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{{short description|Japanese meaning "extra", referring to additional anime, manga and DVD content}} {{italics title}} {{for|the city|Omak, Washington}} {{refimprove|date=April 2012}} {{Anime and manga}} {{wiktionary}} '''''Omake''''' ({{lang|ja|御負け}}, usually written {{lang|ja|おまけ}}) means ''extra'' in [[Japanese language|Japanese]]. Its primary meaning is general and widespread. It is used as an [[anime and manga]] term to mean "extra or bonus".<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=M_aTqHdkt4UC&q=omake&pg=PA121 |title=Girl Wide Web: Girls, the Internet, and the Negotiation of Identity – Google Books |access-date=2013-11-05|isbn=9780820471174 |year=2005 |last1=Mazzarella |first1=Sharon R.|publisher=Peter Lang }}</ref> In the [[United States]] and [[United Kingdom]], anime fans generally use the term in a narrow sense to describe special features on [[DVD]] releases: deleted [[Scene (film)|scene]]s, interviews with the [[actor]]s, "the making of" documentary clips, [[outtake]]s, amusing [[blooper]]s, and so forth. However, this use of the term predates the DVD [[Recording medium|medium]] by several years. For at least the past fifty years in [[Japan]], ''omake'' of small character figurines and toys have been giveaways that come with [[soft drink]]s and [[candy]], and sometimes, the ''omake'' is more desired than the product being sold. In English, the term is often used with this meaning, although it generally only applies to features included with [[anime]], ''[[tokusatsu]]'', and occasionally [[manga]]. Therefore, it is generally limited to use among fans of Japanese pop culture (sometimes called [[otaku]]), and like many loanwords from Japanese, ''omake'' is both the singular and plural form. ==Description== {{Unreferenced section|date=December 2017}} ''Omake'' often include comedy sketches where the characters behave out of character, break the [[fourth wall]], or subtly address opinions of the fandom known to the writers. Sometimes scenes from the TV show or [[original video animation|OVA]] are humorously re-dubbed. One example, included on the ''[[Video Girl Ai]]'' DVD, replays scenes from the OVA series with new voice-acting in a rural accent. Other times, the same actors voice a new script that is more sexually suggestive, often ludicrously so. ''Omake'' can also consist of [[non-canonical]], and often comedic crossover clips that sometimes occur at the end of episodes of two shows airing concurrently from the same studio, such as recent ''[[Kamen Rider Series|Kamen Rider]]'' and ''[[Super Sentai]]'' programs. [[File:GunbusterSD.png|thumb|left|A screenshot of an anime ''omake'', taken from ''Gunbuster''. Here, ''[[chibi (style)|chibi]]'' versions of the main characters attempt to explain the concept of "[[Ice II]]".]] For anime, these are often presented in [[super deformed]] style, in the same way manga ''omake'' often is. For example, the anime OVA ''[[Gunbuster]]'' features super deformed characters trying to explain what the writers know to be mostly pseudo-science, or talking about their relationships with each other in a way they do not in the series itself. In the anime series ''[[Reborn!]]'', one of the characters named [[Haru Miura]] has an interview with each of the characters of the anime in ''[[chibi (term)|chibi]]'' forms, and the characters' answers to the questions are often something they would never say in the anime or the manga. For live action programs, although not animated, the expressions and sound effects used for comedic purposes can often be inspired by the ''omake'' found in the animated mediums. The term "''omake''" has use also in video games; the [[Sega]] game ''[[Shenmue II]]'' for the [[Dreamcast]] had a hidden folder on the game disc labelled "Omake", found by placing the disc into a computer, containing exclusive wallpapers and conception art. Another example of an ''omake'' in popular culture is related to [[Square (video game company)|Square]]'s ''[[Final Fantasy IX]]''. The secret "Blackjack" minigame after completion of the game is accessed by means of a button combination. The ''Final Fantasy'' "Playonline" site has a secrets section for ''Final Fantasy IX'', requiring passwords given in the official Piggyback guide to enter. The password needed to reveal the button combination for the Blackjack minigame is E-OMAKE. The minigame itself is an ''omake''. In some fiction writing communities based on forum sites, the term "''omake''" refer to derivative stories posted in a story thread, usually by users other than the author of the thread, and as a general rule are non-canonical by default. Members of these communities occasionally refer to having written or posted an omake with the term "''omaked''". ''Omake'' occasionally appears in fanfiction about anime or manga, after the story itself, usually as a humorous "alternative ending". An example of this is that at the end of each episode of ''[[Dance in the Vampire Bund]]'' is a 20–30 second ''chibi'' skit called "Dance with the Vampire Maids". ==See also== * [[Easter egg (media)]] * [[Lagniappe]] ==References== {{Reflist}} [[Category:Anime and manga terminology]] [[ru:Термины и понятия аниме и манги#О]]
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