Demon Slayer Cosplay Prepares Nezuko To Celebrate Christmas
Photo Credit: Studio Ufotable

Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba is one of the biggest anime series this year. The series gained a lot of fame after the anime debuted this Spring and each and almost every character of the series have their own fan base. One of the fans’ favorite characters is Nezuko who is the sister of the main protagonist of the series Tanjiro.

Down on Instagram, a cosplay artist named Stephmodified shared posted a picture of their ongoing Demon Slayer cosplay for their supporters, yet it incorporated some celebration augmentations. You can check it out below:

https://www.instagram.com/p/B6GmdNwhgM3/?utm_source=ig_embed

As should be obvious above, the look sees Nezuko wearing her typical rigging. She is wearing a pink yukataa with geometric examples over the texture. From her belt and past, this cosplay nails the typical Nezuko look yet adds a couple of bubbly things to set up the courageous woman for Christmas.

A cape is hung over the cosplayer’s back that is red and fixed with white hide. It’s a piece which Santa would be happy to shake, and it even incorporates a hood for included warmth.

The anime arrangement debuted on April 6, and Aniplex of America has authorized the Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba anime. The show is spilling on Hulu, Crunchyroll, and FunimationNOW. The English dub airs on Adult Swim‘s Toonami block. The anime‘s last episode 26 has aired on 09/28/2019.

Aniplex of America portrays the story:

It is the Taisho Period in Japan. Tanjiro, a kindhearted boy who sells charcoal for a living, finds his family slaughtered by a demon. To make matters worse, his younger sister Nezuko, the sole survivor, has been transformed into a demon herself.
Though devastated by this grim reality, Tanjiro resolves to become a “demon slayer” so that he can turn his sister back into a human, and kill the demon that massacred his family.

The arrangement positioned fourteenth on a rundown of manga suggested by Japanese book shop representatives in 2017, and nineteenth on a rundown of the top manga of 2018 for male readers set up together by Kono Manga ga Sugoi!. As of December 2019, the manga had more than 25 million copies in print.


(C) Koyoharu Gotōge, Shueisha / “Demon Slayer” Production Committee”