User:Wikip3di4us3r10/sandbox

Use this for trinity seven manga...as reference Naruto premiered in Shueisha's Weekly Shōnen Jump magazine in 1999 and will end on November 10, 2014.[14][15] The first 238 chapters are known as Part I, and constitute the first part of the Naruto storyline. Manga chapters 239 to 244 comprise a gaiden series focusing on the background of the character Kakashi Hatake. The rest of the manga (Chapters 245 to 700) belongs to Part II, which continues the storyline after a two-and-a-half year time gap. As of August 2014, 71 tankōbon have been released by Shueisha in Japan, with the first twenty-seven tankōbon containing Part I, and every subsequent one belonging to Part II. The first tankōbon was released on March 3, 2000.[16][17] In addition, several tankōbon, each containing ani-manga based one of the Naruto movies, have been released by Shueisha.[18][19][20][21] In Japanese, Shueisha has also released the series for cell-phone download on their website Shueisha Manga Capsule.[22] A spin-off manga by Kenji Taira, titled Rock Lee no Seishun Full-Power Ninden (ロック・リーの青春フルパワー忍伝?, Rock Lee & His Ninja Pals) and focusing on the character Rock Lee, ran in Shueisha's Saikyō Jump magazine from December 3, 2010 to July 4, 2014.[23][24]

Naruto is serialized in North America by Viz Media in their manga anthology magazine Shonen Jump, with the first chapter of the English adaptation published in the January 2003 issue.[25] To compensate for the gap between the Japanese and English adaptations of the manga, Viz implemented its "Naruto Nation" campaign, where it released three volumes a month in the last four months of 2007 in order to close said gap.[26] Cammie Allen, Viz's product manager, commented that, their main reason for the schedule was to catch up to the Japanese release schedule to give their readers a similar experience to that of Japanese readers.[26] A similar campaign was planned for 2009, with eleven volumes from Part II of the series being released between February and April in order to catch up to the Japanese serialization. Starting with the release of volume forty-five in July, Viz began releasing Naruto on a quarterly basis.[27] Viz has released the manga in English on 67 volumes as of October 7, 2014.[28] In addition, Viz Media released all twenty-seven volumes of Part I in a boxed set, thus constituting the entirety of the Naruto storyline before Part II on November 13, 2007.[29] On May 3, 2011, Viz started collecting the series in an omnibus format in which each volume contains three from the original format.[