Manga
Written and illustrated by Takeshi Konomi, The Prince of Tennis was serialized in Shueisha's manga magazine Weekly Shōnen Jump from July 6, 1999, to March 3, 2008.[5][6] Shueisha collected its 379 individual chapters into forty-two volumes published from January 7, 2000, to June 4, 2008.[7][8]
In North America, Viz Media announced the acquisition of the series in February 2004.[9] The 42 volumes were released from April 21, 2004.[10] to July 5, 2011.[11]
A 4-panel manga parody by Ken-ichi Sakura, titled The Prince of After School (放課後の王子様), began in Jump Square on November 4, 2008.[12][13] The first collected volume was released on June 4, 2010.[14] As of September 4, 2025, nine volumes have been released.[15]
A sequel to the manga series, titled The New Prince of Tennis (新テニスの王子様), was announced in the December issue of Jump Square, published on November 4, 2008.[16] The series began serialization in Jump Square on March 4, 2009. The story is set several months after the end of the first manga, and features Ryoma returning to Japan after his stay in America.[17]
Anime
An anime television series adaptation animated by Trans Arts, co-produced by Nihon Ad Systems and directed by Takayuki Hamana, was broadcast on TV Tokyo from October 10, 2001, to March 30, 2005, spanning a total of 178 episodes.[18] The episodes were collected in forty-five DVD sets, released from January 25, 2002,[19] to October 28, 2005.[20]
In North America, the anime series was licensed by Viz Media. On April 24, 2007, Viz Media released the first The Prince of Tennis box set in the United States.[21] Viz Media has also opted to not include the Japanese opening and ending themes, instead using electric guitar music. However, the original music themes can be found in the DVD extras of disc 3.[22]
Original video animations
The anime television series was followed by a three original video animation (OVA) series which adapted the "National Tournament" arc. The first 13-episode OVA was launched on seven DVDs from March 24, 2006,[27] to March 23, 2007;[28] The second 6-episode OVA was launched on three DVDs from June 22, 2007,[29] to January 25, 2008;[30] The third 7-episode OVA was launched on four DVDs (including the first numbered 0) from April 25, 2008;[31] to January 23, 2009.[32]
A 4-episode OVA, subtitled "Another Story", was released on two DVDs on May 26[33]
Musicals
Beginning in 2003, a series of Prince of Tennis musicals began. Each year sees two musicals based on the storyline come out in the summer and winter, with a 'Dream Live' performance each Spring, featuring numerous actors and past songs. Each storyline musical adapts a single arc of the manga, typically one specific match against a team. Due to the aging of the actors, all the main characters have been recast several times.
Films
The Prince of Tennis: Futari no Samurai (劇場版 テニスの王子様 二人のサムライ THE FIRST GAME) is the first animated film of the series. It was released on January 29, 2005, and co-aired with a short film, Tennis no Oujisama: Atobe Kara no Okurimono (跡部からの贈り物).
On May 13, 2006, a live-action film adaptation premiered in Japan.
Gekijō-ban Tennis no Ōjisama Eikoku-shiki Teikyū-jō Kessen! (劇場版テニスの王子様 英国式庭球城決戦!) is the second film directed by Shunsuke Tada.[37] It was released on August 14, 2011.
At the Jump Festa '19 event, a new film titled Ryoma! The Prince of Tennis (リョーマ! The Prince of Tennis 新生劇場版テニスの王子様) was announced. The film features an original story set between the end of The Prince of Tennis manga and the start of The New Prince of Tennis manga. The film is in 3DCG, and is directed by Hiroshi Kōjina and animated by The Monk Studios and Keica with cooperation by Studio Kai. Takehito Hata is writing scripts, Kei Tsuda is composing the music, and Konomi himself is supervising the film and writing all insert songs. It was initially scheduled to be released in early 2020, but it was delayed to September 3, 2021.[38][39]
Video games
The Prince of Tennis franchise has spawned many different video games. The vast majority of these are either tennis games or dating sims, and they are spread across several different video game consoles. The first of these games was released for the PlayStation console on February 20, 2002, and is the only game which holds the simple Prince of Tennis title – all of the following game titles are preceded by the "Prince of Tennis" title. This was followed by Genius Boys Academy, which was released for the Game Boy Advance on April 25, 2002. Since then, several other video games have been released for different gaming consoles, including one more PlayStation game, three Game Boy Advance games, five Nintendo DS games, thirteen PlayStation 2 games, and one mobile game. The latest game to be released was New Prince of Tennis: Rising Beat in 2017, a rhythm-based mobile game developed by Bushiroad. This game is the first game to be released outside of Japan.[42][43]
Additionally, characters from The Prince of Tennis appeared in the Shōnen Jump based video games Jump Super Stars and Jump Ultimate Stars
Dramas
Two Chinese television adaptations of The Prince of Tennis have been produced. The first, Wǎngqiú Wángzǐ (网球王子), and its sequel, ''Jiāyóu! Wǎngqiú Wángzǐ'' (加油!网球王子), adapt the original story with localized names and cultural elements. A separate 2019 Netflix production, Fèndòu ba, Shàonián! (奋斗吧,少年!), is also based on the story.
The series has produced a half-hour weekly radio show, over 300 music CDs and a large selection of merchandise. Including a trading card game[44] and figures.[45] Three live events, "TeniPuri Perfect Live" in 2003, "The 100 song marathon" in 2008 and "Tenipuri Festa" in 2009, were held by the TeniPuri voice actors and Konomi Takeshi himself.
The 1986 J-pop song "Valentine Kiss" by Sayuri Kokushō was covered multiple times by multiple characters in the series. From February 2004 through February 2010, a total of nine different versions of the song were released (seven individually, and the final two together). The first one, featuring the character Keigo Atobe (voiced by Junichi Suwabe) reached No. 14 on the Oricon charts.[46]