Dragon Quest: Abel Yuusha: Difference between revisions

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'''''Dragon Quest: Abel Yuusha''''' is one of the first contributions to the ''[[Dragon Quest (series)|Dragon Quest]]'' franchise outside of the video games.
'''''Dragon Quest: Abel Yuusha''''' (Dubbed in English as '''''Dragon Warrior''''') is one of the first contributions to the ''[[Dragon Quest (series)|Dragon Quest]]'' franchise outside of the video games.


==History==
==History==
From the success of Dragon Quest I, a 43-episode cartoon series followed (32 episodes in the first season, 11 in the second). Produced by Japan's Nippon Animation Studios in 1989-'90 and released in the U.S. by LBS Communications the following year, under the title ''Dragon Warrior''.
From the success of ''Dragon Quest I'', a 43-episode cartoon series followed (32 episodes in the first season, 11 in the second). Produced by Japan's Nippon Animation Studios in 1989-'90 and released in the U.S. by LBS Communications the following year, under the title ''Dragon Warrior''.


The thirteen ''Dragon Warrior'' episodes mimicked the video game format by being titled as "Levels." The first episode was entitled "Level One: Ariahan Village," the second was "Level Two: Departure," the third was "Level Three: Leebe Village," and so on until "Level Thirteen: Najimi Tower."
The thirteen ''Dragon Warrior'' episodes mimicked the video game format by being titled as "Levels." The first episode was entitled "Level One: Ariahan Village," the second was "Level Two: Departure," the third was "Level Three: Leebe Village," and so on until "Level Thirteen: Najimi Tower."
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Various good and bad characters arose in the series, but outside of Baramos and his coward-bully servant Moor, most of the regulars characters were "good." There was Abel's close pal MocoMoco, who was larger than Abel but not quite as athletic. Then there was Daisy, described by a Dragon Warrior press release as a "macho miss," who was then introduced in "Level 4: Girl Warrior Daisy." And for humor's sake, there was Janac the wizard, a mustachioed, pipe-puffing old soak with not a few eccentric character flaws.
Various good and bad characters arose in the series, but outside of Baramos and his coward-bully servant Moor, most of the regulars characters were "good." There was Abel's close pal MocoMoco, who was larger than Abel but not quite as athletic. Then there was Daisy, described by a Dragon Warrior press release as a "macho miss," who was then introduced in "Level 4: Girl Warrior Daisy." And for humor's sake, there was Janac the wizard, a mustachioed, pipe-puffing old soak with not a few eccentric character flaws.
==Cast list==
*[[Long John Baldry]] - Narrator
*[[Garry Chalk]] - Great Demon King Baramos
*[[Michael Donovan]] - Adonis
*Marcy Goldberg - Daisy
*[[Scott McNeil]] - General Rudolph
*Alvin Sanders - Baharata


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 19:27, 15 February 2018

Dragon Quest: Abel Yuusha (Dubbed in English as Dragon Warrior) is one of the first contributions to the Dragon Quest franchise outside of the video games.

History

From the success of Dragon Quest I, a 43-episode cartoon series followed (32 episodes in the first season, 11 in the second). Produced by Japan's Nippon Animation Studios in 1989-'90 and released in the U.S. by LBS Communications the following year, under the title Dragon Warrior.

The thirteen Dragon Warrior episodes mimicked the video game format by being titled as "Levels." The first episode was entitled "Level One: Ariahan Village," the second was "Level Two: Departure," the third was "Level Three: Leebe Village," and so on until "Level Thirteen: Najimi Tower."

Introduced in Level One was 16-year-old Abel, who was compelled by circumstance to seek and destroy Baramos, a huge, horrible winged creature who bore the "Voice of Doom." Baramos had threatened to expose mankind to the apocalyptic fury of the Great Dragon by means of a magical amulet called the Red Stone. It's likely that Abel would have steered clear of all this had not his closest childhood friend, 15-year-old girl Tiala, been the latest descendant of the family charged with guarding the Red Stone - making her subsequent kidnapping by Baramos all but inevitable.

Various good and bad characters arose in the series, but outside of Baramos and his coward-bully servant Moor, most of the regulars characters were "good." There was Abel's close pal MocoMoco, who was larger than Abel but not quite as athletic. Then there was Daisy, described by a Dragon Warrior press release as a "macho miss," who was then introduced in "Level 4: Girl Warrior Daisy." And for humor's sake, there was Janac the wizard, a mustachioed, pipe-puffing old soak with not a few eccentric character flaws.

Cast list

External links