Naruto: Shippuden is an anime television series mainly adapted from Part II of Masashi Kishimoto's original Naruto manga series, with exactly 500 episodes. It is set two and a half years after the original series in the Naruto universe, following the teenage ninja Naruto Uzumaki and his allies. The series is directed by Hayato Date, and produced by Pierrot and TV Tokyo. It began broadcasting on February 15, 2007, on TV Tokyo, and concluded on March 23, 2017.[1][2]

On January 2, 2009, Viz Media and Crunchyroll provided eight English subtitled Naruto: Shippuden episodes on the official Naruto website.[3] Later the following 2 weeks, Viz began providing subtitled versions of the latest Naruto: Shippuden episodes a week after they first aired in Japan, with a new episode being added to the Naruto website each subsequent Thursday.[3] On July 24, 2009, Viz Media announced that the series would be released on the iTunes Store.[4] The first DVD release of the series in North America was released on September 29, 2009.[5] The English dub of Naruto: Shippuden made its US premiere on Disney XD on October 28, 2009.[6][7][8]


Naruto Shippuden Download All Episodes Free


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Naruto: Shippuden stopped airing on Disney XD on November 5, 2011 after 98 episodes.[9] The English dub was streamed on the Neon Alley web channel from its launch in October 2012, and beginning December 29 of the same year with episode 99, dubbed episodes premiered every week until March 25, 2016 after 338 episodes, about a month before Neon Alley's closure. Adult Swim's Toonami programming block began airing the anime from the beginning on January 5, 2014 in an uncut format.[10] The network started showing never before aired dubbed episodes at the 339th episode mark by May 2021.[11]

In four regions, episodes from the series have been released on DVD and Blu-ray by single volumes and box sets. In Japan, twenty six sets of volumes have been released based on which arc it represents. In North America, twelve single volumes and thirty eight box sets have been released. In the United Kingdom, twenty eight single volumes and six box sets have been released. In Australia and New Zealand, twenty-eight collections have been released.

Naruto Shippuden was an anime series that ran from 2007 to 2017. In total 500 episodes of Naruto Shippuden were aired. With a total of 203 reported filler episodes, Naruto Shippuden has a high filler percentage of 41%.

See also: Anime-Manga DifferencesBelow is the listing of every Naruto, Naruto: Shippden and Boruto: Naruto Next Generations episode released, as well as movies and OVAs. Initially, all original Naruto episodes and Naruto: Shippden episodes 1 through 53 were made in SD (4:3 standard definition), while Naruto: Shippden episodes 54 and onward were made in HD (16:9 high definition).

Some of the episodes (483+) do show some flashback for the characters that we did not know before but they were never shown in the manga before, so if you follow the manga they are still considered "filler". And there is also the weeding :P.

Is anyone having an issue where their anime isn't being recognized? I have duplicates of the entire first season. Emby seems to think episode 1 and episode 101 are the same so it gives them identical metadata. I've downloaded the anime plugin as well hoping it will recognize the differences. I've also tried splitting up the episodes into seasons within folders with the name scheme 01-01, 02-02, etc.. no dice. episodes 1-220 isn't working either. Anyone have any ideas how I can make emby recognize individual episodes? Thank you!

@@Luke yep it seems to still have issues, on the tvdb all 929 episodes are filled under season 1 when you choose absolute numbering (example: -piece/seasons/absolute/1) now when i do the exact same file structure as theTVDB it seems that it creates two listing linking to the same files, "season1" which is supposed to be correct and is created because the folder i put them in is called season 1, then there is a season called "season21" which comes from theTVDB's season ordering which is not what i want as i changed the show to be in absolute ordering, after clicking edit on the episodes that show up on season 1 i can see that they are linked to season 21 aswell so there is definetly some sort of issue with the season info from theTVDB's absolute ordering as the episode metadata in terms of thumbnail and episode summarry are correct, its just that it's displaying incorrectly.

Yeah that is not actually correctly sorted, if you go onto the tvdb you can see that all 500 episodes of naruto shippuden are placed under season 1 which is the correct way of sorting and you are experiencing the same but where the show is split up into the normal season scheme but have a half correct episode numbering.

With hundreds of hours of ninja-fightin', energy-blastin', katana-duelin' fun packed into both series, the best way to not miss out on any of the action is by organizing your binge by order of episodes. Call us biased, but the way we recommend doing that is in chronological order, in other words, tracking the Naruto universe by its historical events. You can do that with this order:

Just so you don't have to go through these lists and count them yourself (unless you're into that. In that case, go nuts!), there are 220 episodes of the original Naruto series and exactly 500 episodes of Shippuden, for a total of 720 Naruto episodes, plus ten films.

Technically, the answer to this question is yes. Naruto stopped airing in 2007, and Naruto Shippuden stopped airing in 2017. As of now, there are no shows focused the titular ninja currently regularly producing new episodes. But does that mean Naruto isn't on TV at all?

Yes! It was announced that, as part of the Naruto 20th anniversary celebrations, four brand new episodes would be released in September 2023. Unfortunately, those episodes have been pushed back to "further raise its quality," according to an announcement on the official Naruto website, with no further release date given.

Simply head to the Naruto Crunchyroll page, Naruto Shippuden Crunchyroll page or Boruto Next Generations Crunchyroll page and choose the first season. Then, click on the episode you want to watch. These episodes are available to watch for free with ads.

The last time the audience saw him, he and Naruto had a massive fight at the Valley of the End, and Sasuke left to join Orochimaru and receive more training to learn how to use his curse mark. Even though Naruto: Shippuden is highly praised, even higher than the original Naruto anime run, it isn't without some seriously weak episodes here and there. These are the ten worst-rated episodes of Naruto: Shippuden according to IMDb.

This is an episode taking place within a dream that Jiraiya wrote within the novel in his dream world. People were not happy about the Jiraiya scroll episodes continuing onwards for such a long stretch of filler. But there are some interesting subtle differences. Sasuke was changed slightly in the opening for this episode, for example.

It was difficult for them to watch filler episodes about his dreamworlds, although some fans were pleased by the humorous elements. There was also a strange change to the tailed beasts animation that people weren't thrilled with. To make matters worse, for some reason, the writers decided it was a good idea to stretch the Killer B filler into two full episodes.

This is one of the early episodes in the much-reviled Jiraiya scrolls filler arc so it's not at all surprising that it would rank as one of the worst episodes of Naruto: Shippuden. Tsunade continues to read from his novel and in doing so the audience slips again inside the dream world being manifested by her reading.

Much like the original series, start Naruto Shippuden from the beginning. But this time, you won't have as many episodes to get through before you run into your first movie break - 32 episodes to be precise.

The events of Boruto: Naruto The Movie are covered within the Boruto: Naruto Next Generations series during episodes 53-66. This means if you want to get up to speed with Boruto before the movie, we'd suggest only starting after episode 52, and then continuing onwards with the rest of the episodes, up to the very present.

The first twelve episodes were collected in a DVD box by Viz Media on October 11, 2011.[6] Additionally, Manga Entertainment collected the first episodes alongside the last ones from the previous season on November 7, 2011 in a 2-disc DVD set in the United Kingdom.[7]

The season uses five musical themes: two opening themes and three ending themes. "Closer" by Joe Inoue was used as the opening theme for episodes 89 to 102. It was replaced by "Hotaru no Hikari" (, "Glow of Fireflies") by Ikimono-gakari from episode 103 onwards. The first ending theme is "Long Kiss Good Bye" by Halcali used only for the first two episodes. "Bacchikoi!!!" (!!!, "Bring It On!!!") by Dev Parade was used as the ending for episodes 91 to 102. It was replaced in episode 103 with "Shinkoky" (, "Deep Breath") by Super Beaver.

This week, Naruto Shippden asks us to forget the cliffhanger from last Thursday and enjoy a two-episode special. Episodes 376 and 377 are "filler" episodes in the loosest sense. Although you could squint and pinpoint them somewhere way back around episodes 55 and 56 (Naruto training with Yamato and Kakashi at the waterfall), they're still not entirely canon. It's best to view the episodes as a special promoting the Naruto Shippden: Ultimate Ninja Storm Revolution video game released this week in Japan (North American release is next week) without getting bogged down with the details. Think of these episodes as taking place in an alternate timeline or view them as a 45-minute commercial, take your pick. 0852c4b9a8

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