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Haigakura Anime Restarts From 1st Episode on July 3
posted on by Crystalyn Hodgkins
The staff of the television anime of Shinobu Takayama's Haigakura manga announced on Friday that the anime will restart from the first episode on July 3. The staff revealed a video for the anime's resumption.
The anime will restart on July 3 on Tokyo MX at 25:30 (effectively July 4 at 1:30 a.m.), before airing on BS-Asahi on July 4 and Sun TV on July 6. The eighth episode, where the anime left off after its first broadcast, will air on August 21.

Amazon Prime Video is streaming the series in limited areas, and Tubi and the YouTube channel for It's Anime! are streaming the series in the United States and Canada. The series is also available on Anime Onegai in selected territories.
REMOW describes the story:
On a journey to find ourselves.With captured family and a missing past, Ichiyo, a kashi, battles alongside Tenko to regain what's lost.
The Immortal realm.
Immortals and humans dwell in a world on the verge of collapse. Ichiyo and Tenko search for the key to salvation, the 'Four Perils' who hold this land together.Based on Shinobu Takayama's popular manga, you can't miss this action fantasy!
Junichi Yamamoto (Armor Shop for Ladies & Gentlemen, More Than a Married Couple, But Not Lovers, Why Raeliana Ended Up at the Duke's Mansion) is directing the anime at Typhoon Graphics. Yū Murai (Why Raeliana Ended Up at the Duke's Mansion scripts for episodes 3, 5, 7, 10-11) is in charge of the series scripts. Masaki Satō (Slam Dunk, Ultimate Muscle, Record of Ragnarok) is designing the characters. Yuki Kurihara (Dropkick on My Devil!) is composing the music. MADKID performs the opening theme song "Chaser" and Hikaru Makishima performs the ending theme song "Phoenix."
Takayama began serializing the manga in Ichijinsha's Zero-Sum Ward magazine in 2008. After the magazine ceased publication in 2015, the manga has since continued on the Zero-Sum Online service as Takayama's longest-running serialization. Ichijinsha has published 16 volumes so far with over 1.3 million copies in circulation (including digital copies).
Takayama's Amatsuki manga also inspired a television anime in 2008.