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  1. Book Review: Ken Sugimori Works. by Jason Moses February 12, 2015. SHARE. Ken Sugimori is a cool dude. You might think the guy who helped co-create Pokemon would be a little arrogant, spending his days in some kind of ivory tower, sleeping on top of large piles of money, and generally being a media gadfly.

  2. Ken Sugimori has been working with The Pokémon Company for 25+ years now. He has designed some of the most iconic cards and still does to this day. One that you might know that has recently been gaining major popularity is the Japanese exclusive promo card "Red's Pikachu". This year marked the 25th anniversary of not only Pokémon but also of ...

  3. Ken Sugimori art book works: A 25 Year Portfolio from Quinty to Jerry Boy and Pokémon - Book ReviewRetrospective artbook featuring the artistic work of Ken S...

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    • Wasabi Galaxy
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  5. May 27, 2020 · This is a book about Sugimori Ken that's focused on pretty much everything he's done other than Pocket Monsters. But a book like that wouldn't sell and so Pikachu and the Kanto starters were thrown on the cover to get some of the Pocket Monsters crowd to buy it.

  6. Jan 1, 2014 · The book itself is thick and I was very excited to see that. But once I opened up, I then understood why. This is book is filled with Ken Sugimori's MANGA works, not illustration works (there are some but very few pages for that, including Pokemon concept art, which I know that almost everyone has found his work through).

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    • Tokuma Shoten
  7. Ken Sugimori has been working with The Pokemon Company for 25+ years now. He has designed some of the most iconic cards and still does to this day. One that you might know that has recently been gaining major popularity is the Japanese exclusive promo card "Red's Pikachu". This year marked the 25th anniversary of not only Pokémon but also of ...

  8. Nov 20, 2022 · The electric tale of Pokémon and Ken Sugimori. It all started in Machida, Japan with a boy named Satoshi Tajiri who loved to watch bugs crawl along the tall grass. Satoshi would spend hours seeing how much different type of insects he could find and draw, marveling at the complexities and uniqueness of nature.

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