A retelling of Mazinger Z mixed with ancient Greek mythology with a modern touch.
Set thirty years after the original Kekkou Kamen, Spartan Institute of Higher Education is back to its old tricks under the reign of the son of Toenail of Satan. There a new Kekkou Kamen appears.
Jun's 18th birthday has been selected by family tradition to be the day that her husband is chosen. Many high-class families have come to try to marry into the physically and economically powerful Asuka dynasty, but Jun is not interested. With her servant Kurata in tow, she runs away from the groom-choosing party.
Cutie Honey SEED takes place in an alternate reality where Cutie Honey is a TV series and the Honey Kisaragi of the series is a shapeshifting alien unrelated to the main protagonist.
Four grown demons (Enma, Yukihime, Kapaeru, and Grandpa Chapeauji) are part of a Yokai-Patrol searching for demons that have escaped from Hell into the human world. They form the group known as the Enma Detective Agency as a cover for their activities.
A comedy with several erotic touches, where the protagonist Suke Banji (or Sukeban) has to disguise himself as a girl in order to be able to attend an all-female school. As Suke Ban is a rebellious boy, this situation creates several comedic troubles.
The adventures of Zubaban, a rogue samurai who meets some friends along the way, including a African man named Golongo who has a pet lion named Shingo, and the French heroine Jeanne d'Arc, who join forces with him to take down the terrible Shishumaru, which later reveals himself to be a much more powerful enemy they can think of.
In order to help her father solve mysterious crimes, the student Susumi Fuji takes the identity of Maboroshi Panty.
Dynamic Heroes is a digital manga by Kazuhiro Ochi that presents the most notable characters from the franchises by Dynamic Productions in their anime format in a massive crossover. It involves the series: Devilman, Mazinger Z, Cutey Honey, Great Mazinger, Getter Robo, Grendizer, Demon Lord Dante and Dororon Enma-kun.

