Comiket Explained

Comic Market
Native Name:コミックマーケット
Native Name Lang:jpn
Status:Active
Frequency:Semiannual
Venue:Tokyo Big Sight in Ariake, Tokyo
Genre:Doujinshi convention
Last:11-12 August 2024
Next:29-30 December 2024
Attendance:110,000 in December 2021
Organised:Comic Market Preparatory Committee (ComiketPC)
Activity:Marketplace, industry floor, cosplay
Website:comiket.co.jp/index_e.html (English)
comiket.co.jp/ (Japanese)

, more commonly known as or, is a semiannual doujinshi convention in Tokyo, Japan. A grassroots market focused on the sale of doujin (self-published) works, Comiket is a not-for-profit fan convention administered by the volunteer-run Comic Market Preparatory Committee (ComiketPC). Inaugurated on 21 December 1975 with an estimated 700 attendees, Comiket has since grown to become the largest fan convention in the world, with an estimated turnstile attendance of 750,000 in 2019. Comiket is typically held at Tokyo Big Sight in August and December, with the two events distinguished as and, respectively.

Program

Dōjin marketplace

Comiket is focused primarily on the sale of dōjin: non-commercial, self-published works.[1] Approximately 35,000 circles (a term for groups or individuals who create dōjin) participate in each edition of Comiket.[2] Different circles exhibit on each day of Comiket; circles producing works on a common subject, such as a particular media franchise or manga genre, are typically grouped on the same day.[3] The most common item sold at Comiket is dōjinshi (self-published comics, novels or magazines), while a smaller number of circles sell dōjin soft, analog (board/card/etc.) games, music, clothing, and other goods. These are often derivative fan works based off of anime, video games, and other media, legal according to Japanese law (shinkokuzai).[3] Since Comiket's inauguration, sample copies of all works sold at Comiket are collected and archived by ComiketPC, with over 2.1 million works having been archived.[1]

Trends in derivative works

+
The number of dōjin circles producing derivative works for given media properties, from Comiket 84 (August 2013) to Comiket 97 (December 2019).[4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12]

Cosplay

Comiket is a major outlet for cosplay enthusiasts. Since Comiket 80 in 2011, restrictions on cosplaying have been gradually relaxed, with a shift from regulating objects (e.g. a ban on items that could be used as weapons) to regulating behavior (e.g. a ban on swinging around long objects).[1] Some general contemporary guidelines include not wearing clothes that are too revealing, not imitating uniformed officers, and being out of cosplay when arriving/departing from Comiket.[13]

Corporate booths

Comiket hosts 190 corporate booths each year. This includes both large commercial companies, such as video game studios and manga publishers, as well as celebrity meet and greet sessions.

Operations

Schedule

Comiket is held twice yearly, in August and December. These events are distinguished as "Summer Comic Market" (Natsukomi) and "Winter Comic Market" (Fuyukomi).[14] Since 1995, both events have run for three days each, with Summer Comiket generally occurring Friday to Sunday in mid-August, and Winter Comiket generally occurring the three days prior to New Year's Day. Starting with Comiket 96, the events have been four days long,[15] with the exception of Comiket 103 and 104, which, due to recent COVID-19 pandemic, were reduced to two days each. Both events run daily from 10:00a.m. to 4:00p.m, with corporate booths open until 5:00p.m and the entire convention closing an hour early on the final day of the event.[16] Comiket has been held at Tokyo Big Sight in Ariake, Tokyo since 1996.[17] Comiket 98, which was planned for August 2020, was the event's first cancellation in its history as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic; Comiket 99, which would have been held in December 2020 was instead held in December 2021, two years after the last time it was held, and ran for only two days.[18]

Event size

Comiket is the largest fan convention in the world,[19] growing from fewer than 10,000 attendees in 1982[20] to over half a million by 2004. Since 2007, attendee numbers have fluctuated in the region of 500,000 for Winter Comiket and 560,000 for Summer Comiket.[21] Because of the extremely high volume of attendance at Comiket, mobile phone companies set up temporary antennas, while the Tokyo Metro makes special arrangements to accommodate the large crowds. Hour-long queues to enter Comiket during peak hours are common, while some attendees queue up to five hours before the event to ensure early admission.[16] Popular circles are frequently placed near the venue's loading docks so that their queues can extend outside.[1] ComiketPC recommends that first-time attendees arrive in the afternoon to avoid queues.[22]

Catalog

For every Comiket, a catalog is released that contains information about the event. The catalog includes a list of all participating circles, maps of the convention layout, directions to and from the convention, rules for the convention, results from surveys held among Comiket participants, articles about topics relevant to dōjinshi creators, and one to two pictures ("circle cuts") for every participating circle. It is available in print and DVD-ROM format, and since Comiket 83, is available online behind a partial paywall.[23]

Catalogs are made available for sale at stores two weeks before the event.[24] The print version is roughly the size of an average phone book, while the DVD-ROM version includes features such as advanced search functions and a clickable map. To date, there is no English edition of the catalog available, though the catalog does contain a four-page basic guide for attending Comiket in English, Chinese, and Korean.[25]

Prior to Comiket 96, a purchased catalog was not required for admission to Comiket (see 2020 Summer Olympics changes below).

Participants

The overwhelming majority of Comiket circle participants are amateur and hobbyist artists: 70% of participating circles lose money, while only 15% turn a profit.[1] The majority of circle participants at Comiket are female, with women composing 57% of participating circles at Comiket 84.[1] General attendees at Comiket tend to skew male, with men comprising 64% of attendees at Comiket 78.[26]

Of the Comiket circle participants, a 2011 poll showed that nearly half participated because attending the event and showing off their work is enjoyable, and a significant percentage came to spread their works to the public.[27] A smaller percentage of dōjinshi creators' goal is to promote an idea or opinion through attending Comiket.

The majority of those participating in circles in 2010 said that they are a part of a one-person circle (59%), while two-person (20%) and three-person (8%) circles were also common.[28]

Philanthropy

Since 1993, ComiketPC has donated over ¥60 million to sustainable forest management to offset paper used in the production of dōjinshi.[1] Since 2007, ComiketPC has worked with the Japanese Red Cross Society to organize bloodmobiles at Comiket events, with donors given Comiket-exclusive posters depicting characters from anime and video games. The Red Cross receives an estimated 1,500 blood donations at each Comiket.[29] [30]

History

Comiket was inaugurated in 1975 by (Labyrinth), a dōjin circle founded by Yoshihiro Yonezawa,, and while studying at Meiji University. The first Comiket was organized amid a period of immense change and upheaval for manga as a medium, characterized by the closure of the experimental manga magazine COM and the ascendance of the Year 24 Group.[31] [32] [33] A 1975 incident in which a dōjin creator applying for was refused admission after criticizing the convention's focus on professional guests over dōjin creators in her application became a catalyst for the founding of Comiket as a fan convention.[34] [35]

As Comiket grew, a lottery system to allocate exhibition space was implemented in 1979, as the number of applications from circles began to surpass available space.[1] In 1981 the event moved to and began publishing an event catalog in 1982. Comiket would change locations frequently throughout the late 1980s and 1990s, as the Japanese bubble economy led to an upsurge in trade shows that made it difficult to secure a consistent venue. The murders by Tsutomu Miyazaki and subsequent moral panic against otaku would lead to further difficulties in Comiket's ability to secure a venue.[1] Tokyo Big Sight hosted Comiket for the first time in 1996, and remains the convention's primary venue. In 1998 (C54), an arsonist placed incendiary devices in the venue the day before the event, which were noticed and neutralized with no major damage; the event was held as normal, though with heightened security. The arsonist was caught at the following event.[36]

In 2012, anonymous threats made against circles creating works related to Kuroko's Basketball led Comiket to prohibit the sale of all Kuroko's Basketball-related items at Comiket 85 (see Kuroko's Basketball § Controversies).[37] Organizers refunded the registration fees for the roughly 900 circles producing Kuroko's Basketball items, resulting in a loss for Comiket of roughly ¥10 million.[38] In 2015, ComiketPC organized a special event specifically focused on doujinshi related to the series.[39] Affectionately nicknamed "Kuroket", the event hosted approximately 2,400 circles producing Kuroko's Basketball items.[40]

In August 2018, ComiketPC announced modified schedules for Comikets 96, 97, and 98 due to the 2020 Summer Olympics. As the east wing of Big Sight closed in 2019 for renovations in advance of the Olympics, the corporate booths of C96 and C97 were moved to Aomi Exhibition Hall, and both events expanded to four days of programming. Admission to both events required the purchase of a wristband – the first time in Comiket's history it was not free to attend – in order to offset the cost of running the event across four days, and to depress attendance in light of the smaller venue space.[41] Wristbands for all four days were included with the purchase of a print event catalog, while individual wristbands for each day were available to purchase at Big Sight the day of the event.[42] C98 in 2020 was slated to be moved to Golden Week in May in order to not conflict with the Olympics in August. On 27 March 2020, ComiketPC announced that C98 had been cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, making it the first time a Comiket event has been cancelled.[43] On 12 July 2020, it was announced that Comiket 99 would be postponed to 2021, taking place during Golden Week as C98 would have in order to not conflict with the Summer Olympics, which were also postponed. A virtual event titled "Air Comiket" was held in December to replace its originally planned dates.[44] Comic Market 99 was ultimately delayed to December 2021, and ran for only two days with entry limited to 55,000 people per day by requiring ticket purchases.[18]

Event history

No.YearDateDōjin circlesAttendanceVenues
1197521 December32700
219764 April39550
325 July56500
419 December80700
5197710 April94
630 - 31 July100
718 December131
819782 April144
CS16 May250
929 - 30 July200
- 15 NovemberHitotsubashi University Kunitachi Campus
1017 December200Ōta City Industrial Building
1119798 April218
1228 - 29 July330
1323 December290Ōta City Industrial Building
14198011 May380
1514 September340
1614 December340
1719815 April400
1815 - 16 August512
1920 December600
20198221 March780
218 August970
2226 December
2319833 April
247 August
2525 December
26198419 August
2723 December
28198511 August
2929 December
30198610 August
3127 - 28 December
3219878 - 9 August
3326 - 27 December
34198813 - 14 August
35198925 - 26 March
3613 - 14 August
3723 - 24 DecemberMakuhari Messe
38199018 - 19 August
3923 - 24 December
40199116 - 17 August
4129 - 30 December
42199215 - 16 August
4329 - 30 December
44199315 - 16 August
4529 - 30 December
4619947 - 8 August
4729 - 30 December
48199518 - 20 August
4929 - 30 December
CS2199617 March
503 - 4 AugustTokyo Big Sight
5128 - 29 December
52199715 - 17 August
5328 - 29 December
54199814 - 16 August
5529 - 30 December
56199913 - 15 August
5724 - 26 December
CS3200013 - 15 AugustOkinawa Convention Center
5811 - 13 AugustTokyo Big Sight
5929 - 30 December
60200110 - 12 August
6129 - 31 December
6220029 - 11 August
6328 - 30 December
64200315 - 17 August
6528 - 30 December
66200415 - 17 August
6728 - 30 December
CS4200521 March
6812 - 14 August
6929 - 30 December
70200611 - 13 August
7129 - 31 December
72200717 - 19 August
7329 - 31 December
74200815 - 17 August
7528 - 30 December
76200914 - 16 August
7729 - 31 December
CS5201014 - 16 August
7813 - 15 AugustTokyo Big Sight
7929 - 31 December
80201112 - 14 August
8129 - 31 December
82201210 - 12 August
29 - 31 December
84201310 - 12 August
8529 - 31 December
86201415 - 17 August
8728 - 30 December
CS6201528 - 29 MarchMakuhari Messe
8814 - 16 AugustTokyo Big Sight
8929 - 31 December
90201612 - 14 August
9129 - 31 December
92201711 - 13 August
9329 - 31 December
94201810 - 12 August
9529 - 31 December
9620199 - 12 AugustTokyo Big Sight & Aomi Exhibition Hall
9728 - 31 December
982020Cancelled
99202130 - 31 December20,000110,000Tokyo Big Sight
100202213 - 14 August 20,000170,000
10130 - 31 December20,000180,000
102202312 - 13 August21,000260,000
10330–31 December25,900 270,000
104202411–12 August
105202429–30 December

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: What Is Comic Market? . Comic Market Preparatory Committee . en. 2018-12-30.
  2. Web site: Comic Market 66 After Report. Comiket. January 7, 2013.
  3. Web site: Chavez, Ed . Aug 21, 2007 . Fan Creativity Explodes at Comiket . Publishers Weekly . en. 2018-12-30.
  4. Web site: Green. Scott. Top Doujinshi Events Most Popular By The Numbers. Crunchyroll. 28 December 2016.
  5. Web site: Green. Scott. With Slight Movement, "KanColle," "Touhou" And "Touken Ranbu" Continue To Dominate Comiket Doujinshi. Crunchyroll. 28 December 2016. 10 November 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20221110164242/http://www.crunchyroll.com/anime-news/2016/08/09/with-slight-movement-kancolle-touhou-and-touken-ranbu-continue-to-dominate-comiket-doujinshi. dead.
  6. Web site: myrmecoleon. ja:過去最大規模のコミックマーケット91の二次創作人気を調査. http://ascii.jp/elem/000/001/408/1408689/. ASCII.jp. 28 December 2016. ja-JP.
  7. Web site: myrmecoleon. 夏コミはFateが劇的拡大! ユーリも人気/恒例の次回サークル数増減予想も. ASCII.jp. 16 August 2017. ja-JP.
  8. Web site: myrmecoleon. Fate8割増! コミックマーケット93の二次創作人気を調査. ASCII.jp. 22 January 2018. ja-JP.
  9. Web site: myrmecoleon. コミックマーケット94の二次創作人気調査&pixivデータで次回予想. ASCII.jp. 27 August 2018. ja-JP.
  10. Web site: myrmecoleon. コミックマーケット95の二次創作人気調査&pixivデータで次回サークル数予想. ASCII.jp. 1 January 2019. ja-JP.
  11. Web site: myrmecoleon. コミケ初の4日間開催 C96の二次創作人気を調査&pixivでC97サークル数予想. ASCII.jp. 5 August 2019. ja-JP.
  12. Web site: コミケ97の二次創作人気を調査&次回予想~VTuber、鬼滅他拡大 . ASCII.jp . 28 December 2019 . ja . 24 December 2019.
  13. Web site: Comic Market's Website for Overseas Attendees. www.comiket.co.jp. 2020-02-08. [Comiket 96-98].
  14. Book: McCarthy, Helen . Helen McCarthy . 500 Manga Heroes & Villains . 2006 . Chrysalis Book Group . Hauppauge, New York, USA . 978-0-7641-3201-8 . 14 . Manga: A Brief History .
  15. Web site: Comic Market to Use Smaller Venue for Record 4 Days for 2019 Events. Loo. Egan. 2018-08-12. AnimeNewsNetwork. 8 February 2020.
  16. Web site: コミックマーケット76のご案内 . 一般参加者サポートページ (General Participant Support Page) . Comiket Inc . ja . Guide to Comic Market 76 . July 5, 2010.
  17. Web site: 'Boys' Love,' Yaoi, and Art Education: Issues of Power and Pedagogy . Wilson . Brent . Toku . Masami . 2003 . Visual Culture Research in Art and Education . July 5, 2010 . 19 July 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110719052019/http://www.csuchico.edu/%7Emtoku/vc/Articles/toku/Wil_Toku_BoysLove.html . dead . Citing Inokai . K. . 2000 . Manga dojinshi-shi . Comic Fan . 10 . 4–59 . ja . History of manga dojinshi .
  18. Web site: Harding . Daryl . Comiket 99 to Require Proof of COVID-19 Vaccination or Negative PCR Test . . 29 December 2021 . 12 November 2021.
  19. Web site: Tokyo's Comiket, not Comic-Con, is the biggest fan convention in the world . Kopf . Dan . July 21, 2018 . Quartz . August 14, 2018.
  20. Mizoguchi Akiko (2003). "Male-Male Romance by and for Women in Japan: A History and the Subgenres of Yaoi Fictions". U.S.-Japan Women’s Journal, 25: 49-75.
  21. Web site: Comic Market Nenpyō (Comic Market chronology). Comiket. January 7, 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20180326120235/http://www.comiket.co.jp/archives/Chronology.html. March 26, 2018. dead.
  22. Web site: To Attendees from Overseas: Comic Market (Comiket) 76 . ComicMarket WebSite To Attendees from Overseas . Comiket Inc . July 5, 2010.
  23. Web site: Comiket WEB CATALOG. December 27, 2012.
  24. Web site: Komiketto katarogu toriatsukaiten no goannai. Comiket. January 7, 2013.
  25. Web site: ComicMarket WebSite To Attendees from Overseas. Comiket. January 7, 2013.
  26. Web site: Comiket.co.jp . http://www.comiket.co.jp/info-a/WhatIsJpn201401.pdf . ja:コミックマーケットとは何か? 2014年1月] - コミックマーケット準備会 . ja . What is the Comic Market? January 2014] - Comic Market Preparatory Committee . August 2, 2016 . 8 March 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140308014547/http://www.comiket.co.jp/info-a/WhatIsJpn201401.pdf . live. (Comiket 84 pie chart is on page 19)
  27. Leavitt. Alex. Horbinski. Andrea. 2012-06-15. Even a monkey can understand fan activism: Political speech, artistic expression, and a public for the Japanese dōjin community. Transformative Works and Cultures. en. 10. 10.3983/twc.2012.0321. 1941-2258. free.
  28. Book: 絵師白書2010. ja.
  29. Web site: Blood drives at Comic Market, one of Japan's largest events. Japanese Red Cross Society. December 31, 2018. 31 December 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20181231143831/http://www.jrc.or.jp/activity/blood/cross/140710_001227.html. dead.
  30. Web site: 輸血用の血液がピンチ! 新型コロナで献血会中止相次ぎ . . 1 January 2022 . Japanese . 26 December 2020.
  31. Book: Schodt, Frederik L. . Dreamland Japan: Writings on Modern Manga . Stone Bridge Press . 978-1-880656-23-5 . 1996 . 40 .
  32. Web site: World's Biggest Underground Comic Convention . August 17, 2000 . . May 5, 2009.
  33. Book: Kinsella, Sharon . Gelder . Ken. The Subcultures Reader . Routledge . London; New York . 2005 . 2000 . 2nd . 542–543 . Amateur Manga Subculture and the Otaku Incident. https://books.google.com/books?id=46OYHkjZR4AC&q=comiket&pg=PA542 . 978-0-415-34415-9 . 57530654 .
  34. News: New university library puts focus on the fans . Galbraith . Patrick L. . June 14, 2009 . . July 26, 2009.
  35. Web site: The cultural economy of fanwork in Japan: dōjinshi exchange as a hybrid economy of open source cultural goods. Nele. Noppe. September 3, 2014. 100. registration .
  36. Book: Ōchi, Yōko . Komikku māketto e yōkoso . Seikaisha Shinsho . 2022 . 9784065300442 . Tokyo . 273-75 . JA.
  37. Web site: Nakamura . Toshi . Threats Against Manga Artist Lead To Empty Tables At Comiket 83 . Kotaku . 27 July 2019 . 3 January 2013.
  38. Web site: Hodgkins . Crystalyn . Comiket Loses 10 Million+ Yen Over Kuroko's Basketball Threats . Anime News Network . 27 July 2019 . 24 December 2012.
  39. Web site: Kuroko's Basketball Doujinshi Event "Kuroket" to be Held By Comic Market. AnimeAnime.Jp. 2014-05-05. 2014-06-28. https://web.archive.org/web/20140714141400/http://animeanime.jp/article/2014/05/05/18552.html. 2014-07-14. dead.
  40. Web site: 開催のご報告 - 黒子のバスケオンリー同人誌即売会「くろケット」. cmksp.jp. 2015-09-17.
  41. Web site: Sherman, Jennifer. 2018-12-31 . What will you be doing at comiket Olympic Games until 2020? . Comiket . ja . 2019-01-01.
  42. Web site: Comic Market Considers Hours With No Charge If It Adds Entrance Fees for 2019, 2020 . Anime News Network . en. 2019-01-01.
  43. Web site: Harding . Daryl . Comiket 98 Has Been Canceled to Limit the Spread of Coronavirus . Crunchyroll . 27 March 2020 . en-us.
  44. Web site: 2020-07-12. Comiket 99 Canceled, Looks Toward 2021 Golden Week Event. 2020-07-12. Otaku USA Magazine. en-US.