Di Gi Charat Ohanami Special

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Alternative Titles

Synonyms: DiGi Charat Ohanami Special
Japanese: Di Gi Charat お花見すぺしゃる


Information

Type: Special
Episodes: 4
Status: Finished Airing
Aired: Apr 6, 2001
Producers: TBS
Licensors: Sentai Filmworks
Studios: Madhouse
Source: Original
Genre: ComedyComedy
Duration: 10 min. per ep.
Rating: G - All Ages

Statistics

Score: 6.711 (scored by 18811,881 users)
1 indicates a weighted score.
Ranked: #57722
2 based on the top anime page. Please note that 'Not yet aired' and 'R18+' titles are excluded.
Popularity: #9569
Members: 3,898
Favorites: 2

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Shows that Masami Okui has sung in, has been credited in, or is plainfully obvious that it's her. (ex: Akazukin Chacha)

50 Entries · Apr 13, 2022 11:57 PM

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Animeby HatsuneYugi39

A stack compiling every special from the Di Gi Charat franchise. Ideally should be watched in chronological order (from the bottom of this list up) after the first main anime and in-between the other TV anime (Panyo Panyo Di Gi Charat and Di Gi Charat Nyo. Most of the specials feature standalone storylines.

10 Entries · Apr 19, 2022 1:36 AM

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Everything in the Di Gi Charat franchise.

"Di Gi Charat (デ・ジ・キャラット, De Ji Kyaratto) is a Japanese manga and anime series created by Koge-Donbo. The series follows a catgirl named Di Gi Charat "Dejiko" who was adopted as the mascot of Broccoli's retail chain store, Gamers. The original anime series and its original video animations (OVAs) are set in a Gamers store. There are twenty Gamers stores across Japan." - Wikipedia

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Animeby IdeDial

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Animeby Svamper

Short form anime series on this site can often be underappreciated. In the same way poetry is radically different from fiction novels, which are radically different from screenplays and so forth, I view shorter series, typically OVAs, in the same way. Too frequently they're compared to TV series, and there will be many comparative allusions roughly paraphrasing, "You can't expect much from the story/characters because of how short it is", or other similar comments. The value of the efficacy of the presentation in both shorter and longer series are for the most part incomparable to each other. They both strive to do very different things through very different means despite the shared medium of "anime". Of course, what constitutes the differences or goals of a creator is quite vast, but the point is that from my personal view, because the context of the existence of shows that would either be shorter in length or longer are so different and require much different means for communicating the information that they present, I think they should be judged by different standards. How a person judges them is up to themselves, but I do believe short series are worthy of the praise that many would only attribute to more lengthy series. What I want to do is give reverence for the fun-sized length series I have come across and enjoyed to some degree.

What constitutes a “short” series is something shorter in length than a standard minimum length TV series, which is 12 episodes in length. The focus is not on the number of episodes, but rather judging roughly the amount of time. So, if there is a series with 24 episodes, but they are only 3 minutes in length, for example, that would constitute a short series.

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