A few in the anime, but the one that sticks out the most is Bass' arc.By 2007, all four volumes had been translated to French. The second manga, Battle Story Rockman.EXE by Jun Keijima and Miho Asada, saw European release starting in 2006.If you are looking for the manga, see MegaMan NT Warrior (2001). note The ten minute episodes would also be inherited by the Anime of the Game of Mega Man Star Force. The series continued, cycling uninterrupted through Rockman.EXE Stream and Beast before the airing of Beast+, whose episodes were shortened to only ten minutes and officially came to an abrupt and unyielding halt on September 30, 2006. However, that October saw the airing of the new Rockman.EXE Axess, which abandoned the straight adaptational approach in favor of introducing the concept of Dimensional Areas note A dimensional convergence between the cyberworld and the real world that turns a set area into its own phantom zone. before tripping over a series of Filler episodes at the end in March 2004. The first portion of the anime consisted of two seasons consisting of a loose and then tighter and then loose again Anime of the first two Battle Network games, ending on a relatively satisfactory note with the end of the Gospel arc. In the anime, Lan and his childhood friend/love interest Maylu (eventually joined by schoolyard bully Dex, insanely rich Kinglish transfer student Yai, and quiet but loyal ally Tory) find themselves caught up in the various strikes and counter-strikes between the Also standing in the boys' way are the enigmatic Chaud Blaze and ProtoMan.EXE, the absolute best of the best. For example, Lan's and MegaMan's introduction to the world of crimefighting has the pair take down an arsonist who set housefires using electronic ovens. They won't just be fighting online when malevolent entities strike, the machine system connected to that part of the hardware will often malfunction dangerously which means Lan will have to take as much initiative offline to stop threats as MegaMan does in Net Battles. The internet is under almost constant threat from a number of villainous entities, most notably the Light, 10-year-old Lan (Netto) Hikari and his partner, MegaMan.EXE (Rockman), find themselves dealing with everyday life and taking down said villainous entities that threaten to destroy the Net and the world along with it. Net Navis each have their own personalities and assist humans with the normal internet stuff: shopping, web surfing, interacting with friends, searching for information, defeating the wild viruses roaming around with their built-in weapon or BattleChips, illegal Net Battles between Navis. In order to easily navigate this massive dimension, humans created a series of Artificial Intelligences, roughly human in form, called Network Navigators, more commonly known as "Net Navis" or just "Navis". This has gotten to the point where the internet has become its own dimension.
Everything - cars, refrigerators, schools, the weather, you name it - everything is literally online. In the present, or rather, the far, far future of 20XX, the world has seen mind-boggling advances of technology, each and every bit of it connected through the vast cybernetic sea of the internet. Light (here named Hikari Tadashi), note A pun on the Japanese-English L/R confusion in romanisation - the name translates out to Right Light turned his mind to the world of computer networking and carried the population of the world with him anyway, leaving Wily, who was left with his robotics to stew in misery. In the Battle Network verse, however, Dr. Light and Wily saw incredible advances in the field of robotics, though Wily's jealousy at Light's more immediate success with the general public saw his arguably greater intellect twisted to petty theft and then increasingly devastating assaults on the world itself.
The chief concept is the series' famous For Want of a Nail: In the classic verse, Drs. Despite all being under the same label and sharing the same basic concept, both the anime and the manga are separate entities from each other and the original Game Boy Advance games.
The anime had 5 series ( Rockman.EXE, Axess, Stream, Beast, and Beast+) along with a movie, though only EXE and Axess got an official English release. MegaMan NT Warrior is the anime adaptation of the Mega Man Battle Network series ( Battle Network Rockman.EXE in Japan, and later just Rockman.EXE).