Old japanese cartoons popular in your country (Besides English speaking countries)

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While americans and the other anglophones often act like they were the first in the west to discover NTSC-J cartoons in the west, when they've been mainstream in other western countries since the 70s and 80s



For example, here in italy I can just have a football match with a bunch of jocks Im friends with, and they all know Lupin, Mazinger, Attacker You!, Pollon, Jeeg Robot, Nadia secret of blue water, Cats Eyes, Roses of Versailles etc etc etc or at least they remember it



So are there other shows that had a big following in the 70s-90s where you're from?



Did a toy distributor make its own merchandise just for your country?



Did they ever produce a cartoon in collaboration with japan? (I think sherlock hound was made in collaboration with the ita television station RAI, man we've falled from grace!!)
 
This one was my whole introduction to animated shows:

 
Old anime exists since forever. I was watching Captain Tsubasa in the 90's, together with other animes older than that like Doraemon, Saint Seiya or Dragon Ball. When I was very little I guess I watched western cartoons but as far as I know, I've been growing with anime because since I was 7 I found other stuff dumb and lack of detail and not appealing at all. More or less like now lol.
 
well, i remember some in the 90s:
Saint Seiya, Sailormoon, Dragon Ball Z, Doraemon, Mini Yonkuro, Grandizer, Voltus, Mashin Eiyuden Wataru I think, Macross, Patlabor, Poko-nyan and some of usual common popular Anime.

I think most popular anime beside Dragon Ball Z and Sailormoon and Doraemon in my country, Mini Yonku is the most, as not only kids who see the hobby, but also older people as well. there is also local racing competition for the mini 4WD and still getting popular these days. and boy, the could spend hundred to thousand dollars just for one custom car : ))
 
Does anyone remember this one? (Ironman 28) Oh boy did I want that remote control...
 

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Starzinger was apparently very popular in the 80s, so was Genshi Shonen Ryu and Cobra to an extent. I know that Saber Rider had a swedish dub too, if that counts.

For slightly more contemporary stuff (aside from the obious global toy hits like YGO, Pokémon and the like) Silver Fang was popular when I was a kid in the late 90s, but out of all of them Sailor Moon in particular was so popular that every single person my age and their parents know the Swedish theme song by heart.

This will probably just sound like bork bork shvergen hurgen durgen to you but it's still fun to share!

HAHAHAHA

I'm kind of omitting Moomin on purpose because even though the 1990 anime is indeed a japanese production and likely the most popular version even here, its existence is such a given here that nobody ever really considered it foreign.
 
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While americans and the other anglophones often act like they were the first in the west to discover NTSC-J cartoons in the west, when they've been mainstream in other western countries since the 70s and 80s

So we're gonna pretend like Kimba and Speed Racer being on American TV in the 60s just doesn't count? lol
 
Man, I grew up in the 90s watching Toonami on TV. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Hardly anyone in my area had even seen anime, let alone know what it was. I had watched anime since I was 5 on things like My Neighbor Totoro, and other young children's anime so I was familiar with the art style, but didn't really know what it was until my early teen years.
 
The US got messed up when it comes to anime. The ones I remember watching were, Pokémon, Sailor Moon, Dragonball, Digimon, Hamtaro and Samurai Piazza Cats. Even very old anime that Adult Swim would sometimes air; Gigantor and Astro Boy.

But somehow, unlike Pokemon and Digimon that sold games and toys in the US, most of the anime I watched rarely had any marketing in the US until years later due to licensing issues, marketing problems, and localization interferences.
 
Brazil had a big Saint Seiya craze in the 90s. We had some anime on the TV before, but SS was something else around here. Then we got Dragon Ball, Tsubasa, Yuu Yuu etc., our own Otaku Spring.
 

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