Fans have been eagerly awaiting the anime adaptation of Tokyo Ghoul:re anime ever since it was teased, and after the first trailer released, they were ready for more.
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Fans still haven’t forgiven the series after Tokyo Ghoul √A, but things seem to be shaping up nicely and more faithfully. And now the anime has confirmed its first ending theme!
「東京喰種:re」のEDアーティストが女王蜂に決定!EDテーマは「HALF」(作詞・作曲:薔薇園アヴ)!4月からの放送をお楽しみに!https://t.co/PBuBNvR4V0#東京喰種 pic.twitter.com/iz4bXYbg27
— アニメ「東京喰種:re」公式 (@tkg_anime) January 19, 2018
The ending theme for the series will be “Half,” performed by the rock band Ziyoou-vachi, and it will be the group’s first theme song for the series.
Premiering in April, Tokyo Ghoul: re will be directed by Odahiro Watanabe with characters designed by Atsuko Nakajima. The series will feature the voices of Natsuki Hanae as Haise Sasaki, Kaito Ishikawa as Kuki Urie, Yuma Uchida as Ginshi Shirazu, Natsumi Fujiwara as Tooru Mutsuki, and Ayane Sakura as Saiko Yonebayashi.
Tokyo Ghoul: re is set two years after the events of the original series and follows Haise Sasaki, a member of the CCG and leader of a special squad of investigators who have implanted the CCG’s specialty weapon, the Quinque, into their bodies and essentially have become half ghoul. The kicker, however, is that Haise is actually Ken Kaneki from the original series who’s suffering from a bout of amnesia.
For those unfamiliar with Tokyo Ghoul, the series was original created by Sui Ishida. The story follows Ken Kaneki, a student who survives an encounter with his date, who turns out to be a ghoul. Kaneki’s world is filled with Ghouls, beings who eat humans, and they’ve been living among humans in secret. After surviving this attack he wakes up to realize that he himself has become a ghoul because of a surgery that implanted organs from the ghoul who attacked him. In order to live somewhat a normal life, Kaneki needs to eat human flesh to survive. Luckily he’s taken in by a group of ghouls at the cafe Anteiku, who help him reintegrate into society.
The series first began in Shueisha’s Weekly Young Jump and ran from 2011 to 2014, and has been collected into 14 volumes. The series was adapted into two anime series. Its first season from Studio Pierrot ran for 12 episodes from July to September 2014, and the sequel, Tokyo Ghoul Root A, followed an original story and also ran for 12 episodes from January to March 2015. The manga was licensed for an English language release from Viz Media, and the anime was licensed by Funimation. The sequel manga, Tokyo Ghoul:re, began in 2014 and is set two years after the events of the original manga.