

Ayakashi Triangle + First 88 chapters available on Viz Media's website, but not the actual app.: Available in the English Shonen Jump and Manga Plus Apps.Many of these series are featured in various video game crossovers, the most prominant are: Jump Super Stars, J-Stars Victory VS, Jump Force, and JUMPUTI Heroes. Viz continues to use the trademark as a label for its compiled releases of shoujo content. There was even a shojo-oriented sister-magazine to the Viz Shonen Jump called Shojo Beat! that came out in the early 2000's, but sadly it didn't make as much money as the publishers hoped, and in 2008, the magazine was discontinued. Its Distaff Counterparts are the shojo-oriented Ribon, Margaret, and Cookie (as well as Shonen Book's older ancestor Shoujo Book), while Cocohana is their josei equivalent. Weekly Shonen Jump also contains a significant number of sister magazines, both former and current, and both for Shōnen and Seinen demographics listed below. In addition, every issue included anime, manga, and video game reviews as well as tips for various card games related to manga series, and several times included promotional cards with an issue. According to The Other Wiki, it featured a total of twelve series in its first six years, previews of many others that Viz publishes, and articles on Japanese culture and language. The magazine introduced many Americans to some great series, such as Naruto and One Piece. It mainly carried translations of manga that first appeared in Weekly Shonen Jump, but tended to publish them on a monthly schedule similar to the earliest output of the Japanese Jump. One attempt to bring Jump to America was through the magazine Shonen Jump (also known as Shonen Jump US), an English-language manga anthology magazine that was published by Viz Media in the US from January 2003 to March 2012.

Thanks to the popularity of Jump in its home country, there have been many exports of its well known manga worldwide during the West's manga boom. Due to its high popularity with young teen boys (rivalling only CoroCoro Comic an iconic children's magazine), many have seen early Jump manga as the Trope Codifier for many series that would follow in its later works as well as its competitors. The original magazine is practically synonymous with works that focus primarily on fighting and action Shonen Jump is often considered to be its own subcategory of shonen anime and manga. Shonen Jump ( or "Shounen" via extended romaji) is a Shōnen Japanese manga anthology magazine owned by Shueisha Publishing, beginning as a bi-weekly series but soon switching to Weekly Shonen Jump in July of 1968.
