief Masahiko Ibaraki (2003âÂÂ2008) stated this was due to the magazine including "hit titles such as Dragon Ball, Slam Dunk, and others." After hitting this peak, the circulation numbers continued to drop. 1998's New Year's issue was the first time in 24 years that Weekly Shà Ânen Jump lost as the highest selling shà Ânen manga magazine (4.15 million copies sold), ceding to Weekly Shà Ânen Magazine (4.45 million). It was not until 2007 that the magazine saw its first increase in 11 years, from 2.75 million to 2.78 million, an increase that Ibaraki credited to One Piece.
By publishing shà Ânen manga, the magazine is targeted to young teenage males. However, Index Digital reported in 2005 that the favorite non-shà Âjo magazine of elementary and middle school-aged female readers is Weekly Shà Ânen Jump at 61.9%. Strengthening it, Oricon conducted a poll among 2,933 female Japanese readers on their favorite manga magazines in 2007. Weekly Shà Ânen Jump was the number one answer, with One Piece, Death Note, and The Prince of Tennis cited as the reasons. In 2009, it was reported that 62.9% of the magazine's readers were under the age of fourteen. However, in 2019 Shueisha revealed that its largest demographic of 27.4% was aged 25 or older.
There are currently 21 manga titles present in Weekly Shà Ânen Jump. Out of them, Burn the Witchs continuation is yet to be scheduled and Hunter àHunter is published irregularly.
is a special seasonal offshoot of Weekly Shà Ânen Jump launched on July 20, 2016. Its original predecessor started in 1969 as a regular special issue of the bi-weekly Shà Ânen Jump. When Shà Ânen Jump became a weekly publication and was renamed Weekly Shà Ânen Jump in October of that same year, the special issue changed to a quarterly release and kept the shorter name. In the mid-1980s, the magazine took on the Weekly Shà Ânen Jump name with each issue subtitled the Spring, Summer, Autumn, or Winter Special.
Beginning in 1996, it was published three times a year for Golden Week, Obon and New Years under the name until April 30, 2010, when it was renamed . Jump Next! has had several other past special versions:
In 2012 it returned to a quarterly schedule. A second exclamation point was added to the title in March 2014, when it switched to a bi-monthly release. After relaunching as Jump Giga, the magazine published four issues or "volumes" in 2016 and 2017, six in 2018 and 2019 (three in summer and three in winter), and seems to have returned to a seasonal quarterly release since 2020.
Jump Giga features many amateur manga artists who get their one-shots published in the magazine. It also puts additional one-shot titles by professional manga artists, which promote upcoming series to be published in the main magazine. It has also featured the last chapters of cancelled series from Weekly Shà Ânen Jump, such as Enigma and Magico. It also features yonkoma of popular series such as Death Note and Naruto, as well as the pilot chapter of Bleach. Final epilogue chapters of The Disastrous Life of Saiki K. and Food Wars! Shokugeki no Soma were also featured, while Gintama and Black Clover were transferred to allow for their completion.
There is currently one manga title being serialized in Jump GIGA.
was originally an offshoot of the Weekly Shà Ânen Jump magazine in a special issue called . The special issues lasted from 1992 through 1993. V Jump became its own independent anthology in 1993 for coverage of games, including video and card games, in addition to its own run of manga series.
was also originally an offshoot of the Weekly Shà Ânen Jump magazine in a special issue called . The magazine was published from 1968 to 1988, when it became a separate anthology for seinen manga.
Jump VS was a special issue of Weekly Shà Ânen Jump, published on March 22, 2013. The issue focused on "battle manga" and included 12 one-shots.
Manga titles from Weekly Shà Ânen Jump are translated into many foreign languages, and some even have their own separate version of the Weekly Shà Ânen Jump anthology. Weekly Shà Ânen Jump manga are also published in many other countries where the magazine itself is not published, like the United Kingdom, Argentina, Mexico, Spain, Australia, and South Korea.
Shonen Jump, published in North America by Viz Media, debuted in November 2002, with a January 2003 cover date. Though based on Weekly Shà Ânen Jump, the English language Shonen Jump is retooled for English readers and the American audience and is published monthly, instead of weekly. It features serialized chapters from seven manga series, and articles on Japanese language and culture, manga, anime, video games, and figurines. In conjunction with the magazine, Viz launched new imprints for releasing media related to the series presented in the magazine, and other shà Ânen works. This includes two new manga imprints, an anime DVD imprint, a fiction line for releasing light novels, a label for fan and data books, and a label for the release of art books.
Prior to the magazine's launch, Viz launched an extensive marketing campaign to promote the magazine and help it succeed where other manga anthologies in North America have failed. Shueisha purchased an equity interest in Viz to help fund the venture, and Cartoon Network, Suncoast, and Diamond Distributors became promotional partners in the magazine. The first issue required three printings to meet demand, with over 300,000 copies sold. It was awarded the ICv2 "Comic Product of the Year" award in December 2002, and continued to enjoy high sales with a monthly circulation of 215,000 in 2008. Shonen Jump was discontinued in April 2012 in favor of its digital successor, Weekly Shonen Jump. With it ending in an incomplete, but yet almost complete picture spine of the Naruto splash page of "Declaration of War" on the side of each said magazine.
Weekly Shonen Jump, Viz Media's successor to the monthly print anthology Shonen Jump, was a North American digital shà Ânen manga anthology published simultaneously with the Japanese editions of Weekly Shà Ânen Jump, in part to combat the copyright violation of manga through bootleg scanlation services. It began serialization on January 30, 2012, as Weekly Shonen Jump Alpha with a lineup of six titles and new issues published online two weeks after Japanese release, but within a year had expanded to twelve ongoing series, and on January 21, 2013, it underwent a rebranding and transitioned to simultaneous publication with Japan.
Banzai! is a German-language version of Weekly Shà Ânen Jump published by Carlsen Verlag that was published from 2001 through December 2005 before being canceled. In addition to the Weekly Shà Ânen Jump manga series, the magazine also included original German language manga-influenced comics. The magazine competed as a sister publication to a shà Âjo anthology called Daisuki. It had a circulation of 140,000 copies.
Rèmén Shàonián Top (ç±éÂÂå°Âå¹´TOP) is the former weekly Chinese-language version of Weekly Shà Ânen Jump, published in Taiwan by Da Ran Publishing. In the 1990s Da Ran went bankrupt and the magazine had to cease publication. Rèmén Shàonián Top serialized series such as Yu-Gi-Oh!, Tottemo! Luckyman, Hikaru no Go, and One Piece as well as several other domestic manhua.
Formosa Youth (寶島å°Âå¹´ BáodÃÂo Shàonián) is the current weekly Chinese version of Weekly Shà Ânen Jump. Formosa Youth features various series from Weekly Shà Ânen Jump. The Formosa Youth magazine translates Weekly Shà Ânen Jump manga up to date. A sister publication of Formosa Youth is Dragon Youth Comic (é¾Âå°Âå¹´ Lóng Shàonián), which specializes in domestic manhua. In 1977, the Tong Li company was created and founded by Fang Wan-Nan which created bootlegs, this ended in 1992. A law in Taiwan restricted the act of bootlegging all manga. During 1992, Tong Li created many manga and manhua magazines, New Youth Bulletin, Youth Comic, Margaret Girl, Dragon Youth Comic, and Formosa Youth. Some series like One Piece and Hikaru no Go were first published in the manga/manhua magazine Rèmén Shàonián Top (ç±éÂÂå°Âå¹´TOP) by Da Ran Publishing, but when Daran Publishing went bankrupt the series were transferred to Formosa Youth.
EX-am is the Hong Kong version of Weekly Shà Ânen Jump published by Culturecom Holdings's comic division Culturecom Comics, the largest comic distributors in all of Asia. The magazine published Hunter àHunter, Captain Tsubasa and Dragon BallâÂÂwhich holds the highest circulation of manga in Hong Kong, alongside the highest of domestic manhua which would be '.
C-Kids (à ¸Âà ¸µà ¸Âà ¸´à ¸Âà ¸ªà ¹ See KÃÂt) is the Thai language Weekly Shà Ânen Jump published by Siam Inter Comics. C-Kids publishes many Weekly Shà Ânen Jump series such as One Piece, Gintama along with many original manga-influenced comics from the division Cartoon Thai Studio like EXEcutional.
Boom (à ¸Âà ¸¹à ¸¡) is another Thai language Weekly Shà Ânen Jump published by Nation Edutainment. Boom publishes many Weekly Shà Ânen Jump series such as Naruto, Death Note along with many original manga-influenced comics from Factory Studio like Meed Thii Sib-Sam and Apaimanee Saga.
In November 2004, Manga Media began publication of a Swedish language version of Weekly Shà Ânen Jump in Sweden, called Shonen Jump as a sister publication to their existing magazines Manga Mania and Shojo Stars. The magazine included chapters from various popular Weekly Shà Ânen Jump titles including Bleach, Naruto, Shaman King, and Yu-Gi-Oh!. In November 2007, after 37 issues published, Manga Media ceased publication of the magazine. It had a circulation of 30,000 copies.
A Norwegian language edition of Weekly Shà Ânen Jump began publication in Norway in March 2005. Published by Schibsted, the Norwegian edition was a direct translation of Bonnier's Swedish version of the magazine, containing the same series and titles. When Bonnier lost the license for Weekly Shà Ânen Jump, the Norwegian version also ceased publication, with the last issue released on February 26, 2007. They also created two short lived book imprints: "En Bok Fra Shonen Jump" (a book from Shonen Jump) for profile books and "Dragon Ball Ekstra" (Dragon Ball Extra) a line specifically for manga written by Akira Toriyama. Also a film comic based on the Dragon Ball Z anime was released under the "TV Anime Comic" imprint.
Jump Comics is used as an imprint label for publishing manga, most often for collected volumes of manga series originally serialized in Weekly Shà Ânen Jump and other Jump magazines. The imprint is published in the U.S. under the names Shonen Jump and Shonen Jump Advanced. Shà Ânen Jump Advanced was created for the distribution of manga series considered more mature due to content or themes. Series released under SJA include Eyeshield 21, Ichigo 100%, Pretty Face, I"s, Hunter àHunter, Bobobo-bo Bo-bobo (first edition) and Death Note.
Weekly Shà Ânen Jump formerly ran a manga line of aizà Âban editions called Jump Comics Deluxe. Jump Comics+ is the imprint for all the manga series exclusively digitally released on the app and website Shà Ânen Jump+ after the chapters of the series get reunited and released in print in format. Weekly Shà Ânen Jump has also run a line of light novels and guidebooks called Jump J-Books. Weekly Shà Ânen Jump has also run a line bunkobon editions called Shueisha Comic Bunko. A line of large square-bound phone book size issues of early Jump Comics series named Shueisha Jump Remix has also been published.
The mid-1980s to the mid-1990s represents the era when the magazine's circulation was at its highest, 6.53million copies per week, with a total readership of people in Japan. The magazine has sold over 7.5 billion copies since 1968, making it the best-selling comic/manga magazine, ahead of competitors such as Weekly Shà Ânen Magazine and Weekly Shà Ânen Sunday. Throughout 2019, it had an average circulation of over copies per week.
The following table lists the manga series that have had the highest circulation in Shà Ânen Jump magazine. It lists the number of issues where they're serialized, and estimated circulation figures and sales revenue of those Shà Ânen Jump issues (based on the magazine circulation figures above). Of the series listed below, only Bleach, Gintama and Black Clover began their serialization after the conclusion of the golden age in the late 1990s.