When Did Kishimoto Announce Boruto'S Manga Plans?

2025-11-25 22:33:10 302

3 Answers

Naomi
Naomi
2025-11-26 14:10:23
I still get a warm buzz thinking about how the whole Boruto era unfolded, and if you want the short timeline: the manga's formal launch and Kishimoto's public plans for it crystallized in spring 2016. After 'Naruto' wrapped up in late 2014, Masashi Kishimoto began sketching out the world’s next chapter and provided character designs and guidance for the subsequent projects. That creative seed led to 'Boruto: Naruto the Movie' in 2015, which acted like a proof of concept and brought Boruto’s vibe to a wide audience.

The concrete moment most people point to is May 2016, when the 'Boruto' manga began serialization (the debut issue was in May 2016). At that time it was announced that Ukyo Kodachi would handle the scripting with Mikio Ikemoto on art, while Kishimoto would supervise and contribute character designs and overall direction. Over the years that supervisory role was pretty important — and later, in late 2020, Kishimoto formally stepped into the writing role for the manga, shifting the series’ creative hand again.

So, in short: the groundwork and teasers began right after 'Naruto' ended and through 2015’s movie, but the clear public announcement tied to the serialized manga happened around the May 2016 launch. I still love comparing the early movie beats to how the serialized story grew afterward — it’s been a wild, satisfying ride.
Chloe
Chloe
2025-11-27 19:36:02
I’ve talked about this a ton with friends, and here’s the straightforward take: Kishimoto’s involvement in the Boruto project was hinted at immediately after 'Naruto' concluded, but the formal manga plans became public when the series actually launched in 2016. The movie, 'Boruto: Naruto the Movie', hit theaters in 2015 and helped set expectations and character visuals, but the serialized manga incarnation — which readers could follow chapter by chapter — kicked off in May 2016.

When the manga started, the credits made it clear Kishimoto was guiding the project rather than writing every installment himself; he provided designs and oversight while Ukyo Kodachi wrote the early chapters and Mikio Ikemoto handled the art. That delegation didn’t mean Kishimoto was absent — his fingerprints are on the characters and direction. Then, if you fast-forward, he officially took over writing duties around late 2020, which many fans noticed because the narrative tone tightened and shifted. It’s been interesting watching how the property evolved from movie to manga and then changed hands creatively over time, and I love debating which era felt most like Kishimoto’s voice.
Damien
Damien
2025-11-28 16:56:21
For me it’s easiest to mark two moments: the creative concept and teasing happened right after 'Naruto' ended in 2014 and was showcased in the 2015 film 'Boruto: Naruto the Movie', but the clear public announcement tied to a serialized manga occurred when the manga launched in May 2016. That is when readers could follow chapters regularly and the staff credits spelled out Kishimoto’s supervisory role while Ukyo Kodachi and Mikio Ikemoto handled writing and art respectively.

I also think the story’s authorship arc is part of the tale: Kishimoto supervised at launch but later took direct writing duties around late 2020, which shifted things again. All of that makes the series feel like a living, changing continuation of the world I grew up with — it’s been gratifying to watch it evolve.
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3 Answers2025-11-25 20:40:32
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