Detective Conan Episode 366
Detective Conan episode 366 (S13E13)TitleJapanese丸見え埠頭の惨劇(前編)TranslatedMarumie Futō no Sangeki (Zenpen)Broadcast InformationJapanese BroadcastEnglish BroadcastJuly 05, 2004N/AProduction InformationDirectorMasato SatoOrganizerKatsumi EndoScreenplayN/AStoryboardKatsumi EndoEpisode DirectorNana HaradaAnimation DirectorHirobi MuranakaEpisode InformationNext Conan's HintCelebrationDVD VolumePart 13, DVD Volume 04Episode No.03File / Case(s)Poisoned Fisherman CaseFile N/A
Detective Conan Episode 366
As long-running favorites such as One Piece and Case Closed (also known as Detective Conan) sail past the thousand-episode mark, viewers marvel at the staying power of such anime. These are series that have been on the air for longer than some of their viewers have been alive, racking up episode counts into the hundreds or even thousands, to the point where it would take weeks to marathon just one of them.
Updated on January 25th, 2023 by Jordan Iacobucci: In the anime world, there are many series that may very well go on forever. As more and more beloved series pass the 1,000-episode threshold, fans of those shows are looking back and celebrating the many long-running anime that have renewed interest in the medium and carried on throughout the decades.
Bleach began its long run in 2004, going on to air for the next eight years before coming to an epic conclusion in 2012. By the time the anime came to an end, it had aired 366 episodes, becoming one of the longest-running anime series of all time. The show's legacy still lives on to this day through its brand-new sequel series, Bleach: Thousand-Year Blood War.
Gintama is set in a world where aliens were the primary cultural influence over Edo Period Japan means that any ridiculous thing that could happen, will happen. These include a character turning into a gorilla after being bitten by one, a four-way swordfight over toilet paper, and one of the best beach episodes in anime, rounding out a 367-episode run over twelve years.
Korchikame: Tokyo Beat Cops has a tremendous backlog of episodes for new and old fans alike, with eight years of content to sift through. Ultimately, the series came to an end in 2004 with 373 episodes in total but has continued to produce new content in the form of nine television specials, the most recent of which aired in 2016.
Even without counting the sequel series Boruto: Naruto Next Generations, which currently has 260 episodes, Naruto is one of the longest-running series of all time, with its second part, Naruto Shippuden, making up the bulk of its runtime. Naruto Uzumaki starts off as a lonely orphan with untapped potential and ends up majestically coming into his own as a great hero.
Of course, some could say that Naruto cheats a little in this category: much of its episode count is built up by filler episodes. While this filler is often maligned, some arcs have produced some of Naruto's best villains.
The series began its historic run in 1993, running for over 700 episodes over the span of fifteen years before coming to an end in 2008. This was, however, only the original series that came to an end, with successor series adding to the show's legacy, with a cumulative total of well over 1,000 episodes.
Shinichi Kudo is a brilliant young detective, already assisting seasoned police on big cases with his lightning-fast analyses. However, with success comes enemies: two criminals attack Shinichi and force-feed him experimental poison. Instead of killing him, the poison turns him into a child, forcing him to adopt a new identity as he continues to try and solve crimes.
Chibi Maruko-chan is a must-watch single-season anime, but it may be harder to marathon than the average 12- or 24-episode season. With an episode count well into the thousands, it would take over three weeks to finish the whole thing.
Due to the main character's prominence in Japanese popular culture, Sorieke! Anpanman has enjoyed a lengthy run as a television series. Beginning its tenure in 1988, the series is still continuing to this very day, with over three decades' worth of storytelling and over 1,500 episodes.
The 1979 rendition of Doraemon ran for twenty-six years and aired over 1,700 episodes before coming to an end in 2005. Though the series is still far from the longest-running anime's episode count, the total amount of episodes in the entire Doraemon pantheon is over 3,000.
Chibi Maruko-chan originally aired from 1990 to 1992. It had 142 episodes. A second series debuted later on in 1995. It gained popularity and led to adaptations in games, films, and other merchandise.
Naruto Shippuden is a sequel to the original Naruto series that premiered in October 2002. It ended in February 2007. It had 220 episodes. Popular in the West, an English dub of this anime series aired in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, and Australia.
Another anime series that falls close to some of the longest-running animes is Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood. This show has 64 episodes. It has a very dedicated fanbase too. Many claims that Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood is the best anime of all time.
The corresponding manga chapters are listed in parentheses next to the episode numbers if you are interested. The first set is the overall chapter numbers and the second is the chapters as contained within each volume, separated by a bar (). If a manga chapter reference is followed by an asterisk (*), then there has been some story-critical change between the manga and the anime adaptation.
Since Detective Conan has had some direct crossovers with the Magic Kaito manga over the years, yet those parts of the Detective Conan anime never had the Magic Kaito parts that gave them context animated as well, those crossovers have never really had their full and proper effect for anime-only fans. However, now that Magic Kaito has finally received an adequate anime adaptation, I have taken the liberty of working the timings of these all-important crossovers into where they fit in with their Detective Conan episode counterparts, making the crossovers whole once more. The Internet can thank me later. The only issue is that the Magic Kaito episodes are entirely out of order. But, the order really does not matter for that series as it does with Conan, as the series is entirely episodic beyond pretty much the first episode. So, you can ignore that and watch that series in any order you wish.
An episode being on this list does not necessarily mean that I am insisting that you watch it. It is calling the case out as one that someone might not want to miss for some reason or reasons, with those listed. If the reason given does not look like it matters to you, feel free to ignore that episode.
The *Main Plot* label is only there to point out episodes that you definitely should not skip, since listing the spoiler-lite reasons alone may not be enough. Watching only those episodes is missing out on most of the character development, which is what mainly causes you to care about what happens in those episodes in the first place. While I am not necessarily recommending that you watch every case listed, I am suggesting that you find a balance somewhere in the middle that works for you.
13 [INTL 14] (manga 13-16V2F4-7*): Introduces Miyano Akemi. *Main Plot*Note her importance was far more immediately obvious in the manga (although not the full breadth of it by any means). But the anime creators were idiots, in a way they really seemed to enjoy being at this point in the anime, and changed the ending of this episode completely. Therefore, they had to make a special original followup episode later on when they got to adapting the part of the manga where the implications of the true ending started to become extremely important. Fortunately, I think they learned from this incident and stopped doing things quite so dumb from that point on.
In recent years, anime has switched to a more seasonal format. Shows are usually around 12-episode seasons that might get continued down the line. Anime didn't always follow this format, though. A lot of shows of the past (and even some today) can run on for hundreds of episodes.
Long-running anime were good for filling space on the airwaves but weren't a great idea in hindsight. Sure, seasonal anime has developed the issue of quantity over quality, but the same can be said about shows that run for hundreds of episodes. American viewers have seen shows like The Simpsonsfall off a cliff after so many seasons, so the same could happen to anime.
Prior to Dragon Ball, this was one of Toei's cash cows. Toei did whatever they could to stretch and milk Fist of the North Star for all it was worth. A show with such an overpowered main character that can make people disintegrate on contact can't last too long, and this went past 100 episodes.
Black Clover started off on the wrong foot and then got good about 20 episodes in. The story started to fall off a cliff about a hundred episodes later, though. No series is immune to seasonal rot, and Black Clover felt it pretty hard after a while.
The eponymous Inuyasha and his love interest Kagome didn't have the chemistry to carry a series for more than 100 episodes. This combined with a meandering plot full of filler left many fans impatient. Plus, the fact that so many volumes were adapted into the 26-episode Final Act proved that Takahashi wasn't exactly good at pacing.
Bleach began with a premise reminiscent of Yu Yu Hakusho: a teenager fights the supernatural after being given a second chance at life. After a few episodes, the lore was expanded to include new Soul Reapers. The introduction of so many new characters at once led the series down a dark path.
The original Naruto series was a good example of shonen done right. The story was epic, and the fights were exciting. Then the time skip occurred and things started to take a turn for the worse. Even after 85 episodes of filler in the previous incarnation, Shippuden ended up with filler after about a year or two. 041b061a72