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UDON Entertainment Corporation
Type Comics studio
Founded 2000
Headquarters Richmond Hill, Ontario, Canada
Website Official website

UDON Entertainment Corporation is a studio (or "art collective") of Asian-influenced comic book creators that provides creative services to the entertainment industry.[citation needed] The company is a publisher of comic books, graphic novels and art books, as well as English editions of Japanese manga and Korean manhwa titles. Erik Ko is its Chief of Operations. UDON is named after a kind of Japanese noodle.

Overview[]

It was affiliated with Studio XD; in March 2004, UDON announced a partnership to release comics under Devil's Due Publishing.[citation needed] UDON's first offering was the Street Fighter comic book series, launching in September 2003. They would add a Darkstalkers comic series to their line in November 2004. In October 2005, UDON reorganized its operations and became a full-fledged publisher.[citation needed] Erik Ko revealed that the lengthy break in the Summer of 2005 was to recover from a licensing deal with Capcom, which saw UDON doing artwork for Capcom Fighting Evolution.[citation needed] Although UDON appreciated the opportunity to work on the game, and to strengthen their ties with the video game maker, it taxed their resources, and left them behind schedule on their comics.[citation needed] In October 2005, UDON released Street Fighter II #0, the sequel to their Street Fighter comic; it was followed in early 2006 with the long awaited launch of Rival Schools. Erik Ko discusses this in an interview with Newsarama that can be read here.[1]

File:10.12.12UDONPanelByLuigiNovi2.jpg

The UDON panel at the 2012 New York Comic Con. From left to right are UDON Director of Marketing Chris Butcher (emceeing at the podium), Managing Editor Matt Moylan, Project Manager Jeff Zubkavich and artist Omar Dogan.

In December 2007 at the New York Anime Festival, UDON announced that it would be publishing three new Street Fighter comic book series in 2008. These include Street Fighter II Turbo (12-issue series), Street Fighter Legends: Chun-Li (4-issue mini), and Street Fighter III (6-issue series).[2]

In November 2008, UDON announced it would publish a 4-issue mini-series of the upcoming Street Fighter IV game. “With the most anticipated Street Fighter game in years arriving 2009, we will be launching the SF 4 comic series as a big crossover event with the game. That would mean the originally planned SFIII series will have to make way and be released after this SFIV story arc is done.” says UDON’s Chief of Ops Erik Ko. “We are working very closely with Capcom and the SFIV producer in Japan to make this comic series as exciting as possible. The stories from our comic are linked directly to the game, and it is a genuine extension that fans will definitely love. Also expect plenty of cross promotion and marketing between our comics and the game.”[3]

In January 2009, UDON announced it had acquired the rights to produce Final Fight comic books.[4] In November 2009, UDON announced it will continue the Darkstalkers comic series with a new 3-issue mini-series called Darkstalkers: The Night Warriors.[5] In December 2009, UDON announced it will make a Street Fighter Legends: Ibuki 4-issue mini-series.[6]

Publishing[]

Comic book series[]

  • Street Fighter series:
    • Street Fighter #0-14 (2003–2005, originally through Image, then Devil's Due Publishing)
    • Street Fighter II #0-6 (2005–2006)
    • Street Fighter Legends: Sakura #1-4 (2006)
    • Street Fighter Remix #0 (2008)
    • Street Fighter II Turbo #1-12 (2008–2010)
    • Street Fighter Legends: Chun Li #1-4 (2009)
    • Street Fighter IV #1-4 (2009)
    • Street Fighter Legends: Ibuki #1-4 (2010)
  • Darkstalkers series:
    • Darkstalkers #1-6 (2004–2005, originally through Devil's Due Publishing)
    • Darkstalkers: The Night Warriors #1-3 (2010)
  • Exalted #0-4 (2005–2006, based on the roleplaying game by White Wolf)
  • Cannon Busters #0-2 (2005–2006, creator-owned series by LeSean Thomas)
  • Rival Schools #1-4 (2006, issues #3-4 published online only)

Imported titles[]

  • 1520
  • ROBOT (Japanese anthology/art book)
  • APPLE (Korean anthology/art book)
  • Onimusha: Dawn of Dreams
  • Street Fighter Alpha
  • Street Fighter: Sakura Ganbaru
  • Street Fighter II: The Manga
  • Street Fighter III: Ryu Final
  • Dorothy of Oz
  • Star Project Chiro
  • Magical JxR
  • Dear Waltz
  • Daring Students' Association
  • Chronicles of the Grim Peddler
  • Evyione: Ocean Fantasy
  • Reading Club
  • Mega Man ZX
  • Mega Man Megamix
  • Mega Man Gigamix
  • Silent Moebius Complete

Art books[]

  • The Art of Darksiders
  • The Art of Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney
  • The Art of Resident Evil 5
  • Darkstalkers: Graphic File
  • Darkstalkers Tribute
  • Okami: Official Complete Works
  • Mega Man: Official Complete Works
  • Mega Man X: Official Complete Works
  • Mega Man Zero: Official Complete Works
  • SF20: The Art of Street Fighter
  • Street Fighter: Art Comic Anthology - Japanese only
  • Street Fighter: Eternal Challenge
  • Street Fighter Tribute
  • UDON’s Art of Capcom
  • UDON’s Art of Capcom 2
  • VENT

Work for other companies[]

Video games[]

  • Full artwork for Super Street Fighter II Turbo HD Remix (Capcom), for Xbox Live Arcade and PlayStation Network
  • Character designs and illustrations for New International Track & Field (Konami), for Nintendo DS
  • Character designs and illustrations for Speed Racer (WB Games), for Nintendo DS, Wii and PlayStation 2
  • Artwork for Capcom Fighting Evolution (Capcom)
  • Artwork for Kongai on Kongregate
  • Artwork for the pack-in comic included with Namco's Soulcalibur IV Platinum Edition
  • Artwork for the pack-in comic included with Capcom's Street Fighter IV Collector's Edition
  • Artwork for Tatsunoko vs. Capcom: Ultimate All-Stars (Capcom), for Wii
  • Inks and Colours for the pack-in comic included with Midway Games' Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe Kollector's Edition
  • Promotional artwork for the re-release of Marvel vs. Capcom 2: New Age of Heroes on Xbox Live Arcade and PlayStation Network
  • Promotional artwork for Marvel vs. Capcom 3: Fate of Two Worlds
  • Promotional Comic for Fire Emblem: The Sacred Stones

Comics[]

Misc[]

  • Character designs for DC's Ame-Comi Girls PVC statue line (DC Direct)
  • Epic Battles trading card game (Score Entertainment)
  • Street Fighter UFS trading card game (Sabertooth Games)
  • Darkstalkers UFS trading card game (Sabertooth Games)

References[]

External links[]

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