When Did The Heart Of Justice First Release In Japan?

2025-08-24 01:15:58
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5 Answers

Detail Spotter Police Officer
I’m excited by how many possibilities that title opens up — but I need one small favor: can you tell me what kind of thing 'The Heart of Justice' is? Without that, my best move is to point you at the most reliable places to find a first-Japan release date. Start with Japanese Wikipedia and publisher pages, and search in Japanese with words like "発売" or "初回" to surface official dates.

For music check Oricon and Discogs; for video/games check Amazon.co.jp, Animate, or the production company’s website; for books check the National Diet Library catalog. If the listing has vanished, the Wayback Machine or archived news posts often save the day. If you give me the medium or a creator, I’ll go look and give you the exact Japanese release date and where I found it — I love digging up those details.
2025-08-25 06:17:00
22
Responder Editor
I’m picturing myself scrolling through an online store late at night trying to track this down: sometimes titles like 'The Heart of Justice' are localized names and the original Japanese release is listed under a different title. If you have any extra clue — artist, studio, franchise — throw it at me. Without that, here’s a practical route I use.

First, search Japanese-language pages: Japanese Wikipedia often lists first-release dates with the original title. For music, Oricon and JASRAC databases show release and copyright dates. For games and anime, look at publisher press releases, official Twitter feeds, and product pages on Amazon.co.jp or Animate. Discographies on sites like Discogs and retail pages (CDJapan, HMV Japan) usually show the exact release day. If the title is part of a larger series, fandom wikis or MyAnimeList sometimes have episode and release timelines.

I once tracked an obscure single by cross-referencing Oricon, Discogs, and the publisher’s archived press release — it took a little patience but paid off. If you want, tell me one more clue and I’ll narrow the search down right away.
2025-08-28 12:51:18
22
Vincent
Vincent
Favorite read: When Justice Meets Love
Plot Explainer Librarian
I got into collecting weird soundtracks years ago, and titles with English names often hide behind a Japanese original title — that’s probably what’s happening with 'The Heart of Justice'. Rather than guess a date, here’s the step-by-step approach I’d take and what to watch for:

1) Identify the medium (song, episode, game, novel). Each has different databases: Oricon/JASRAC for music, publisher catalog pages for DVDs/games, and library catalogs (like the National Diet Library) for books.
2) Use Japanese search terms like 「ハート・オブ・ジャスティス 発売」 or 「正義の心 発売日」 to find exact product pages.
3) Verify with at least two sources — e.g., the product page and a retailer listing (Amazon.co.jp, CDJapan) or a press release.
4) If it’s obscure or the page’s gone, try the Wayback Machine or fan wikis; they often preserve original air dates or release announcements.

If you want, tell me any extra detail — even a year you think it might be — and I’ll help narrow it to the exact day and link to the source. I enjoy the hunt for these specifics.
2025-08-29 03:02:12
20
Jocelyn
Jocelyn
Favorite read: Heart Of Steel
Twist Chaser Police Officer
I’ve seen this pop up in conversations a few times, and honestly the main snag is that 'The Heart of Justice' could mean very different things depending on medium — a song, a movie, a game, or even an episode title. Before pinning down a release date, I’d want to know which one you mean. Is it a single, a CD track, a TV episode, or maybe a novel translation? Each has a different trail to follow.

If you don’t have more detail, here’s how I’d chase it down: search Japanese sites like the Japanese Wikipedia, Oricon (for music), or publisher pages for DVDs/Blu-rays. Try Japanese keywords too — for example search both "'The Heart of Justice'" and likely Japanese renderings such as 「ハート・オブ・ジャスティス」 or 「正義の心」. For music, check catalog numbers on CDJapan or Discogs; for video, check Amazon.jp, HMV Japan, or official production company press releases. If something’s obscure, the Wayback Machine or fan forums often preserve old listings.

Tell me which medium you meant and I’ll dig up the exact Japanese release date and a couple of sources to cite — I actually love sleuthing this kind of stuff, especially when a title has multiple incarnations.
2025-08-29 15:02:58
15
Honest Reviewer Cashier
Which specific 'The Heart of Justice' are you asking about? That’s where I’d start — the phrase could be a translated title used in English-speaking communities. Quick tips: search Japanese Wikipedia, check Oricon (if it’s music), or the publisher’s product page (if it’s a DVD/Blu-ray or game). Use likely Japanese translations like 「ハート・オブ・ジャスティス」 or 「正義の心」 as search terms.

Another fast trick is to search for the title plus words like "発売" (release) or "配信日" (release date) in Japanese — that often brings up news posts or product listings with precise dates. If you give me the medium or a creator name, I’ll pinpoint the first Japanese release date for you.
2025-08-30 19:37:24
17
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Who composed the heart of justice soundtrack for the anime?

5 Answers2025-08-24 03:48:25
I get the urge to help immediately whenever someone asks about a specific soundtrack — music hooks me the same way a great scene does. For 'Heart of Justice', the trickiest part is that multiple shows or fan projects could use that title, so the composer isn't a single, universally-known name unless you tell me which anime you mean. When I want to find a composer, I usually check the end credits first (yes, the part most of us skip), then hunt down the official OST release. Sites like VGMdb, Discogs, and MusicBrainz are lifesavers because they catalogue track listings and composer credits. If I’m stuck, I open the video on YouTube or the scene on Crunchyroll — the description or the subtitle/caption files sometimes credit the music. If you tell me which anime or drop a screenshot of the credits, I’ll dig in and try to pin down the exact composer. I’ve done this for obscure tracks while sipping cold coffee at 2 a.m., so I enjoy the chase.

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