The Seven Deadly Sins (Japanese: , Hepburn: Nanatsu no Taizai) is a Japanese fantasy manga series written and illustrated by Nakaba Suzuki. It was serialized in Kodansha's Weekly Shnen Magazine from October 2012 to March 2020, with the chapters collected into 41 tankbon volumes. Featuring a setting similar to the European Middle Ages, the story follows a titular group of knights representing the seven deadly sins. The manga has been licensed by Kodansha USA for English publication in North America, while the chapters were released digitally by Crunchyroll in over 170 countries as they were published in Japan.

A-1 Pictures adapted the series into a three-season anime television series that ran from October 2014 to June 2018, and one theatrical film: Prisoners of the Sky. Studio Deen produced two further seasons that ran from October 2019 to June 2021, and a second theatrical film: Cursed by Light. Alfred Imageworks and Marvy Jack then produced a two-part film for Netflix: Grudge of Edinburgh, released in 2022 and 2023. Funimation licensed the home video rights to the first season, while Netflix acquired the English streaming rights to the anime and films.


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In April 2014, the 20th issue of Weekly Shnen Magazine announced that The Seven Deadly Sins was being adapted into an anime television series.[36][37] The staff was revealed in the combined 36/37 issue of the year: created by A-1 Pictures, directed by Tensai Okamura, written by Shtar Suga, with Keigo Sasaki providing character designs, and Hiroyuki Sawano composing the music.[38] The series aired on MBS, TBS and other JNN stations for 24 episodes from October 5, 2014, to March 29, 2015.[39][40]

A second series was confirmed on September 27, 2015, to air in 2016.[41] This turned out to be a four-episode anime television special featuring an original story by Nakaba Suzuki, titled The Seven Deadly Sins: Signs of Holy War ( , Nanatsu no Taizai: Seisen no Shirushi), that aired from August 28 to September 18, 2016, on MBS and TBS.[42] The special was produced by A-1 Pictures, directed by Tomokazu Tokoro, and written by Yuniko Ayana and Yuichiro Kido, featuring character designs by Keigo Sasaki. The music was composed by Hiroyuki Sawano and Takafumi Wada.[43]

The Seven Deadly Sins was licensed for English streaming by Netflix in 2015 as its second exclusive anime, following their acquisition of Knights of Sidonia.[54] All 24 episodes of the first season were released on November 1, 2015, in both subtitled or English dub formats. The Signs of Holy War arc was labeled as "Season 2" by Netflix and released on February 17, 2017.[55] The streaming service released "Season 3" in English on October 15, 2018.[56] The first half of "Season 5" was released on June 28, 2021, with the second half following on September 23, 2021.[57][58] On February 14, 2017, Funimation announced that they acquired the first season for home video distribution for US and Canada.[59] Part One of the first season was released on Blu-Ray on May 15, 2017, with Part Two being released on June 20 of the same year.[60][61] A set containing the entirety of the first season was released on August 14, 2018.[62] Madman Entertainment imported Funimation's release into Australia and New Zealand, with a release scheduled for January 2019.[63]

An anime film,[66] titled The Seven Deadly Sins the Movie: Prisoners of the Sky, premiered in Japanese theaters on August 18, 2018. Directed by Yasuto Nishikata, with Noriyuki Abe serving as chief director, it was written by Makoto Uezu and based on an original story by Nakaba Suzuki. The main staff members from the A-1 Pictures anime TV series returned to reprise their roles on the film.[67]

A second anime film titled The Seven Deadly Sins: Cursed by Light premiered on July 2, 2021.[68][69] Takayuki Hamana directed the film at Studio Deen, with Rintar Ikeda writing the script.[70]

A two-part anime film, titled The Seven Deadly Sins: Grudge of Edinburgh, was announced during Netflix's "Festival Japan" virtual event in November 2021. The film revolves around Meliodas' son, Tristan Liones. Bob Shirahata serves as director, with Noriyuki Abe as supervising director, and Rintarou Ikeda as scriptwriter. It is animated by Alfred Imageworks and Marvy Jack.[71] The first part of the film was released on Netflix on December 20, 2022,[72] with the second part set for an August 2023 release.[73]

An illustration collection titled Rainbow of Sin (, Nanairo no Tsumi) and an official fan book were both released on February 17, 2015.[85][86] A guidebook for the anime titled Ani-Sin (, Ani-Tsumi) was released on April 17, 2015, while a second fan book was published on August 17, 2016.[87][88] Three character guidebooks each focusing on a different couple from The Seven Deadly Sins have been released; Meliodas and Elizabeth on October 17, 2016, Ban and Elaine on July 14, 2017, and King and Diane on November 16, 2018.[89][90][91] A book where Suzuki discusses the completed series and its creation in depth was released on May 15, 2020, while a character directory profiling over 200 characters from the manga was published on May 17, 2021.[92][93]

Jordan Richards of AIPT Comics called The Seven Deadly Sins a must read for fans of medieval fantasy and traditional shnen action series.[101] He felt the "unique" art helps set it apart from other series in the later category.[102] However, he did note it was hard to tell exactly what happens in some moments.[103] Rebecca Silverman of Anime News Network gave the first volume a B grade, calling the art interesting and the story a "neat take on the basic knights-in-shining-armor." She saw influence from Akira Toriyama in Meliodas and 1970s shjo manga in the female characters. However, Silverman felt the art had issues with perspective and commented that Elizabeth lacked character development.[104] Richards noted that Elizabeth's characterization improved in the second volume.[103] He strongly praised the art, character designs and the panel layouts, particularly during action scenes; "Everyone looks so distinct and some of the shots are just phenomenal".[103] Although noting he had said it more than once before, Richards found volume nine of the series to be the best so far, with strong characterization and growth, action and drama throughout, and one of the best double-page spreads he had ever seen in any series.[105] Silverman felt that the plot of volume 14 comes off as darker when compared to the substantial changes made in its anime adaptation.[106]

Reviewing the first anime for Anime News Network, Theron Martin felt that the series has a slow start with typical action fare but the storytelling picks up significantly in the second half. He had strong praise for the music and enjoyed the main cast and their interactions, but not the common archetypal villains. Martin noted that the art has a "semi-cartoonish look" that one would expect in a series that "skews a bit younger," but The Seven Deadly Sins' graphic violence and minimal fan service prove it's "anything but a kiddie show."[126] Martin largely compared Revival of The Commandments to the anime's first season and to Dragon Ball Z. He was positively surprised by the amount of character development within the main cast, but again found the arc's titular villains far less compelling, although he did note the powers they possess make for lively fights.[127]

The first DVD volume of the anime debuted at first place on the Oricon's Japanese animation DVD chart with 3,574 copies sold.[128] With 32,762 copies sold of the five volumes released at the time, The Seven Deadly Sins was the 30th best-selling animation in the first half of 2015.[129] In their first weeks of release, the first and second DVD volumes of Signs of Holy War sold 1,194 and 1,004 copies for fourth and second place, respectively.[130][131] In October 2017, Netflix revealed that The Seven Deadly Sins anime was the fourth most binge-watched show within its first 24 hours of release on their platform.[132]

I think it might be possible as the series did do fairly well in its volume sales but I did hear that the series was axed, but we have seen other axed series get anime adaptations. The series probably would benefit from a faster paced and more cohesive anime adaptation anyway

My wife and I just finished season 5 of the Seven Deadly Sins anime last night and we feel really let down. It would have made a much better ending if they would have just left it after the Demon King was defeated and left out the whole Chaos stuff. I'm not sure if that's what the sequel revolves around, due to not having started it yet, but it really feels like they messed up the ending of Seven Deadly Sins with it. Why introduce this whole new deity, that is much stronger than the current two, right at the end only to just basically say, "Meh we'll deal with it later."? The vibe it gives off is that the author had a whole new arc planned and then just said screw it part way thru introducing everything. It feels like he just got bored of the current storyline and decided to write a new one instead.

A better ending in my opinion would have been they defeat the Demon King and save Zeldris, Escanor dies, and then they all go back to the castle to celebrate. The anime ends just the same except for Merlin's part. Show her standing over the lake with the Boar's Hat behind her, zoom in on her face and she smiles. Gives the hint that something more is about to happen but doesn't have the 4 episodes that just feel like filler content. If the sequel has to do with chaos then have those 4 episodes can be added into the sequel as a back story. That would have felt like a much better ending in my opinion. 17dc91bb1f

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