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{{Short description|Japanese media franchise}}
{{Short description|TV series of 1971}}
{{Other uses|Kamen Rider (disambiguation)}}
{{about|the 1971 television series|other media titled "Kamen Rider"|Kamen Rider (disambiguation)}}
{{More citations needed|date=March 2022}}
{{pp-semi-indef|small=yes}}
{{Infobox media franchise
{{Infobox television
| image = Kamen rider eurodata.png
| image = Kamen Rider (1971) Title Card.png
| caption = Original Japanese title card
| caption = A statue of [[Kamen Rider (1971 TV series)|Kamen Rider 1]] outside of [[Bandai]] Corporate Headquarters in [[Taitō, Tokyo|Taitō]], [[Tokyo]]
| genre = [[Tokusatsu]]<br>[[Superhero fiction|Superhero]]<br>[[Horror fiction|Horror]]<br>[[Science fiction]]
| title = ''Kamen Rider''
| runtime = 24 minutes
| creator = [[Shotaro Ishinomori]]<br />[[Ishimori Productions]]<br />[[Toei Company]]
| creator = [[Shotaro Ishinomori]]
| origin = ''[[Kamen Rider (1971 TV series)|Kamen Rider]]''
| developer = Masaru Igami
| owner = [[Ishimori Productions]]<br />[[Toei Company]]<br />[[Mainichi Broadcasting System|MBS]]/[[TV Asahi|NET]] (1971–1975, up to ''Amazon'')<br />MBS/[[Tokyo Broadcasting System Television|TBS]] (1975–1989, from ''Stronger'' up to ''Black RX'')<br />[[TV Asahi]] (2000–present)<br />[[Asatsu-DK|ADK]] (2000–present)
| director = Koichi Takemoto
| years = 1971–present
| starring = [[Hiroshi Fujioka]]<br>Takeshi Sasaki<br>[[Jirō Yabuki|Jirō Chiba]]<br>[[Akiji Kobayashi]]<br>Wakako Oki
| films = [[#Theatrical releases|See below]]
| voices = [[Gorō Naya]]
| tv = [[#Main series|See below]]
| narrated = [[Shinji Nakae]]
| plays =
| country = Japan
| musicals =
| composer = [[Shunsuke Kikuchi]]
| games = ''[[Rangers Strike]]''
| company = [[Toei Company]]<br>[[Ishimori Productions]]
| rpgs =
| network = [[MBS TV]]<br>[[TV Asahi|NET]]
| vgs = ''[[Kamen Rider Battle: Ganbaride]]''<br />''[[Kamen Rider: Climax Heroes]]''<br />''[[All Kamen Rider: Rider Generation]]''<br />''[[Kamen Rider: Battride War]]''
| opentheme = "Let's Go!! Rider Kick!" by [[Hiroshi Fujioka]] (#1–13) and [[Masato Shimon]] (#14–88)<br>"Rider Action" by Masato Shimon (#89–98)
| books =
| endtheme = "Kamen Rider no Uta" by Masato Shimon (#1–71)<br>"Rider Action" by Masato Shimon (#72–88)<br>"Lonely Kamen Rider" by Masato Shimon (#89–98)
| novels =
| first_aired = {{start date|1971|4|3}}
| comics =
| last_aired = {{end date|1973|2|10}}
| magazines =
| num_episodes = 98
| strips =
| related = ''[[Kamen Rider V3]]''
| radio =
{{Infobox animanga/Print
| soundtracks =
|type = manga
| music = [[Rider Chips]]<br />[[Kamen Rider Girls]]
|author = Shotaro Ishinomori
| toys = DX Henshin Belts<br />Complete Selection Modification<br />[[Super Imaginative Chogokin]]<br />Souchaku Henshin Series<br />S.H. Figuarts<br />Rider Kick's Figure Series
|illustrator =
| otherlabel1 = Mainly sponsored by
|publisher = [[Kodansha]]
| otherdata1 = [[Bandai]]<br />[[McDonald's]]<br />[[w:ja:セイバン|Seiban Ltd.]] (for Seiban-branded backpacks)<br />[[Otsuka Pharmaceutical|Otsuka Pharmaceutical Company]] (for [[Oronamin|Oronamin C]])<br />[[Shogakukan]]<br />[[Kodansha]]
|demographic = ''[[Shōnen manga|Shōnen]]''
| website = {{url|https://www.kamen-rider-official.com}}
|magazine = [[Weekly Shōnen Magazine]]
|first = 1971
|last = 1973
|volumes = 4
}}
}}
}}
{{nihongo|'''''Kamen Rider'''''|[[:ja:仮面ライダー|仮面ライダー]]|Kamen Raidā|{{Literal translation|''Masked Rider''}}|lead=yes}} is a Japanese [[tokusatsu]] [[superhero]] television series and weekly [[science fiction]] [[manga]] created by [[Mangaka|manga artist]] [[Shotaro Ishinomori]]. The original airing consisted of a total of 98 episodes and were broadcast from April 3, 1971, to February 10, 1973, on [[Mainichi Broadcasting System]] and NET (now [[TV Asahi]]). The manga adaptation was also featured in ''[[Weekly Shōnen Magazine|Shōnen Magazine]]'' around the same period. The series has evolved into a [[Kamen Rider Series|franchise with many subsequent annual iterations]].


The series spawned a second boom in [[tokusatsu]] shows, and was Toei's first commercialised series.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Japanese Heroes Rule the World|journal=Kadokawa Shoten}}</ref> During its run the brand sold 620 million bags of popcorn (branded ''Kamen Rider Snack''),<ref>{{cite book|title=Speak! Kamen Rider|publisher=KK Bestsellers|date=April 2013}}</ref> 3.8 million transformation belts<ref>{{cite web
The {{Nihongo|'''''Kamen Rider Series'''''|[[:ja:仮面ライダーシリーズ|仮面ライダーシリーズ]]|Kamen Raidā Shirīzu|lead=yes|}}, also known as '''''Masked Rider Series''''' (until [[Kamen Rider Decade|Decade]]), is a Japanese [[superhero fiction|superhero]] media franchise consisting of [[tokusatsu]] television programs, films, [[manga]], and [[anime]], created by manga artist [[Shotaro Ishinomori]]. ''Kamen Rider'' media generally features a [[motorcycle]]-riding [[superhero]] with an [[insect]] motif who fights [[supervillain]]s, often known as {{Nihongo|''[[kaiju|kaijin]]''|怪人||lit. strange person}}.
|url=https://www.bandai.co.jp/releases/J2006013101.html
|title=Complete Selection Kamen Rider New No. 1 Transformation Belt|access-date=2023-12-22}}</ref> and 300,000 bikes.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Behind the scenes of hit products No. 5 Do-Re-Mi (Bridgestone Cycle)|journal= OFM9 2004|author=Kazumitsu, Takahashi}}</ref>


== Story ==
The franchise began in 1971 with the ''[[Kamen Rider (1971 TV series)|Kamen Rider]]'' television series, which followed college student [[Kamen Rider 1|Takeshi Hongo]] and his quest to defeat the world-conquering [[Shocker (Kamen Rider)|Shocker]] organization. The original series spawned television and film sequels and launched the Second Kaiju Boom (also known as the Henshin Boom) on Japanese television during the early 1970s, impacting the superhero and action-adventure genres in Japan.<ref>{{Cite book |editor=Takeshobo|date=1995-11-30 |script-title=ja:超人画報 国産架空ヒーロー四十年の歩み|trans-title=The Super Heroes Chronicles: The History of Japanese Fantastic Televisions, Movies and Videos, 1957–1995 |publisher=[[Takeshobo]] |pages=85|chapter=BonusColumn「変身ブーム到来!!」|trans-chapter=Bonus Column 'The Henshin Boom Arrives!'|id=C0076 |isbn=4-88475-874-9|language=ja}}</ref>
The series takes place in a world plagued by Shocker, a mysterious worldwide [[terrorism|terrorist]] organization formed mostly by remaining members of the [[Nazi Party|Nazis]]. To further its plans for [[Hegemony|world domination]], Shocker recruited its agents through kidnapping, turning their victims into [[mutant (fiction)|mutant]] {{nihongo|[[cyborgs]]|改造人間|kaizō ningen|{{Literal translation|[[transhuman]]}}}} and, ultimately, [[brainwashing]] them. However, one victim named Takeshi Hongo escaped just before the final brainwashing. With his sanity and moral conscience intact, Takeshi wages a one-man war against Shocker's minions as the grasshopper-themed cyborg [[superhero]] Kamen Rider. Another victim of the cyborg process, freelance photographer Hayato Ichimonji, became Kamen Rider 2 after Kamen Rider, who eventually renamed himself "Kamen Rider 1", saved him from Shocker's brainwashing. Assisted by motorcycle race team manager Tobei Tachibana and FBI agent Kazuya Taki, the Kamen Riders fought in both solo and partnered missions against Shocker while later getting help from Tobei and Kazuya's Kamen Rider Kid Corps. Later, after many battles with Shocker the organization was wiped out and its leader created Gel-Shocker to fulfill his goals. After many battles with Gel-Shocker the Kamen Riders defeated the organization's leader and stopped Gel-Shocker. With Kazuya returning to America peace was restored, [[Kamen Rider V3|or so it seems]].


== Manga ==
[[Bandai]] owns the toy rights to Kamen Rider in Japan and other Asian regions. Bandai Collectables, a subsidiary of Bandai Namco, distributes Kamen Rider merchandise in North America.<ref>{{cite web |title=Kamen Rider |url=https://www.bluefinbrands.com/kamenrider.html |website=www.bluefinbrands.com |access-date=6 April 2021}}</ref>
Many [[manga]] based on the original ''Kamen Rider'' series have been published, but only one was penned and drawn by Ishinomori himself. Ishinomori was also the author of one chapter of the ''Kamen Rider Amazon'' manga and the entire ''Kamen Rider Black'' manga. However, those manga were based on sequels to ''Kamen Rider'', rather than the original series.


The original [[manga]], published in 1971, initially follows a path resembling the first few episodes of the TV series, from basic plot to creature designs. However, when Takeshi leaves the story, the series diverge greatly. In the TV show, Takeshi travels abroad to fight Shocker in other countries, leaving Japan's protection to Hayato Ichimonji, a freelance cameraman who was experimented on by Shocker but saved by Takeshi, becoming the second Kamen Rider. In the manga, Takeshi never left Japan. He was confronted by twelve "Shocker Riders" and was subsequently mortally wounded during his battle against them. Hayato Ichimonji, one of the twelve Shocker Riders, receives a head injury during the fight and regains his conscience as a result. He then turns against Shocker and takes Takeshi's role as Kamen Rider. In spite of the damage to his body, Takeshi's brain survives and guides Hayato, the two fighting as one.
==Series overview==
The ''Kamen Rider'' franchise primarily revolves around the eponymous Kamen Rider, a superpowered vigilante who mostly resembles a [[grasshopper]] and rides a [[motorcycle]], and their one-man war against an ever-larger malevolent force, usually a [[terrorist organization]] bent on [[world domination]]. A common running theme in the franchise is that the Rider's power is derived from the same source and technology used by malevolent forces, thus forming a moral vow for the protagonists to use this power to fight against evil.


Takeshi eventually returns as a Rider in both stories, but starting with Hayato's debut, villains and even basic story development greatly diverge between the two versions. The manga portrays a seemingly hopeless battle against Shocker, an organization with ties to governmental conspiracies that seems much bigger than either of the two Riders. The live action TV shows portray the Riders as heroes strong enough to bring down Shocker, only to see it replaced by similar organizations led by Shocker's mysterious leader. The Shocker Riders eventually appear in the TV series, too, but they looked different and had different abilities. There were also only six Shocker Riders, rather than the manga's 12.
Similar to its [[Super Sentai|counterpart]], each series focuses on a different Rider, a new set of characters and a different story set in its universe, though there have been multiple instances of past characters from previous Kamen Rider series crossing over to team up against a common foe.


In February 2021, [[Seven Seas Entertainment]] announced they licensed the original manga for publication in one omnibus edition.<ref>{{cite web|title=Seven Seas Licenses Shotaro Ishinomori's Original Kamen Rider Manga|url=https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2021-02-28/seven-seas-licenses-shotaro-ishinomori-original-kamen-rider-manga/.170090|website=Anime News Network|date=February 28, 2021|access-date=April 3, 2021}}</ref>
===The Kamen Riders===
The {{Nihongo|''Kamen Rider''|仮面ライダー|Kamen Raidā|lead=yes|translated as "Masked Rider"}}, also known as simply {{Nihongo|''Rider''|ライダー|Raidā}}, is a collective name referring to the eponymous heroes and numerous individuals of the series. Usually resembling a grasshopper-themed masked superhero or a similarly-looking vigilante in [[spandex]], the Riders are enhanced humans with superhuman strength, resilience and agility, specifically modified to fight an entire army. Originally created by the terrorist organization known as "Shocker" as a means of creating super-soldiers, one of these potential soldiers, biochemistry lab student and motorcycle enthusiast [[Kamen Rider (1971 TV series)|Takeshi Hongo]], escaped from captivity and has since been fighting against Shocker, often recruiting similar individuals to fight alongside him.


== Characters ==
Each Rider, whose appearance varies per series, has a full set of arsenal and equipment in their disposal, coined as the {{Nihongo|''Rider System''|ライダーシステム|Raidā Shisutemu}}, consisting of their {{Nihongo|''Rider Belt''|ライダーベルト|Raidā Beruto|also known as a "Driver"}} (a transformation item that allows a Rider to transform), its associating {{Nihongo|''Rider Items''|ライダーアイテム|Raidā Aitemu}} (which can be used in conjunction with the Rider Belt to gain access to multiple forms) and {{Nihongo|''Rider Weapons''|ライダー兵器|Raidā Heiki}} (auxiliary items serving as optional weapon of choice for the Riders), and their mode of transportation known as a {{Nihongo|''Rider Machine''|ライダーマシン|Raidā Mashin}}. A common theme amongst the Riders is that the Rider System's power was derived from the same technology/power source used by the villains, ironically using it fight against evil to such extent. From [[Kamen Rider Kuuga]] onwards, each Rider has multiple different forms, often divided into six tiers: the default {{Nihongo|''Base Form''|ベースフォーム|Bēsu Fōmu}} and its multiple alternate {{Nihongo|''Extra Forms''|エクストラフォーム|Ekusutora Fōmu}}, the {{Nihongo|''Mid-Season Form''|ミッドシーズンフォーム|Middoshīzun Fōmu}}, the penultimate {{Nihongo|''Super Form''|スーパーフォーム|Sūpā Fōmu}}, the optional movie-exclusive {{Nihongo|''Movie Form''|映画フォーム|Eiga Fōmu}} and the powerful aptly-named {{Nihongo|''Final Form''|ファイナルフォーム|Fainaru Fōmu}}.
=== Kamen Riders ===
* {{nihongo|Takeshi Hongo/Kamen Rider 1|本郷 猛/仮面ライダー1号|Hongō Takeshi/Kamen Raidā Ichigō}}: The first main protagonist. A biochemistry lab student at Jonan University who also races motorcycles as part of the Tachibana Racing Club.
* {{nihongo|Hayato Ichimonji/Kamen Rider 2|一文字 隼人/仮面ライダー2号|Ichimonji Hayato/Kamen Raidā Nigō}}: The other main protagonist. A freelance photographer who becomes the second Kamen Rider after Takeshi saves him from Shocker.


=== Allies ===
Every Rider has a selection of powerful finishing moves, either accessible through their respective Rider Weapons and/or through other forms, though the most commonly-used finishing attack is the {{Nihongo|''Rider Kick''|ライダーキック|Raidā Kikku}}, a dive kick capable of destroying most enemies in a single strike by infusing it with such strength that it causes the opponent to violently explode.
* {{nihongo|Tobei Tachibana|立花 藤兵衛|Tachibana Tōbee}}: Takeshi's racing mentor and confidant. He is often called "Boss" by other members of his racing club. He runs a small [[café]] named Snack Amigo where Hongo and other members of Tachibana's racing club gather in early episodes, and its employees occasionally assist Hongo in countering Shocker's plans. At the same time as Takeshi's departure, he opens a motorcycle goods shop named Tachibana Auto Corner and sets up the Tachibana Racing Club. He is often seen smoking a pipe.
* {{nihongo|Kazuya Taki|滝 和也|Taki Kazuya|11, 13-19, 21-82 & 84-98}}: An [[FBI]] agent assigned to investigate Shocker activities in Japan. While not himself a cyborg, Kazuya was skilled in martial arts and often used them alongside both Kamen Riders to battle the combatants who invariably accompanied a Shocker commander.
* {{nihongo|Hiroshi Midorikawa|緑川 弘|Midorikawa Hiroshi|1}}: Takeshi's teacher at university and an authority on biochemistry. He is a Shocker scientist, but freed Takeshi and was killed by Man Spider, an agent of Shocker.
* {{nihongo|Ruriko Midorikawa|緑川 ルリ子|Midorikawa Ruriko|1-13}}: The daughter of Doctor Midorikawa, she initially blames Takeshi for her father's death, but eventually learns the truth and becomes his ally. In episode 14, it is revealed that she accompanied Takeshi on his quest to defeat Shocker activities in Europe.
* {{nihongo|Hiromi Nohara|野原 ひろみ|Nohara Hiromi|1-25 & 34}}: Ruriko's fellow student, who works as a waitress at Snack Amigo.
* {{nihongo|Shiro|史郎|Shirō|2-15}}: A bartender at Snack Amigo.
* {{nihongo|Rider Girls|ライダーガールズ|Raidā Gāruzu}}: Female members of the Tachibana Racing Club who assist both Kamen Riders.
** {{nihongo|Yuri|ユリ||14-98}}: Hiromi's friend who is a first-degree black belt in karate.
** {{nihongo|Mari|マリ||14-25 & 29-38}}: Hiromi's friend who has experience in fencing.
** {{nihongo|Michi|ミチ||14-25}}: Hiromi's friend who has experience in [[aikido]] and is a small-displacement rider.
** {{nihongo|Emi|エミ||40-68}}: Takeshi's assistant from Switzerland who has experience in aikido.
** {{nihongo|Mika|ミカ||40-52}}: Takeshi's assistant from Switzerland who is good at fortune-telling by playing cards.
** {{nihongo|Tokko|トッコ||53-69}}: She is in charge of cooking in the Tachibana Racing Club.
** {{nihongo|Yokko|ヨッコ||70-98}}: After the Kamen Rider Kid Corps was set up, she was in charge of communication and administration.
** {{nihongo|Choko|チョコ||70-98}}: She likes food.
* {{nihongo|Goro Ishikura|石倉 五郎|Ishikura Gorō|14-65}}: A bright boy who frequents the Tachibana Racing Club.
* {{nihongo|Kamen Rider Kid Corps|少年仮面ライダー隊|Shōnen Kamen Raidā-tai}}: A nationwide organization, with Tobei as the president and Kazuya as the captain, that is composed of boys and girls in episode 74.
** {{nihongo|Naoki & Mitsuru|ナオキ&ミツル||62-98}}: Boys who serve as leading members.


==History==
=== Shocker ===
{{nihongo|Shocker|ショッカー|Shokkā}} is a terrorist organization formed by former Nazis. Shocker's goal is to conquer the world. To this end, their scientists turn humans into superhuman cyborgs by surgically altering them with animal and insect DNA with robotic cybernetics. Virtually all of its members are modified the same way. Even a Shocker Combatant is tougher, faster, and stronger than an ordinary human civilian. The original manga showed that Shocker had influence over the governments of the world. Its founders had ties to the [[Nazis]], [[Illuminati]] and the [[Kamen Rider Spirits]] manga makes references to the group's support by the Badan Empire.
===[[Shōwa era|Shōwa]] era===
In 1970, Toei producer {{Nihongo|Toru Hirayama|平山 亨|Hirayama Tōru}} proposed a "Masked Hero Project", which he approached [[Shotaro Ishinomori]] to provide character designs for. This became ''[[Kamen Rider (1971 TV series)|Kamen Rider]]'', which premiered on April 3, 1971 initially intended as an adaptation of Ishinomori's ''[[Skull Man]]'' manga. He and Hirayama redesigned the main character to resemble a [[grasshopper]]. The hero Takeshi Hongo/Kamen Rider, played by actor and stuntman [[Hiroshi Fujioka]], was described as a {{Nihongo|transformed human|改造人間|kaizō ningen}} (cyborg). During the filming of episode 10, Fujioka was thrown from his motorcycle during a stunt and broke both legs. Although most staff wanted Hongo to be killed off, Hirayama opposed it, saying "We can't destroy the children's dreams of being almighty."<ref>{{cite book|title=Kamen Rider Encyclopaedia 2000}}</ref> His character was thus temporarily phased out until the introduction of another transformed human, Hayato Ichimonji/Kamen Rider 2 (played by Takeshi Sasaki) was introduced in episode 14. Hongo (Fujioka) was reintroduced in episode 40, and by episode 53, had fully replaced Ichimonji's character until the two were united in episodes 72, 73, 93, 94 - and the series finale - episode 98.


Ruthless and merciless, Shocker would often kidnap prominent scientists and force them to work for the organization, then kill them when their usefulness was at an end, or if they attempted to escape. The decision to kidnap and modify college student Takeshi Hongo proved to be their undoing. He was intended to be another of Shocker's powerful cyborg warriors, a grasshopper-human hybrid, but he escaped and opposed them as Kamen Rider 1. A later attempt to create a second, more powerful Kamen Rider backfired when the intended victim, Hayato Ichimonji, was rescued by the original Rider before he was brainwashed. Hayato joined Takeshi as Kamen Rider 2. The pair, known as the Double Riders, put an end to Shocker, and later its remnants, who formed Gelshocker after their disbandment.
The series from April 1971 to January 1976 (''Kamen Rider'', ''[[Kamen Rider V3|V3]]'', ''[[Kamen Rider X|X]]'', ''[[Kamen Rider Amazon|Amazon]]'', ''[[Kamen Rider Stronger|Stronger]]'') included a recurring mentor, [[Tobei Tachibana]], and also featured regular team-ups with each protagonist, with the exception of ''Amazon'', with Hirayama stating "I was planning to save it until the next development, so I thought it was not necessary for a while, but the cancellation was decided." After a four-year hiatus following the finale of ''[[Kamen Rider Stronger]]'', the series returned to broadcast television in October 1979 for two years with ''[[Kamen Rider (1979 TV series)|The New Kamen Rider]]'' (featuring [[Skyrider (Kamen Rider)|Skyrider]]) and ''[[Kamen Rider Super-1]]''. This was initiated by Hirayama studying the recent trend in [[Science fiction|science fiction]] productions and discussing ideas with fans. In these shows, Tachibana was replaced by a similar character named {{Nihongo|Genjiro Tani|谷 源次郎|Tani Genjirō}}. The annual new shows ended briefly during the 1980s, punctuated by the 1984 [[Kamen Rider ZX]] special ''[[Birth of the 10th! Kamen Riders All Together!!]]'' (Hirayama's last project for the franchise).


In ''[[OOO, Den-O, All Riders: Let's Go Kamen Riders]]'', Shocker, although with a membership and leadership covering Gelshocker members from the original TV series, obtained a Core Medal and modified it into the Shocker Medal. Though they were originally unable to use it, the appearance of the Greed Ankh in their time enabled the organization to obtain one of his Cell Medals and create the Shocker Greed. This altered time so that Shocker defeated the Double Riders and managed to conquer all of Japan and eventually the world, setting up a union with many of the other organizations that originally emerged after Shocker's destruction. The group is ultimately defeated by the Kamen Riders.
''[[Kamen Rider Black]]'' premiered in 1987, the first series since ''Amazon'' not hinting at a relationship to its predecessors. ''Black'' was the first show in the franchise with a direct sequel: ''[[Kamen Rider Black RX]]'', the basis of Saban's Americanized ''[[Masked Rider (TV series)|Masked Rider]]''. In ''RX''{{'s}} finale, the ten previous Riders returned to help Black RX defeat the Crisis Empire. ''Kamen Rider Black RX'' was the final show produced during the Shōwa era, with the franchise resuming production by the end of the 20th century. A manga of ''Kamen Rider Black'' was a novelization and reimagination of the ''Black''-''RX'' series' continuity. Absent from television during the 1990s, the franchise was kept alive by stage shows, musical CDs, and the ''[[Shin Kamen Rider: Prologue|Shin]]'', ''[[Kamen Rider ZO|ZO]]'', and ''[[Kamen Rider J|J]]'' films.{{citation needed|date=January 2021}}


But as revealed in ''Kamen Rider OOO'' onwards, there are some surviving members of the Shocker organization, even from Badan Empire who went into hiding to gather data of the Kamen Riders' battles against some of their respective monsters many years ago. But during the events of ''[[Super Hero Taisen GP: Kamen Rider 3]]'', Shocker's remaining scientists created a History Modification Machine that they use to send a time displaced cyborg called Kamen Rider Three back in time to destroy the Double Riders in the aftermath of Gelshocker's defeat, creating a new timeline where Shocker rules the world with some Kamen Riders in their service. Luckily, the apparent destruction of the History Modification Machine restores the timeline (with the exception of [[List of Kamen Rider Drive characters#Go Shijima|Go Shijima/Kamen Rider Mach]] who was killed by Cheetahkatatsumuri), only to be found out during the events of ''D-Video Special: Kamen Rider Four'' that Shocker secretly uses it to create time loops and alters the timeline once more, allowing to create Kamen Rider Four, as well as the revelation that they have been targeting [[List of Kamen Rider 555 characters#Takumi Inui|Takumi Inui]], due to his sacrifice-less wish to ensure that no one dies like what happened to one of his old allies to create a loop. As Takumi is about to destroy the machine, the Shocker Leader appears with an appearance identical to Takumi's. In the end, Takumi destroys the machine and disappears alongside the modified timeline, restored back to its original timeline once more. Though most of his allies who do not originate from the ''Kamen Rider 555'' TV series like from ''[[Kamen Rider Drive]]'', and even ''[[Kamen Rider Den-O]]'''s [[Kamen Rider Zeronos]] don't remember if they had encountered Takumi, only some of Takumi's old friends from the ''Kamen Rider 555'' TV series, including Naoya Kaido still remember Takumi.
===[[Heisei era|Heisei]] era===
====Phase 1====
Toei announced a new project, ''[[Kamen Rider Kuuga]]'', in May 1999. ''Kuuga'' was part of Ishinomori's 1997 Kamen Rider revival in preparation for its 30th anniversary, but he died before the shows materialized. During the summer of 1999, Kuuga was promoted in magazine advertisements and TV commercials. On January 30, 2000, ''Kamen Rider Kuuga'' premiered with newcomer [[Joe Odagiri]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.honda.co.jp/customer/tips/kamen-rider/index.html|title=Honda {{!}} お客様相談センター {{!}} 仮面ライダーのバイク|access-date=2008-11-20|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110501091935/http://www.honda.co.jp/customer/tips/kamen-rider/index.html|archive-date=2011-05-01|url-status=dead}}</ref> Following ''Kuuga''{{'s}} 2001 sequel ''[[Kamen Rider Agito]]'', the series deviated into a series of unconnected stories starting from ''[[Kamen Rider Ryuki]]'' in 2002 to ''[[Kamen Rider Kabuto]]'' in 2006.


In the movie ''Kamen Rider 1'', there is a civil war between the original Shocker and a newly formed organization called Nova Shocker in an attempt to kidnap Mayu, Tobei Tachibana's granddaughter, and release the Alexander Gamma Eyecon from her body, in order to obtain its power. As all of the revived Ambassador Hell's Shocker faction had been annihilated completely, leaving only himself, and also after he witnessed how dangerous the Alexander Gamma Eyecon is, he makes an uneasy alliance with Kamen Riders Ghost, Specter and a newly improved Kamen Rider 1.
In 2005, ''[[Kamen Rider: The First]]'' was produced. Written by [[Toshiki Inoue]], the film reimagines the manga and original television series and characters from the original series had their storylines altered to fit the film's time span. [[Masaya Kikawada]] played [[Kamen Rider 1|Takeshi Hongo/Kamen Rider 1]] and [[Hassei Takano]] (previously [[Kamen Rider Raia|Miyuki Tezuka/Kamen Rider Raia]] in ''[[Kamen Rider Ryuki]]'') was [[Kamen Rider 2|Hayato Ichimonji/Kamen Rider 2]]. This was followed in 2007 by ''[[Kamen Rider The Next]]'', an adaptation of ''[[Kamen Rider V3]]'' starring [[Kazuki Kato]] (previously [[Kamen Rider Drake|Daisuke Kazama/Kamen Rider Drake]] in ''[[Kamen Rider Kabuto]]'') as [[Kamen Rider V3 (character)|Shiro Kazami/Kamen Rider V3]] and with Kikawada and Takano reprising their roles.{{citation needed|date=January 2021}}


* {{nihongo|Shocker Leader|ショッカー首領|Shokkā Shuryō}}: The high ruler of the organization and main antagonist of the series. He appears for the first time in short video footage shown in episode 34, although his appearance there is mostly hidden by shadows. He talks with his followers through speakers on Shocker's emblems in the multiple outposts. The Shocker Leader is a cruel being who does not have qualms in sacrificing his minions during moments of crisis or failure.<ref name="KREpisode80">Kamen Rider Episode 80</ref> The Shocker Leader would later become the {{nihongo|Gel-Shocker Leader|ゲルショッカー首領|Gerushokkā Shuryō}} when Shocker merges with Geldam to form Gel-Shocker. He takes various forms, his first being a cyclopean [[gorgon]] in crimson robes in the original series, his second being a skeletal creature in ''[[Kamen Rider V3]]'', following a skull-faced insect who leads a mini-restoration of Shocker known as Black Satan, and his true form is known as the {{nihongo|Great Leader Rock|岩石大首領|Ganseki Daishuryō}} in ''[[Kamen Rider Stronger]]'' where he is a giant humanoid rock man controlled by a large one-eyed cybernetic brain.
The eighth series, ''[[Kamen Rider Den-O]]'', followed in 2007. It differed from past Kamen Rider series with the main protagonist being unsure of himself and uses a large vehicle, the DenLiner: a time traveling [[shinkansen|bullet train]]. Although the series has only two riders (Den-O and Zeronos), they have multiple forms similar to Black RX, Kuuga, and Agito. Due to ''Den-O''{{'s}} popularity, a second film crossover with the 2008 series ''[[Kamen Rider Kiva]]'' was released on April 12, 2008. The top film in its opening weekend,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://movie.goo.ne.jp/ranking/boxoffice/20080415.html|title=映画興行成績ランキング – goo 映画|access-date=2008-04-15|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090328190631/http://movie.goo.ne.jp/ranking/boxoffice/20080415.html|archive-date=2009-03-28|url-status=dead}}</ref> it grossed [[Japanese yen|¥]]730 million.<ref name="Variety">{{cite web|url=http://www.varietyjapan.com/news/movie_dom/2k1u7d00000dcmlm.html|title=バラエティ・ジャパン {{!}} 佐藤健「電王」3度目映画化に「一番面白い」|access-date=2008-09-26}}</ref> In addition, [[Animate (retailer)|Animate]] produced an [[original video animation|OVA]], ''Imagin Anime'', with [[super-deformed|SD]] versions of the [[Imagin]]. A third film, ''[[Saraba Kamen Rider Den-O: Final Countdown]]'' (with two new riders) serves as a series epilogue.<ref name="Variety" /> According to [[Takeru Satoh]], who played the titular protagonist in the television series and first three films, ''Den-O'' was successful because of its humor.<ref name="Sanspo">{{cite web|url=http://www.sanspo.com/geino/news/080926/gnj0809261105021-n1.htm |title=佐藤健、「仮面ライダー電王」人気の秘密は… - 芸能 - SANSPO.COM |access-date=2008-09-26 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080929040435/http://www.sanspo.com/geino/news/080926/gnj0809261105021-n1.htm |archive-date=September 29, 2008 }}</ref>
* {{nihongo|Colonel Zol/Wolf-Man|ゾル大佐/狼男|Zoru-taisa/Ōkami Otoko|26-39, ''Kamen Rider vs. Shocker'' & ''V3'' 27 & 28}} (a.k.a. {{nihongo|Golden Wolf-Man|黄金狼男|Ōgon Ōkami Otoko}}): From Shocker's Near and Middle East Branch, his true form was a [[wolf]]-like monster. He was also a disguise specialist, able to mimic Taki's appearance almost perfectly using only makeup during his debut. His personal mark, worn by the Combatants of his own Shocker outpost and used in his official correspondence, was the Shocker emblem, but with the bird's head replaced by a wolf's.<ref name="ZolMark">Kamen Rider Episode 39</ref> He confronted Kamen Rider 2 himself in episode 39 and after a lengthy fight was toppled off a cliff by Kamen Rider 2's Rider Punch, destroying him. Gold Wolf-Man briefly appeared in Kamen Rider vs Shocker among the members of the resurrected monster army. In ''[[Kamen Rider V3]]'', episode 27, Colonel Zol is resurrected alongside the other three great Shocker and Gelshocker commanders from the original TV series by Destron. He aims to become a Destron commander, replacing Doctor G. However, in episode 28, after Kamen Rider V3 escaped from Destron's base, a self-destruction sequence was activated, and Colonel Zol was unable to escape, dying again with it. In the Kamen Rider Spirits manga, he is revived with other Shocker commanders as a soulless pawn of the Badan Empire.
* {{nihongo|Doctor Death/Ikadevil|死神博士/イカデビル|Shinigami-hakase/Ikadebiru|40-52, ''Kamen Rider vs. Shocker'', 61, 63 & 68, ''V3'' 27 & 28, ''Decade: All Riders vs Great-Shocker'' & ''Let's Go Kamen Riders''}}: From Shocker's branch in Switzerland, he took over Japan's command after Zol's death until Ambassador Hell appeared. However, he returned to Japan in episode 61, working together with Ambassador Hell and also attempting his own plans. He had cold and calculating behavior. In episode 68, he captured Tobei to help train him for his battle with Kamen Rider 1, but that only resulted in Tobei learning about his weak point, his head. Discarding his cape when he faced Takeshi for the last time, Death assumed his [[squid]]-like monster form to fight Rider 1 with his tentacle whip, while Taki was held off by the Shocker Combatants. With Tobei's guidance, Kamen Rider 1 managed to overpower Ikadevil and weaken him with a Rider Chop before sending Squiddevil falling to his death with his Rider Drill Shoot. Ikadevil tried to rise once more, only to fall down and explode. Doctor Death was resurrected by Destron in ''Kamen Rider V3'', episode 27, and speculated about how he had been brought back to replace Doctor G, only to learn that he was there just for a new operation. Shortly afterwards, in episode 28, he died when Destron's base accidentally self-destructed. He is revived as a soulless pawn of the Badan Empire alongside Colonel Zol and Ambassador Hell in the Kamen Rider Spirits manga.
* {{nihongo|Ambassador Hell/Garagaranda|地獄大使/ガラガランダ|Jigoku-taishi/Garagaranda|53-62, 64-67, ''Kamen Rider vs. Ambassador Hell'' & 69-79, ''V3'' 27 & 28, ''Decade: All Riders vs Great-Shocker'' & ''Let's Go Kamen Riders''}}: Summoned from Shocker's branch in Southeast Asia, he took command of the organisation in Japan. His true name was {{nihongo|Damon|ダモン}} according to [[Kamen Rider Spirits]]. He used an electromagnetic whip and an iron claw as his weapons. In episode 79, after capturing the Riders' friends, he called Hongo out as he assumed his [[rattlesnake]]-like monster form, able to burrow underground and use his whip arm as a weapon. Kamen Rider 1 battled Garagaranda while Kazuya freed Tobei and the others, managing to use his Rider Kick on the monster. Reverting to his normal form, Hell cursed the Riders and screamed to Shocker's perseverance before he died, exploding. Afterwards, the Shocker Leader destroyed the original Shocker. In spite of his failure, Ambassador Hell was resurrected by Destron in ''Kamen Rider V3'', episode 27. In episode 28, his sneaky behavior ended up leading to the prisoner V3 capturing him and escaping from the Destron base. Soon afterwards, Ambassador Hell returned to the base, only to die in its self-destruction. Ambassador Hell returns in the Kamen Rider Spirits manga, working for the Badan Empire. But his difference among the other revived members is that he had his own consciousness, and it is revealed that the Silver Skull used to revive him is capable of bringing back the dead person's memories. In ''[[Kamen Rider ZX]]'', the Ambassador of Darkness, Ambassador Hell's younger cousin, appeared as a Badan Empire leader.
* {{nihongo|Shocker Combatants|ショッカー戦闘員|Shokkā Sentōin}}: Black uniformed soldiers, some of the later versions having skeleton markings on their torsos. They are normally easily defeated by the Riders, often without even needing to transform. Their trademark is a high-pitched battle-cry.
* {{nihongo|Big Machine|ビッグマシン|Biggu Mashin}}: A character who only appears in Ishinomori's original Kamen Rider manga. Big Machine is Shocker's highest commander and main antagonist in the manga. He also seems to be the one called "Shocker Leader" by some of the lower ranking Shocker members. He has a fully mechanized body and is behind Shocker's "October Project", which involves using a supercomputer to brainwash the population of Japan. He's able to match up the Riders in combat and launch attacks that disrupt electronic equipment, including Rider 1's and 2's own bodies. The design of his body was the base of Ambassador Hell's design in the TV show, although it was altered to allow a human face and, unlike Big Machine, Ambassador Hell was kept a separate character from the Shocker Leader. In ''[[Kamen Rider × Super Sentai: Superhero Taisen]]'', Big Machine is reimagined as a project of the Shocker/Zangyack Alliance to create a giant robot from the Crisis Fortress and the [[Space Empire Zangyack|Gigant Horse]].


==== Shocker Kaijin ====
The 2009 series, ''[[Kamen Rider Decade]]'', commemorated the Heisei run's 10th anniversary with its protagonist able to assume the forms of his predecessors. Japanese recording artist [[Gackt]] performed the series' opening theme, "[[Journey through the Decade]]", and the film's theme song ("[[The Next Decade]]") and jokingly expressed interest in playing a villain on the show.<ref name="Gackt">{{cite web|url=http://www.oricon.co.jp/news/confidence/61028/full/|title=Gackt、必殺技"投げキッス"で仮面ライダー出演を熱望 ニュース-ORICON STYLE-|access-date=2008-12-12}}</ref> Also announced in 2009 was a fourth ''Den-O'' film<ref name="yongo">{{cite web|url=http://animeanime.jp/news/archives/2009/01/post_649.html|title=全国映画概況発表会見で、「仮面ライダー電王」新作発表?|access-date=2009-01-30|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090131230227/http://animeanime.jp/news/archives/2009/01/post_649.html|archive-date=2009-01-31}}</ref> (later revealed as the beginning of the [[Cho-Den-O Series]] of films),<ref name="mainichi">{{cite web|url=http://mainichi.jp/enta/mantan/graph/anime/20090209/|title=仮面ライダー電王: 映画「超・電王」で復活 アッキーナ出演も佐藤健は… – 毎日jp(毎日新聞)|access-date=2009-02-10|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090210071737/http://mainichi.jp/enta/mantan/graph/anime/20090209/|archive-date=2009-02-10}}</ref> starting with ''[[Cho Kamen Rider Den-O & Decade Neo Generations: The Onigashima Warship]]''. In the March 2009 issue of ''Kindai'' magazine, ''Decade'' star [[Masahiro Inoue]] said that the series was scheduled for only 30 episodes.{{citation needed|date=January 2021}}
The Shocker Kaijin are monsters used by Shocker who are formerly humans who were enhanced with animal DNA and cybernetics.


* {{nihongo|Spider Man|蜘蛛男|Kumo Otoko|1, 13, Rider vs Shocker}} – A [[spider]] kaijin with heightened strength and agility. Spider Man was responsible for the capture of Takeshi Hongo, who would later become the first Kamen Rider. Not to be confused with the Marvel Comics character [[Spider-Man|with a similar name]].
====Phase 2====
* {{nihongo|Bat Man|蝙蝠男|Kōmori Otoko|2, 13, Rider vs Shocker}} (a.k.a. {{nihongo|Human Bat|人間蝙蝠|Ningen Kōmori}}) - A [[bat]] monster. Not to be confused with [[Batman|the similarly named DC Comics character]].
Advertisements in May, June, and July 2009 promoted the debut of ''[[Kamen Rider W]]'',<ref name="tvkun809"/> who first appeared at the 10th-anniversary Masked Rider Live event<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/decade/liveshow/index.html|title=10th Anniversary ProjectMASKED RIDER LIVE & SHOW〜十年祭〜{{!}}テレビ朝日{{!}}仮面ライダーディケイド|access-date=2009-06-10}}</ref> and was featured in ''[[Kamen Rider Decade: All Riders vs. Dai-Shocker]]''. The staff of ''W'' said that they planned to make 10 more years of Kamen Rider, differentiating subsequent series from the ''Kuuga'' through ''Decade'' period (including a new broadcast season from September of one year to about August of the next). The hero of ''Kamen Rider W'' is the first Kamen Rider to transform from two people at once,<ref name="tvkun809">''Telebikun'' August 2009</ref> and the series premiered on September 6, 2009.<ref>''Uchuusen'' No. 125</ref> Continuing into 2010 with ''[[Kamen Rider × Kamen Rider W & Decade: Movie War 2010]]'', ''W'' ran from September 2009 to September 2010 instead of from January to January. The second, third, and fourth films of the Cho-Den-O series, collectively known as ''[[Kamen Rider × Kamen Rider × Kamen Rider The Movie: Cho-Den-O Trilogy]]'', were also released in 2010.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sponichi.co.jp/entertainment/news/2010/03/05/03.html|title=「ライダー電王」映画第5弾は豪華3連発!(芸能) ― スポニチ Sponichi Annex ニュース|date=2010-03-05|access-date=2010-03-05|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100307101152/http://www.sponichi.co.jp/entertainment/news/2010/03/05/03.html|archive-date=2010-03-07}}</ref> Late 2010 brought the series ''[[Kamen Rider OOO]]'' to television after ''W''{{'}}s finale, and 2011 observed the 40th anniversary of the franchise. Festivities that year included the [[Kamen Rider Girls]] [[Japanese idol|idol group]], the film ''[[OOO, Den-O, All Riders: Let's Go Kamen Riders]]'' (released on April 1) and ''OOO''{{'}}s successor, ''[[Kamen Rider Fourze]]'', which references the previous heroes in its characters' names and its plot. A crossover film, ''[[Kamen Rider × Super Sentai: Super Hero Taisen]]'', was released in 2012 featuring the heroes of all ''Kamen Rider'' and ''[[Super Sentai]]'' series to date.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sponichi.co.jp/entertainment/news/2011/12/04/kiji/K20111204002166930.html|title=ライダーと戦隊ものが初共演 ヒーロー240人大集結 ― スポニチ Sponichi Annex ニュース|date=2011-12-04|access-date=2011-12-04}}</ref>
* {{nihongo|Scorpion Man|さそり男|Sasori Otoko|3, 13, Rider vs Shocker}} (a.k.a. {{nihongo|Scorpion Human|さそり人間|Sasori Ningen}}) - A [[scorpion]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Sarracenian|サラセニアン|Sarasenian|4, 13, 27, Rider vs Shocker}} (a.k.a. {{nihongo|Sarracenia Human|サラセニア人間|Sarasenia Ningen}}) - A [[sarracenia]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Mantis Man|かまきり男|Kamakiri Otoko|5, 13}} - A [[mantis]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Grimreaper Chameleon|死神カメレオン|Shinigami Kamereon|6-7, 13, Rider vs Shocker}} (a.k.a. {{nihongo|Chameleon Man|カメレオン男|Kamereon Otoko}}) - A [[chameleon]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Wasp Woman|蜂女|Hachi Onna|8, 13, Kamen Rider: Seigi No keifu}} - A female [[bee]] monster armed with a rapier as her weapon.
* {{nihongo|Cobra Man|コブラ男|Kobura Otoko|9}} - A [[cobra]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Gebacondor|ゲバコンドル|Gebakondoru|11, 13, 27, Rider vs Shocker}} - A [[condor]] monster.ider vs Shocker movie, but did not actually have an active participation there.
* {{nihongo|Yamogeras|ヤモゲラス|Yamogerasu|12, 13, Rider vs Shocker}} - A [[gecko]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Tokageron|トカゲロン|Tokageron|13}} - Originally an arrogant soccer player named {{nihongo|Ken Nomoto|野本健|Nomoto Ken}}, he fell into Shocker's sights due to his leg strength. Though he escapes Grimreaper Chameleon, Nomoto is captured by Spider Man as he was then converted into a [[lizard]] cyborg. Retaining his arrogance, Togakeron is used in Shocker's scheme down the Tokyo Atomic Energy lab's barrier with Shocker's "Barrier Destruction Ball" bomb for the {{nihongo|Revived Kaijin Corps|再生怪人軍団|Saisei Kaijin Gundan|13}} to storm in and get the materials within. Though he defeats Kamen Rider #1's Rider Kick, Hongo musters the new Lightning Rider Kick and uses it to kick the Barrier Destruction Ball back to Tokageron and the defeated Revived Kaijin Corps, destroying them all as the bomb detonates.
* {{nihongo|Saboteguron|サボテグロン|Saboteguron|14-15, Rider vs Shocker}} - A [[cactus]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Phirasaurus|ピラザウルス|Pirazaurusu|16-17}} (a.k.a. {{nihongo|Phirasaurus Human|人間ピラザウルス|Ningen Pirazaurusu}}) – A [[piranha]]/[[dinosaur]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Hitodanger|ヒトデンジャー|Hitodenjā|18}} - A giant [[starfish]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Kanibubbler|カニバブラー|Kanibaburā|19, 37, Rider vs Shocker}} - A [[crab]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Dokugandar's Caterpillar Form|ドクガンダー|Dokugandā|20, Rider vs Shocker}} – A [[caterpillar]] monster.
** Dokugandar's Imago Form (21, Rider vs Shocker) - Dokugandar's [[moth]] monster form. The form Dokugandar took after breaking from its white cocoon.
* {{nihongo|Amazonia|アマゾニア|Amazonia|22}} - A [[piranha]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Musasabeedle|ムササビードル|Musasabīdoru|23, Rider vs Shocker, Rider vs Ambassador Hell}} - A [[Japanese giant flying squirrel]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Kinokomorgu|キノコモルグ|Kinokomorugu|24-25, Rider vs Shocker, Rider vs Ambassador Hell}} – A [[mushroom]] monster.
* Colonel Zol's Kaijin - These are the Kaijin used by Colonel Zol.
** {{nihongo|Antlion Thunder|地獄サンダー|Jigoku Sandā|26, Rider vs Shocker}} - An [[antlion]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Mukaderas|ムカデラス|Mukaderasu|27, 37, Rider vs Shocker}} - A [[centipede]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Mogurang|モグラング|Mogurangu|28, 37, 41, Rider vs Shocker}} – A [[Mole (animal)|mole]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Kuragedarl|クラゲダール|Kuragedāru|29}} - A [[jellyfish]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Zanburonzo|ザンブロンゾ|Zanburonzo|30, Rider vs Shocker, Rider vs Ambassador Hell}} - A [[trilobite]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Arigabari|アリガバリ|Arigabari|31}} - A [[giant anteater]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Dokudahlian|ドクダリアン|Dokudarian|32, Rider vs Shocker, V3 27-28}} – A [[flower]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Armadillong|アルマジロング|Arumajirongu|33, 37, 41, Rider vs Shocker}} – An [[armadillo]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Gamagirah|ガマギラー|Gamagirā|34, Rider vs Shocker}} – A [[toad]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Arikimedes|アリキメデス|Arikimedesu|35, Rider vs Shocker}} - A queen [[ant]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Egyptas|エジプタス|Ejiputasu|36}} – An Egyptian [[mummy]] altered into a [[Mummy (undead)|mummy]] monster by Shocker Japan under Colonel Zol's orders.
** {{nihongo|Torikabuto|トリカブト|Torikabuto|37, Rider vs Shocker}} – An [[aconitum]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Eiking|エイキング|Eikingu|38, Kamen Rider: Seigi No keifu, Rider vs Shocker, Rider vs Ambassador Hell}} - A [[stingray]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Wolf Man|狼男|Ōkami Otoko|39}} (a.k.a. {{nihongo|Experimental Wolf Man|実験用狼男|Jikkenyō Ōkami Otoko}}) - An experimental [[wolf]] monster created by the wolf virus.
* Doctor Death's Kaijin - These are the Kaijin used by Doctor Shinigami.
** {{nihongo|Snowman|スノーマン|Sunōman|40}} - A [[yeti]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Ghoster|ゴースター|Gōsutā|41}} - A [[magma]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Fly Man|ハエ男|Hae Otoko|42}} - A [[fly]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Pranodon|プラノドン|Puranodon|43}} - A [[pteranodon]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Kabibinga|カビビンガ|Kabibinga|44}} - A [[mold]] monster
** {{nihongo|Namekujira|ナメクジラ|Namekujira|45}} - A [[slug]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Bearkonger|ベアーコンガー|Beākongā|46}} - A [[brown bear]]/[[cougar]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Todogirah|トドギラー|Todogirā|47}} - A [[steller sea lion]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Hiruguerrilla|ヒルゲリラ|Hirugerira|48}} - A [[leech]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Isoginchak|イソギンチャック|Isoginchakku|49}} - A [[sea anemone]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Kamestone|カメストーン|Kamesutōn|50,Kamen Rider: Seigi No keifu}} - A [[turtle]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Unicornos|ユニコルノス|Yunikorunosu|51}} - A [[unicorn]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Gilgalass|ギルガラス|Girugarasu|52, Kamen Rider: Seigi No keifu}} - A [[jungle crow]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Namazugiller|ナマズギラー|Namazugirā|61, Kamen Rider: Seigi No keifu}} - An [[electric catfish]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Saigang|サイギャング|Saigyangu|63, 66}} - A [[rhinoceros]] monster.
* Ambassador Hell's Kaijin - These are the Kaijin used by Ambassador Hell.
** {{nihongo|Jaguarman|ジャガーマン|Jagāman|53, 66}} - A [[jaguar]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Sea Snake Man|海蛇男|Umihebi Otoko|54}} - A [[sea snake]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Cockroach Man|ごきぶり男|Gokiburi Otoko|55}} - A [[cockroach]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Dokumondo|ドクモンド|Dokumondo|57}} - A [[ground spider]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Poison Lizard Man|毒トカゲ男|Dokutokage Otoko|58, 66}} - A [[Frill-necked Lizard|frilled lizard]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Earthworm Man|ミミズ男|Mimizu Otoko|59}} - An [[earthworm]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Owl Man|フクロウ男|Fukurō Otoko|60}} - An [[owl]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Harinezuras|ハリネズラス|Harinezurasu|62, 66}} - A [[hedgehog]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Semiminga|セミミンガ|Semiminga|64, Kamen Rider: Seigi No keifu}} - A [[cicada]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Kabutorong|カブトロング|Kabutorongu|65}} - A [[Japanese rhinoceros beetle]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Kamikirikid|カミキリキッド|Kamikirikiddo|66, Kamen Rider: Seigi No keifu}} - A [[longhorn beetle]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Girizames|ギリザメス|Girizamesu|67}} - A [[sawshark]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Gillerkorogi|ギラーコオロギ|Girākōrogi|69}} - A [[cricket (insect)|cricket]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Elekibotaru|エレキボタル|Erekibotaru|70}} - A [[firefly]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Abugomens|アブゴメス|Abugomesu|71}} - A [[horse-fly]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Mosquiras|モスキラス|Mosukirasu|72}} - A [[mosquito]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Shiomaneking|シオマネキング|Shiomanekingu|72-73, V3 27-28}} - A [[fiddler crab]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Shiracuras|シラキュラス|Shirakyurasu|74}} - A [[crab louse]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Bararanga|バラランガ|Bararanga|75}} - A [[rose]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Seadragon I|シードラゴンⅠ世|Shīdoragon Issei|76}} - A [[seahorse]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Seadragon II|シードラゴンⅡ世|Shīdoragon Nisei|76}} - A seahorse monster.
** {{nihongo|Seadragon III|シードラゴンⅢ世|Shīdoragon Sansei|76}} - A seahorse monster.
** {{nihongo|Imoriges|イモリゲス|Imorigesu|77, V3 27-28}} - A [[newt]] monster.
** {{nihongo|Unidogma|ウニドグマ|Unidoguma|78, V3 27-28}} - A [[sea urchin]] monster.


=== Gel-Shocker ===
With ''Fourze''{{'}}s run complete in 2012, ''[[Kamen Rider Wizard]]'' premiered; its protagonist was the first Kamen Rider to use magic.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.oricon.co.jp/news/movie/2013520/full/ |title=『仮面ライダー』最新作は初の"魔法使い" (白石隼也) ニュース-ORICON STYLE |publisher=Oricon.co.jp |date=2012-06-27 |access-date=2013-06-13}}</ref> ''Wizard'' additionally had the first homosexual character and cast member with [[Kaba-chan]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://hochi.yomiuri.co.jp/entertainment/news/20120824-OHT1T00029.htm |title=KABA.ちゃんが新ライダー援護!シリーズ初の"おネエキャラ":芸能:スポーツ報知 |publisher=Hochi.yomiuri.co.jp |date=2012-08-24 |access-date=2013-06-13 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120829184756/http://hochi.yomiuri.co.jp/entertainment/news/20120824-OHT1T00029.htm |archive-date=2012-08-29 }}</ref> ''[[Kamen Rider × Super Sentai × Space Sheriff: Super Hero Taisen Z]]'', a sequel to 2012's ''Super Hero Taisen'' with the revived [[Metal Hero Series]] characters from ''[[Space Sheriff Gavan: The Movie]]'' and other characters created by Shotaro Ishinomori appearing in ''[[Kamen Rider × Kamen Rider Wizard & Fourze: Movie War Ultimatum]]'', was released in 2013.{{citation needed|date=January 2021}}
{{nihongo|Gel-Shocker|ゲルショッカー|Gerushokkā}} was formed after the disbandment of Shocker, with the remnants of the organization absorbing another organization {{nihongo|Geldam|ゲルダム団|Gerudamu-dan}} trained in the deserts of Africa. After Ambassador Hell's defeat, the Shocker Leader reorganized the organization from the ground up, destroying all remaining secret bases and even killing the remaining troop contingent in a bloody forest massacre witnessed by unfortunate campers.


* {{nihongo|General Black|ブラック将軍|Burakku-shōgun}}: The leader of Gel-Shocker. General Black is a commander originally from Geldam who had a monstrous [[leech]]/[[chameleon]] hybrid form called {{nihongo|Hilchameleon|ヒルカメレオン|Hirukamereon}} who had the ability to suck blood by hugging humans, which was later used to revive Gel-Shocker monsters after already being defeated by the Double Riders, throwing leeches which cause the target to follow his orders and turn himself invisible. Later, he fought the Double Riders on a roller coaster and was defeated by their Rider Double Chop while turning invisible. Weakened, he reverted to his human form and cursed the Double Riders before exploding. Eventually, General Black was resurrected and worked for Destron in an important operation but ended up dying in the self-destruction of a Destron base. Black returned as a soulless pawn of the Badan Empire in the Kamen Rider Spirits manga, but he was defeated by a Rider Double Kick performed by Kamen Riders 2 and ZX.
On May 20, 2013, Toei filed for several trademarks on the phrase {{nihongo3||仮面ライダー鎧武(ガイム)|Kamen Raidā Gaimu}}.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www6.ipdl.inpit.go.jp/Syouhyou/shcontentdb.ipdl?N0000=20&N0005=LtsFvSJP6A4ztp7CrY4q&N0400=text/html&N0401=/TD2/web030/20130613142229161938.body&N0703=1&N0347=&N0348=&N0349=&N0704=2JP4%202013037689 |archive-url=https://www.webcitation.org/6HL0BCULH?url=http://www6.ipdl.inpit.go.jp/Syouhyou/shcontentdb.ipdl?N0000=20&N0005=LtsFvSJP6A4ztp7CrY4q&N0400=text%2Fhtml&N0401=%2FTD2%2Fweb030%2F20130613142229161938.body&N0703=1&N0347=&N0348=&N0349=&N0704=2JP4%202013037689 |archive-date=2013-06-13 |title=商願2013-37690 |publisher=[[Japan Patent Office]] |access-date=2013-06-13 |url-status=dead }}</ref> ''[[Kamen Rider Gaim]]'' previewed on July 25, 2013, revealing a [[Sengoku period]] and [[fruit]]-themed motif to the series' multiple-rival Kamen Riders and [[Gen Urobuchi]] as the series' main writer.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.oricon.co.jp/news/entertainment/2026955/full/ |title=新生『仮面ライダーガイム』はフルーツと戦国武将が合体 ジュノンボーイ佐野岳が初主演 ニュース-ORICON STYLE |publisher=Oricon.co.jp |date=2013-07-25 |access-date=2013-07-25}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://mantan-web.jp/2013/07/25/20130725dog00m200031000c.html |title=仮面ライダー:最新作「鎧武/ガイム」発表 モチーフは"武将とフルーツ" – MANTANWEB(まんたんウェブ) |language=ja |publisher=Mantan-web.jp |date=2013-07-25 |access-date=2013-07-25 |archive-date=2013-08-16 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130816160439/http://mantan-web.jp/2013/07/25/20130725dog00m200031000c.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> The third entry in the ''Super Hero Taisen'' film series, ''[[Heisei Rider vs. Shōwa Rider: Kamen Rider Taisen feat. Super Sentai]]'', marked the 15th anniversary of the Heisei Kamen Rider era and revolved around a conflict between the 15 Heisei Riders and the 15 Showa Riders with Kamen Rider Fifteen, and a cameo appearance by the [[Ressha Sentai ToQger|ToQgers]] and the [[Zyuden Sentai Kyoryuger|Kyoryugers]]. It also marked the start of a yearly {{nihongo3|''Spring Break Combined Special''|春休み合体スペシャル|Haruyasumi Gattai Supesharu}} involving each year's Kamen Rider teaming up with the current Super Sentai team in a story tying into that year's entry in the ''Super Hero Taisen'' movie series. ''Gaim'' was followed in 2014 by ''[[Kamen Rider Drive]]'', the first Kamen Rider since Kamen Rider Black RX (who also used a motorcycle), to use a car instead of a motorcycle.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.oricon.co.jp/news/2041459/full/|title=「仮面ライダー」が"禁じ手" バイク捨て、車に乗る刑事ライダー登場 (内田理央) ニュース-ORICON STYLE-|date=2014-08-28|access-date=2014-08-28}}</ref><ref name="47 news 1">{{cite web|url=http://www.47news.jp/topics/entertainment/oricon/movie_anime/151802.html|title="新人俳優"竹内涼真、新仮面ライダーに抜てき「1年間、全力で」 – 映画・アニメニュース一覧 – オリコンスタイル – エンタメ – 47NEWS(よんななニュース)|date=2014-08-28|access-date=2014-08-28|archive-date=2014-09-03|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140903145448/http://www.47news.jp/topics/entertainment/oricon/movie_anime/151802.html|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="47 news 2">{{cite web|url=http://www.47news.jp/topics/entertainment/oricon/movie_anime/151797.html|title=「仮面ライダー」が"禁じ手" バイク捨て、車に乗る刑事ライダー登場 – 映画・アニメニュース一覧 – オリコンスタイル – エンタメ – 47NEWS(よんななニュース)|date=2014-08-28|access-date=2014-08-28|archive-date=2014-09-03|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140903145450/http://www.47news.jp/topics/entertainment/oricon/movie_anime/151797.html|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="mynavi">{{cite web|url=http://news.mynavi.jp/news/2014/08/28/256/|title=最新作『仮面ライダードライブ』は史上初・バイクに乗らず車に乗る刑事ライダー |publisher= マイナビニュース|date=2014-08-28|access-date=2014-08-28}}</ref><ref name="nlab">{{cite web|url=http://nlab.itmedia.co.jp/nl/articles/1408/28/news126.html|title=「仮面ライダードライブ」10月5日から バイクに乗らずに車に乗るライダー – ねとらぼ|date=2014-08-28|access-date=2014-08-28}}</ref><ref name="itmedia">{{cite web|url=http://www.itmedia.co.jp/news/articles/1408/28/news132.html|title=ねっと部:史上初、バイクに乗らない仮面ライダー「ドライブ」 初の刑事もの、「幅広い層が楽しめる作品に」 – ITmedia ニュース|date=2014-08-28|access-date=2014-08-28}}</ref><ref name="ameba">{{cite web|url=http://news.ameba.jp/20140828-495/|title=竹内涼真が新仮面ライダーに!ヒロイン役は内田理央「パンチラには細心の注意」!?『仮面ライダードライブ』制作発表 – Ameba News [アメーバニュース]|date=2014-08-28|access-date=2014-08-28|archive-date=2014-08-31|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140831152931/http://news.ameba.jp/20140828-495|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="asahi">{{cite web|url=http://www.asahi.com/and_M/interest/entertainment/Cfettp01408280041.html|title=〈速報〉新ライダー竹内「ズボンのおしり破れた」 – 日刊スポーツ芸能速報 – 朝日新聞デジタル&M|date=2014-08-28|access-date=2014-08-28}}</ref><ref name="Sponichi">{{cite web|url=http://www.sponichi.co.jp/entertainment/news/2014/08/28/kiji/K20140828008827680.html|title=竹内涼真 新ライダーはサッカー選手からの"変身"「おじが泣いて喜んだ」 ― スポニチ Sponichi Annex 芸能|date=2014-08-28|work=[[Sports Nippon]]|access-date=2014-08-28}}</ref> The fourth ''Super Hero Taisen'', ''Super Hero Taisen GP'', marks ''Kamen Rider 3''{{'s}} first live-action appearance after the ''Showa Kamen Rider'' manga. ''[[Kamen Rider Ghost]]'' was introduced in 2015. In 2016 the Kamen Rider series celebrated its 45th anniversary, and Toei released the film ''[[Kamen Rider 1 (film)|Kamen Rider 1]]'' on March 26, 2016.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.toei.co.jp/release/movie/1206733_979.html|title = 2016年は「スーパーヒーローイヤー」!仮面ライダー45周年記念超大作・映画『仮面ライダー1号』製作決定&新ビジュアル解禁!}}</ref> ''[[Kamen Rider Ex-Aid]]'' was introduced in 2016 and was the first Rider series to have a character, Kiriya Kujo, portray the main Rider's motorcycle. A Movie War film known as ''[[Kamen Rider Heisei Generations: Dr. Pac-Man vs. Ex-Aid & Ghost with Legend Rider]]'' was announced for December 10, 2016, featuring [[Bandai Namco Entertainment]]'s original character created by [[Namco]] prior to merging with [[Bandai]] in 2006, [[Pac-Man]]. Following up ''Ex-Aid's'' finale, ''[[Kamen Rider Build]]'' premiered on September 3, 2017.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.oricon.co.jp/news/2094737/|title=天才物理学者が変身 『仮面ライダービルド』9・3スタート|work=ORICON NEWS|access-date=2017-09-21|language=ja-JP}}</ref> The twentieth and last series of the Heisei era, ''[[Kamen Rider Zi-O]],'' which commemorates the 20th anniversary of the Heisei era, premiered on September 2, 2018. On December 22, 2018, a film commemorating all the Riders of the Heisei Era titled ''[[Kamen Rider Heisei Generations Forever]]'' premiered in Japanese theaters.
* {{nihongo|Gel-Shocker Combatants|ゲルショッカー戦闘員|Geru Shokkā Sentōin}}: Gel-Shocker Combatants wore bright purple and yellow costumes, were capable of traveling from one place to another by transforming into sheets that would drop down onto unsuspecting victims, and were capable of taking more blunt abuse than their predecessors.
* {{nihongo|Shocker Riders|ショッカーライダー|Shokkā Raidā}}: There were 12 of them instead of the 6 created by Gel-Shocker that later appeared in the TV series. Hayato Ichimonji was one of them. In episode 15, Hayato had a brief flashback about his capture by Shocker. A Shocker surgeon told him that he'd become a cyborg to fight against the Kamen Rider. Afterwards, Hayato mentioned that he was saved by Kamen Rider #1, but the specific circumstances of that event are not clear.


===[[Reiwa era|Reiwa]] era===
==== Gel-Shocker Kaijin ====
The Gel-Shocker Kaijin are the Kaijin of Gel-Shocker who are hybrids of two different animals or an animal and a plant.
On May 13, 2019, Toei filed a trademark on the phrase {{nihongo4|''[[Kamen Rider Zero-One]]''|仮面ライダーゼロワン|Kamen Raidā Zerowan}}, which premiered on September 1, 2019.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://twitter.com/trademark_bot/status/1127954256294662144 |title=東映株式会社により「仮面ライダーゼロワン / KAMEN RIDER ZERO-ONE」が商標登録出願されていることが、公開商標公報から明らかになりました。出願番号は2019-54945~2019-54966です。 |author=Trademark Bot |publisher=[[Twitter]] |date=2019-05-13 |access-date=2021-09-30}}</ref> It is followed up by {{nihongo|''[[Kamen Rider Saber]]''|仮面ライダーセイバー/聖刃|Kamen Raidā Seibā}} on September 6, 2020, It is followed by {{nihongo|''[[Kamen Rider Revice]]''|仮面ライダーリバイス|Kamen Raidā Ribaisu}} on September 5, 2021
. In commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the Kamen Rider series, ''[[Neon Genesis Evangelion]]'' director [[Hideaki Anno]] was announced as the writer and director of {{nihongo4|''[[Shin Kamen Rider (film)|Shin Kamen Rider]]''|シン・仮面ライダー|Shin Kamen Raidā}}, a reimagining of the original 1971 series. It is planned for release in 2023.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://twitter.com/khara_inc/status/1378306283095347200 |title=『シン・仮面ライダー』超特報 |author=[[Khara (studio)|Khara]] |publisher=[[Twitter]] |date=2021-04-03 |access-date=2021-09-30}}</ref>


* {{nihongo|Ganikoumoru|ガニコウモル|Ganikōmoru|78-80, 97}}: A [[crab]]/[[bat]] monster who is the only monster of Geldam before it combined with the remnants of Shocker. Destroyed by Kamen Rider 1. He was later revived in a new appearance called {{nihongo|Revived Ganikoumoru|再生ガニコウモル|Saisei Ganikōmoru|97}}
The franchise's latest complete entry in the Reiwa era is {{nihongo4|''[[Kamen Rider Geats]]''|仮面ライダーギーツ|Kamen Raidā Gītsu}}, which debuted in September 2022 following the finale of ''Revice''. The series would end in 2023, with {{nihongo4|''[[Kamen Rider Gotchard]]''|仮面ライダーガッチャード|Kamen Raidā Gatchādo}} debuting following the finale as the current airing series.
* {{nihongo|Sasori Tokagues|サソリトカゲス|Sasori Tokagesu|81}}: A [[scorpion]]/[[lizard]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Kurage Wolf|クラゲウルフ|Kurage Urufu|82}}: A [[jellyfish]]/[[wolf]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Ino Kabuton|イノカブトン|83}}: A [[wild boar]]/[[Japanese rhinoceros beetle]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Isoguin Jaguar|イソギンジャガー|Isogin Jagā|84}}: A [[sea anemone]]/[[jaguar]] monster created from a man named Yosuke Katsurojou.
* {{nihongo|Utsubo Games|ウツボガメス|Utsubo Gamesu|85}}: A [[moray eel]]/[[turtle]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Washi Kamaguilli|ワシカマギリ|Washi Kamagiri|86}}: An [[eagle]]/[[mantis]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Kumo Lion|クモライオン|Kumo Raion|87}}: A [[Nephila clavata|golden silk spider]]/[[lion]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Neko Yamori|ネコヤモリ|88}}: A [[cat]]/[[gecko]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Nezcondor|ネズコンドル|Nezukondoru|89, 90}}: A [[house mouse]]/[[condor]] monster. He was later enhanced into {{nihongo|Remodeled Nezcondor|改造ネズコンドル|Kaizō Nezukondoru|90}}.
* {{nihongo|Mukade Tiger|ムカデタイガー|Mukade Taigā|91}}: A [[centipede]]/[[tiger]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Haetori Bachi|ハエトリバチ|92, 93}}: A [[Venus flytrap]]/[[bee]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Ei Dokugar|エイドクガー|Ei Dokugā|93, 94}}: A [[Batoidea|ray]]/[[moth]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Namekuji Kinoka|ナメクジキノコ|93, 94}}: A [[slug]]/[[mushroom]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Garaox|ガラオックス|Garaokkusu|95}}: A [[jungle crow]]/[[ox]] monster.
* {{nihongo|Saboten Bat|サボテンバット|Saboten Bat|96}}: A [[cactus]]/[[bat]] monster.


==Production==
== Episode list ==
# {{nihongo|The Eerie Man Spider|怪奇蜘蛛男|Kaiki Kumo Otoko}} (Original Airdate: April 3, 1971)
===Main series===
# {{nihongo|The Terrifying Man Bat|恐怖蝙蝠男|Kyōfu Kōmori Otoko}} (Original Airdate: April 10, 1971)
[[File:205-3100 m2.JPG|thumb|alt=Urban train with a Kamen rider on the front|A [[205 series]] train on the [[Senseki Line]] with ''Kamen Rider'' and other [[Shotaro Ishinomori]] character livery. The Senseki Line has a terminal in Ishinomori's hometown of [[Ishinomaki, Miyagi|Ishinomaki]], [[Miyagi Prefecture]].]]
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Scorpion Man|怪人さそり男|Kaijin Sasori Otoko}} (Original Airdate: April 17, 1971)
The following is a list of the Kamen Rider series and their broadcast years:
# {{nihongo|The Man-Eating Sarracenian|人喰いサラセニアン|Hitokui Sarasenian}} (Original Airdate: April 24, 1971)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Mantis Man|怪人かまきり男|Kaijin Kamakiri Otoko}} (Original Airdate: May 1, 1971)
# {{nihongo|The Deadly Chameleon|死神カメレオン|Shinigami Kamereon}} (Original Airdate: May 8, 1971)
# {{nihongo|The Deadly Chameleon! Showdown at the Old World's Fair!|死神カメレオン決闘!万博跡|Shinigami Kamereon Kettō! Banpaku Ato}} (Original Airdate: May 15, 1971)
# {{nihongo|The Creepy Wasp Woman!|怪異!蜂女|Kaii! Hachi Onna}} (Original Airdate: May 22, 1971)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Cobra Man|恐怖コブラ男|Kyōfu Kobura Otoko}} (Original Airdate: May 29, 1971)
# {{nihongo|The Reborn Cobra Man|よみがえるコブラ男|Yomigaeru Kobura Otoko}} (Original Airdate: June 5, 1971)
# {{nihongo|Blood-Sucking Monster Gebacondor|吸血怪人ゲバコンドル|Kyūketsu Kaijin Gebakondoru}} (Original Airdate: June 12, 1971)
# {{nihongo|The Murderous Yamogeras|殺人ヤモゲラス|Satsujin Yamogerasu}} (Original Airdate: June 19, 1971)
# {{nihongo|Tokageron and the Monster Army!|トカゲロンと怪人大軍団|Tokageron to Kaijin Dai Gundan}} (Original Airdate: June 26, 1971)
# {{nihongo|The Devilish Saboteguron Attacks!|魔人サボテグロンの襲来|Majin Saboteguron no Shūrai}} (Original Airdate: July 3, 1971)
# {{nihongo|Saboteguron Strikes Back|逆襲サボテグロン|Gyakushū Saboteguron}} (Original Airdate: July 10, 1971)
# {{nihongo|The Devil Wrestler Pirasaurus|悪魔のレスラーピラザウルス|Akuma no Resurā Pirazaurusu}} (Original Airdate: July 17, 1971)
# {{nihongo|Deathmatch in the Ring! Defeat Pirasaurus|リングの死闘倒せ!ピラザウルス|Ringu No Shitō Taose! Pirazaurusu}} (Original Airdate: July 24, 1971)
# {{nihongo|Fossil Man Hitodanger|化石男ヒトデンジャー|Kaseki-Otoko Hitodenjā}} (Original Airdate: July 31, 1971)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Kanibubbler Appears in Hokkaido|怪人カニバブラー北海道に現る|Kaijin Kanibaburā Hokkaidō ni Arawaru}} (Original Airdate: August 7, 1971)
# {{nihongo|The Fire-Breathing Caterpillar Monster, Dokugandar|火を吹く毛虫怪人ドクガンダー|Hi o Fuku Kemushi Kaijin Dokugandā}} (Original Airdate: August 14, 1971)
# {{nihongo|Dokugandar, Battle at Osaka Castle!|ドクガンダー 大阪城の対決!|Dokugandā Ōsaka-jō no Taiketsu!}} (Original Airdate: August 21, 1971)
# {{nihongo|Monstrous Merman Amazonia|怪魚人アマゾニア|Kaigyojin Amazonia}} (Original Airdate: August 28, 1971)
# {{nihongo|Soaring Monster Masasabedle|空飛ぶ怪人ムササビードル|Soratobu Kaijin Musasabīdoru}} (Original Airdate: September 4, 1971)
# {{nihongo|Poisonous Monster Kinokomorgue Attacks!|猛毒怪人キノコモルグの出撃!|Mōdoku Kaijin Kinokomorugu no Shutsugeki!}} (Original Airdate: September 11, 1971)
# {{nihongo|Defeat Kinokomorgue!|キノコモルグを倒せ!|Kinokomorugu o Taose!}} (Original Airdate: September 18, 1971)
# {{nihongo|The Terrifying Antlion Pit|恐怖のあり地獄|Kyōfu no Arijigoku}} (Original Airdate: September 25, 1971)
# {{nihongo|Mukaderas's Monster School|ムカデラス怪人教室|Mukaderasu Kaijin Kyōshitsu}} (Original Airdate: October 2, 1971)
# {{nihongo|Underground Monster Mogurang|地底怪人モグラング|Chitei Kaijin Mogurangu}} (Original Airdate: October 9, 1971)
# {{nihongo|The Electric Monster Kuragedarl|電気怪人クラゲダール|Denki Kaijin Kuragedāru}} (Original Airdate: October 16, 1971)
# {{nihongo|Reborn Fossil: The Bloodsucking Trilobite|よみがえる化石吸血三葉虫|Yomigaeru Kaseki Kyūketsu San'yōchū}} (Original Airdate: October 23, 1971)
# {{nihongo|Deathmatch! The Ant-eating Devil Arigabari|死斗!ありくい魔人アリガバリ|Shitō! Arikui Majin Arigabari}} (Original Airdate: October 30, 1971)
# {{nihongo|The Man-Eating Flower, Dokudahlian|人喰い花ドクダリアン|Hitokui Hana Dokudarian}} (Original Airdate: November 6, 1971)
# {{nihongo|Steel Monster Armadillong|鋼鉄怪人アルマジロング|Kōtetsu Kaijin Arumajirongu}} (Original Airdate: November 13, 1971)
# {{nihongo|Japan in Peril! Gamagiller's Invasion|日本危うし!ガマギラーの侵入|Nihon Ayaushi! Gamagirā no Shin'nyū}} (Original Airdate: November 20, 1971)
# {{nihongo|The Killer Queen Ant, Arikimedes|殺人女王蟻アリキメデス|Satsujin Joōari Arikimedesu}} (Original Airdate: November 27, 1971)
# {{nihongo|The Revived Mummy Monster, Egyptus|いきかえったミイラ怪人エジプタス|Ikikaetta Miira Kaijin Ejiputasu}} (Original Airdate: December 4, 1971)
# {{nihongo|Poison Gas Monster Torikabuto's Operation: G|毒ガス怪人トリカブトのG作戦|Dokugasu Kaijin Torikabuto no Jī Sakusen}} (Original Airdate: December 11, 1971)
# {{nihongo|Lightning Monster Rayking's Worldwide Blackout Operation|稲妻怪人エイキングの世界暗黒作戦|Inazuma Kaijin Eikingu no Sekai Ankoku Sakusen}} (Original Airdate: December 18, 1971)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Wolf Man's Killer Party|怪人狼男の殺人大パーティー|Kaijin Ōkami Otoko no Satsujin Dai Pātī}} (Original Airdate: December 25, 1971)
# {{nihongo|Deathmatch! The Monstrous Snowman vs. The Two Riders!|死斗!怪人スノーマン対二人のライダー|Shitō! Kaijin Sunōman Tai Futari no Raidā}} (Original Airdate: January 1, 1972)
# {{nihongo|Magma Monster Ghoster! The Great Battle of Sakurajima|マグマ怪人ゴースター 桜島大決戦|Maguma Kaijin Gōsutā Sakurajima Dai Kessen}} (Original Airdate: January 8, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Demonic Assassin, the Eerie Fly Man|悪魔の使者 怪奇ハエ男|Akuma no Shisha Kaiki Hae Otoko}} (Original Airdate: January 15, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Monster-Bird Pranodon Attacks|怪鳥人プラノドンの襲撃|Kai Chōjin Puranodon no Shūgeki}} (Original Airdate: January 22, 1972)
# {{nihongo|Graveyard Monster Kabibinga|墓場の怪人カビビンガ|Hakaba no Kaijin Kabibinga}} (Original Airdate: January 29, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Namekujira's Gas Explosion Plan|怪人ナメクジラのガス爆発作戦|Kaijin Namekujira no Gasu Bakuhatsu Sakusen}} (Original Airdate: February 5, 1972)
# {{nihongo|Showdown!! Snowy Mountain Monster Bearkonger|対決!!雪山怪人ベアーコンガー|Taiketsu!! Yukiyama Kaijin Beākongā}} (Original Airdate: February 12, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Deadly Ice Devil Todogiller|死を呼ぶ氷魔人トドギラー|Shi o Yobu Kōri Majin Todogirā}} (Original Airdate: February 19, 1972)
# {{nihongo|Hiruguerrilla of the Vampire Swamp|吸血沼のヒルゲリラ|Kyūketsu Numa no Hirugerira}} (Original Airdate: February 26, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Man-Eating Monster, Isoginchak|人喰い怪人イソギンチャック|Hitokui Kaijin Isoginchakku}} (Original Airdate: March 4, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Kamestone's Killer Aurora Plan|怪人カメストーンの殺人オーロラ計画|Kaijin Kamesutōn no Satsujin Ōrora Keikaku}} (Original Airdate: March 11, 1972)
# {{nihongo|Rock Monster Unicornos Versus the Double Rider Kick|石怪人ユニコルノス対ダブルライダーキック|Ishi Kaijin Yunikorunosu Tai Daburu Raidā Kikku}} (Original Airdate: March 18, 1972)
# {{nihongo|My Name is Monster Bird Gilgalass!|おれの名は 怪鳥人ギルガラスだ!|Ore no Na wa Kai Chōjin Girugarasu da!}} (Original Airdate: March 25, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Jaguar Man's Deadly Motorcycle Battle|怪人ジャガーマン決死のオートバイ戦|Kaijin Jagāman Kesshi Ōtobai Ikusa}} (Original Airdate: April 1, 1972)
# {{nihongo|Umihebiotoko of the Ghost Village|ユウレイ村の海蛇男|Yūrei Mura no Umihebi Otoko}} (Original Airdate: April 8, 1972)
# {{nihongo|Cockroach Man!! The Dreadful Germ-Filled Ad Balloon|ゴキブリ男!!恐怖の細菌アドバルーン|Gokiburi Otoko!! Kyōfu no Saikin Adobarūn}} (Original Airdate: April 15, 1972)
# {{nihongo|Poison Butterfly of the Amazon, Gireela|アマゾンの毒蝶ギリーラ|Amazon no Doku Chō Girīra}} (Original Airdate: April 22, 1972)
# {{nihongo|Purseweb Man Dokumondo|土ぐも男ドクモンド|Tsuchigumo Otoko Dokumondo}} (Original Airdate: April 29, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Dokutokageotoko, Deathmatch in Fear Valley!!|怪人毒トカゲ おそれ谷の決闘!!|Kaijin Doku Tokage Osoredani no Kettō!!}} (Original Airdate: May 6, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Mimizuotoko of the Bottomless Swamp!|底なし沼の怪人ミミズ男!|Sokonashi Numa no Kaijin Mimizu Otoko!}} (Original Airdate: May 13, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Owl Man's Killer X-Rays|怪奇フクロウ男の殺人レントゲン|Kaiki Fukurō Otoko no Satsujin Rentogen}} (Original Airdate: May 20, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Namazugiller's Electric Hell|怪人ナマズギラーの電気地獄|Kaijin Namazugirā no Denki Jigoku}} (Original Airdate: May 27, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Harinezuras's Killer Skull Plan|怪人ハリネズラス 殺人どくろ作戦|Kaijin Harinezurasu Satsujin Dokuro Sakusen}} (Original Airdate: June 3, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Saigang's Deadly Auto Race|怪人サイギャング 死のオートレース|Kaijin Saigyangu Shi no Ōto Rēsu}} (Original Airdate: June 10, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Semiminga's Song of Slaughter!|怪人セミミンガ みな殺しのうた!|Kaijin Semiminga Minagoroshi no Uta!}} (Original Airdate: June 17, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Beetle Professor and the Shocker School|怪人昆虫博士とショッカースクール|Kaijin Konchū Hakase to Shokkā Sukūru}} (Original Airdate: June 24, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Shocker Graveyard: Monsters Revived|ショッカー墓場よみがえる怪人たち|Shokkā Hakaba Yomigaeru Kaijin-tachi}} (Original Airdate: July 1, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Shocker Leader Appears!! Rider in Danger|ショッカー首領出現!!ライダー危うし|Shokkā Shuryō Shutsugen!! Raidā Ayaushi}} (Original Airdate: July 8, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Terrifying Truth of Doctor Death?|死神博士恐怖の正体?|Shinigami-hakase Kyōfu no Shōtai?}} (Original Airdate: July 15, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Gillerkorogi's Nails of Death|怪人ギラーコオロギせまる死のツメ|Kaijin Girākōrogi Semaru Shi no Tsume}} (Original Airdate: July 22, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Elekibotaru's Fireball Attack!!|怪人エレキボタル火の玉攻撃!!|Kaijin Erekibotaru Hi no Tama Kōgeki!!}} (Original Airdate: July 29, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Mt. Rokko Pursuit of the Monstrous Abugomes!|怪人アブゴメス六甲山大ついせき!|Kaijin Abugomesu Rokkōsan Daitsuiseki!}} (Original Airdate: August 5, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Blood-Sucking Mosquilas Versus the Two Riders|吸血モスキラス対二人ライダー|Kyūketsu Mosukirasu Tai Futari Raidā}} (Original Airdate: August 12, 1972)
# {{nihongo|Double Riders! Defeat Shiomaneking|ダブルライダー!倒せシオマネキング|Daburu Raidā! Taose Shiomanekingu}} (Original Airdate: August 19, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Deadly Blood-Sucker! Give It Your All, Rider Kid Corps|死の吸血魔 がんばれ!!ライダー少年隊|Shi no Kyūketsuma Ganbare!! Raidā Shōnentai}} (Original Airdate: August 26, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Poison Flower Bararanga Secret of the Terror House|毒花怪人バラランガ 恐怖の家の秘密|Dokubana Kaijin Bararanga Kyōfu no Ie no Himitsu}} (Original Airdate: September 2, 1972)
# {{nihongo|Three Electric Monsters: the Seadragons!!|三匹の発電怪人シードラゴン!!|Sanbiki no Hatsuden Kaijin Shīdoragon!!}} (Original Airdate: September 9, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Monster Imoriges, Showdown at Hell Ranch!!|怪人イモリゲスじごく牧場の決闘!!|Kaijin Imorigesu Jigoku Bokujō no Kettō!!}} (Original Airdate: September 16, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Terrifying Unidogma + Ghost Monsters|恐怖のウニドグマ+ゆうれい怪人|Kyōfu no Unidoguma + Yūrei Kaijin}} (Original Airdate: September 23, 1972)
# {{nihongo|Ambassador Hell!! His Fearsome True Form?|地獄大使!!恐怖の正体?|Jigoku-taishi!! Kyōfu no Shōtai?}} (Original Airdate: September 30, 1972)
# {{nihongo|Gelshocker's Debut! The Last Day of Kamen Rider!!|ゲルショッカー出現!仮面ライダー最後の日!!|Gerushokkā Shutsugen! Kamen Raidā Saigo no Hi!!}} (Original Airdate: October 7, 1972)
# {{nihongo|Kamen Rider Dies Twice!!|仮面ライダーは二度死ぬ!|Kamen Raidā wa Nido Shinu!}} (Original Airdate: October 14, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Kuragewolf, the Rush Hour of Terror|怪人クラゲウルフ 恐怖のラッシュアワー|Kaijin Kurageurufu Kyōfu no Rasshuawā}} (Original Airdate: October 21, 1972)
# {{nihongo|Monstrous Inokabuton, Defeat Kamen Rider With Insanity Gas|怪人イノカブトン 発狂ガスでライダーを倒せ|Kaijin Inokabuton Hakkyō Gasu de Raidā o Taose}} (Original Airdate: October 28, 1972)
# {{nihongo|Rider in Peril! Isoginjaguar's Hellish Trap|危うしライダー!イソギンジャガーの地獄罠|Ayaushi Raidā! Isoginjagā no Jigoku Wana}} (Original Airdate: November 4, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Sludge Monster's Terrifying Killer Smog|ヘドロ怪人恐怖の殺人スモッグ|Hedoro Kaijin Kyōfu no Satsujin Sumoggu}} (Original Airdate: November 11, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Washikamagiri's Human Hunt|怪人ワシカマギリの人間狩り|Kaijin Washikamagiri no Ningen Gari}} (Original Airdate: November 18, 1972)
# {{nihongo|Gelshocker's Deliveryman of Death!|ゲルショッカー 死の配達人!|Gerushokkā Shi no Haitatsunin!}} (Original Airdate: November 25, 1972)
# {{nihongo|Scary Story! The Bloodthirsty Black Cat Paintings!|怪奇!血をよぶ黒猫の絵|Kaiki! Chi o Yobu Kuroneko no E}} (Original Airdate: December 2, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Terrifying Pet Operation, Send Rider to Hell!|恐怖のペット作戦 ライダーを地獄へ落とせ!|Kyōfu no Petto Sakusen Raidā o Jigoku e Otose!}} (Original Airdate: December 9, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Terrifying Pet Operation, Rider SOS|恐怖のペット作戦 ライダーSOS|Kyōfu no Petto Sakusen Raidā Esu Ō Esu}} (Original Airdate: December 16, 1972)
# {{nihongo|Enroll in the Gelshocker Terror School|ゲルショッカー恐怖学校に入学せよ|Gerushokkā Kyōfu Gakkō ni Nyūgaku Seyo}} (Original Airdate: December 23, 1972)
# {{nihongo|Evil! The Fake Kamen Rider!!|凶悪!にせ仮面ライダー!!|Kyōaku! Nise Kamen Raidā!!}} (Original Airdate: December 30, 1972)
# {{nihongo|The Eight Kamen Riders|8人の仮面ライダー|Hachinin no Kamen Raidā}} (Original Airdate: January 6, 1973)
# {{nihongo|The Truth Behind Gelshocker's Leader!!|ゲルショッカー首領の正体|Gerushokkā Shuryō no Shōtai}} (Original Airdate: January 13, 1973)
# {{nihongo|The Monstrous Garaox's Flying Cars!!|怪人ガラオックスの空飛ぶ自動車|Kaijin Garaokkusu no Sora Tobu Jidōsha}} (Original Airdate: January 20, 1973)
# {{nihongo|Takeshi Hongo Becomes a Cactus Monster!?|本郷猛 サボテン怪人にされる!?|Hongō Takeshi Saboten Kaijin ni Sareru!?}} (Original Airdate: January 27, 1973)
# {{nihongo|Takeshi Hongo Cannot Transform!!|本郷猛 変身不可能|Hongō Takeshi Henshin Fukanō}} (Original Airdate: February 3, 1973)
# {{nihongo|Gelshocker Destroyed! The Leader's End!!|ゲルショッカー全滅!首領の最後!!|Gerushokkā Zenmetsu! Shuryō no Saigo!!}} (Original Airdate: February 10, 1973)


== Films ==
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center; width:70%"
* 1971: {{nihongo|''Go Go Kamen Rider''|ゴーゴー仮面ライダー|Gō Gō Kamen Raidā}} - A movie version of episode 13.
! scope="col" style="width:5%" | Series
* 1972: {{nihongo|''[[Kamen Rider vs. Shocker]]''|仮面ライダー対ショッカー|Kamen Raidā Tai Shokkā}}
! scope="col" style="width:50%" | Show
* 1972: {{nihongo|''Kamen Rider vs. Ambassador Hell''|仮面ライダー対じごく大使|Kamen Raidā Tai Jigoku-taishi}}
! scope="col" style="width:5%" | Episodes
! scope="col" style="width:40%" | Broadcast date
|-
! colspan="4" style="background-color:#ccccff;" | Showa Era
<section begin=Showa Era />
|-
| 1
| ''[[Kamen Rider (1971 TV series)|Kamen Rider]]''
| 98
| {{Start and end dates|1971|4|3|1973|2|10}}
|-
| 2
| ''[[Kamen Rider V3]]''
| 52
| {{Start and end dates|1973|2|17|1974|2|9}}
|-
| 3
| ''[[Kamen Rider X]]''
| 35
| {{Start and end dates|1974|2|16|1974|10|12}}
|-
| 4
| ''[[Kamen Rider Amazon]]''
| 24
| {{Start and end dates|1974|10|19|1975|3|29}}
|-
| 5
| ''[[Kamen Rider Stronger]]''
| 39
| {{Start and end dates|1975|4|5|1975|12|27}}
|-
| 6
| ''[[Kamen Rider (1979 TV series)|Kamen Rider Skyrider]]''
| 54
| {{Start and end dates|1979|10|5|1980|10|10}}
|-
| 7
| ''[[Kamen Rider Super-1]]''
| 48
| {{Start and end dates|1980|10|17|1981|10|3}}
|-
| 8
| ''[[Kamen Rider Black]]''
| 51
| {{Start and end dates|1987|10|4|1988|10|9}}
|-
| 9
| ''[[Kamen Rider Black RX]]''
| 47
| {{Start and end dates|1988|10|23|1989|9|24}}
|-
! colspan="4" style="background-color:#ccccff;" | Heisei Era Phase 1
<section begin=Heisei Era Phase 1/>
|-
| 10
| ''[[Kamen Rider Kuuga]]''
| 49
| {{Start and end dates|2000|1|30|2001|1|21}}
|-
| 11
| ''[[Kamen Rider Agito]]''
| 51
| {{Start and end dates|2001|1|28|2002|1|27}}
|-
| 12
| ''[[Kamen Rider Ryuki]]''
| 50
| {{Start and end dates|2002|2|3|2003|1|19}}
|-
| 13
| ''[[Kamen Rider 555]]''
| 50
| {{Start and end dates|2003|1|26|2004|1|18}}
|-
| 14
| ''[[Kamen Rider Blade]]''
| 49
| {{Start and end dates|2004|1|25|2005|1|23}}
|-
| 15
| ''[[Kamen Rider Hibiki]]''
| 48
| {{Start and end dates|2005|1|30|2006|1|22}}
|-
| 16
| ''[[Kamen Rider Kabuto]]''
| 49
| {{Start and end dates|2006|1|29|2007|1|21}}
|-
| 17
| ''[[Kamen Rider Den-O]]''
| 49
| {{Start and end dates|2007|1|28|2008|1|20}}
|-
| 18
| ''[[Kamen Rider Kiva]]''
| 48
| {{Start and end dates|2008|1|27|2009|1|18}}
|-
| 19
| ''[[Kamen Rider Decade]]''
| 31
| {{Start and end dates|2009|1|25|2009|8|30}}
|-
! colspan="4" style="background-color:#ccccff;" | Heisei Era Phase 2
<section begin=Heisei Era Phase 2/>
|-
| 20
| ''[[Kamen Rider W]]''
| 49
| {{Start and end dates|2009|9|6|2010|8|29}}
|-
| 21
| ''[[Kamen Rider OOO]]''
| 48
| {{Start and end dates|2010|9|5|2011|8|28}}
|-
| 22
| ''[[Kamen Rider Fourze]]''
| 48
| {{Start and end dates|2011|9|4|2012|8|26}}
|-
| 23
| ''[[Kamen Rider Wizard]]''
| 53
| {{Start and end dates|2012|9|2|2013|9|29}}
|-
| 24
| ''[[Kamen Rider Gaim]]''
| 47
| {{Start and end dates|2013|10|6|2014|9|28}}
|-
| 25
| ''[[Kamen Rider Drive]]''
| 48
| {{Start and end dates|2014|10|5|2015|9|27}}
|-
| 26
| ''[[Kamen Rider Ghost]]''
| 50
| {{Start and end dates|2015|10|4|2016|9|25}}
|-
| 27
| ''[[Kamen Rider Ex-Aid]]''
| 45
| {{Start and end dates|2016|10|2|2017|8|27}}
|-
| 28
| ''[[Kamen Rider Build]]''
| 49
| {{Start and end dates|2017|9|3|2018|8|26}}
|-
| 29
| ''[[Kamen Rider Zi-O]]''
| 49
| {{Start and end dates|2018|9|2|2019|8|25}}
|-
! colspan="4" style="background-color:#ccccff;" | Reiwa Era
<section begin=Reiwa Era />
|-
| 30
| ''[[Kamen Rider Zero-One]]''
| 45
| {{Start and end dates|2019|9|1|2020|8|30}}
|-
| 31
| ''[[Kamen Rider Saber]]''
| 47
| {{Start and end dates|2020|9|6|2021|8|29}}
|-
| 32
| ''[[Kamen Rider Revice]]''
| 50
| {{Start and end dates|2021|9|5|2022|8|28}}
|-
| 33
| ''[[Kamen Rider Geats]]''<ref>{{cite tweet|number=1531291199986102274|user=trademark_bot|title=東映株式会社により「仮面ライダーギーツ / KAMEN RIDER GEATS」が商標登録出願されていることが、公開商標公報から明らかになりました。出願番号は2022-58078〜2022-58099です。|date=30 May 2022}}</ref>
| 49
| {{Start and end dates|2022|9|4|2023|8|27}}
|-
| 34
| ''[[Kamen Rider Gotchard]]''
| TBD
| {{Start date|2023|9|3}}
|-
| 35
| ''[[Kamen Rider Gavv]]''
| TBD
| 2024
|}

===Television specials===
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center; width:40%"
! scope="col" style="width:80%" | Show
! scope="col" style="width:20%" | Year
|-
| ''All Together! Seven Kamen Riders''
| 1976
|-
| Immortal Kamen Rider Special
| 1979
|-
| ''[[Birth of the 10th! Kamen Riders All Together!!]]''
| 1984
|-
| ''This Is Kamen Rider Black''
| 1987
|-
| ''Kamen Rider 1 through RX: Big Gathering''
| 1988
|-
| ''[[Ultraman vs. Kamen Rider]]''
| 1993
|-
| ''[[Kamen Rider Kuuga|Kamen Rider Kuuga: First Dream Of The New Year]]''
| 2000
|-
| ''[[Kamen Rider Agito|Kamen Rider Agito Special: Another New Transformation]]''
| 2001
|-
| ''[[Kamen Rider Ryuki|Kamen Rider Ryuki Special: 13 Riders]]''
| 2002
|-
| ''[[Kamen Rider Blade|Kamen Rider Blade: New Generation]]''
| 2004
|-
| ''[[Kamen Rider Kabuto|35th Masked Rider Anniversary File]]''
| 2006
|-
| ''[[Kamen Rider Decade#Kamen Rider G|Kamen Rider G]]''
| 2009
|}

===Theatrical releases===
* 1971: ''Go Go Kamen Rider'' (Movie version of episode 13)
* 1972: ''[[Kamen Rider vs. Shocker]]''
* 1972: ''Kamen Rider vs. Ambassador Hell''
* 1973: ''[[Kamen Rider V3]]'' (Movie version of episode 2)
* 1973: ''Kamen Rider V3 vs. the Destron Monsters''
* 1974: ''[[Kamen Rider X]]'' (Movie version of episode 3)
* 1974: ''Kamen Rider X: Five Riders vs. King Dark''
* 1975: ''[[Kamen Rider Amazon]]'' (Movie version of episode 16)
* 1975: ''[[Kamen Rider Stronger]]'' (Movie version of episode 7)
* 1980: ''[[Kamen Rider (Skyrider)|Kamen Rider: Eight Riders vs. Galaxy King]]''
* 1981: ''[[Kamen Rider Super-1]]''
* 1988: ''[[Kamen Rider Black]]: Hurry to Onigashima''
* 1988: ''Kamen Rider Black: Fear! Evil Monster Mansion''
* 1989: ''Kamen Rider: Stay in the World'' – [[3D film|3D]] theme park special
* 1992: ''[[Shin Kamen Rider: Prologue]]''
* 1993: ''[[Kamen Rider ZO]]''
* 1994: ''[[Kamen Rider J]]''
* 1994: ''[[Kamen Rider World]]'' – 3-D theme park special
* 2001: ''[[Kamen Rider Agito#Movies and specials|Kamen Rider Agito: Project G4]]''
* 2002: ''[[Kamen Rider Ryuki: Episode Final]]''
* 2003: ''[[Kamen Rider 555: Paradise Lost]]''
* 2004: ''[[Kamen Rider Blade: Missing Ace]]''
* 2005: ''[[Kamen Rider Hibiki & The Seven Senki]]''
* 2005: ''[[Kamen Rider: The First]]''
* 2005: ''[[Kamen Rider: The First]]''
* 2006: ''[[Kamen Rider Kabuto: God Speed Love]]''
* 2007: ''[[Kamen Rider Den-O: I'm Born!]]''
* 2007: ''[[Kamen Rider: The Next]]''
* 2007: ''[[Kamen Rider: The Next]]''
* 2011: {{nihongo|''[[OOO, Den-O, All Riders: Let's Go Kamen Riders]]''|オーズ・電王・オールライダー レッツゴー仮面ライダー|Ōzu Den'ō Ōru Raidā Rettsu Gō Kamen Raidā}}<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cine-phoenix.jp/new/|title=新着情報{{!}}三宮シネフェニックス|access-date=2010-12-21|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110824165613/http://www.cine-phoenix.jp/new/|archive-date=2011-08-24}}</ref>
* 2008: ''[[Kamen Rider Den-O & Kiva: Climax Deka]]''
* 2014: {{nihongo4|''[[Heisei Rider vs. Shōwa Rider: Kamen Rider Taisen feat. Super Sentai]]''|平成ライダー対昭和ライダー 仮面ライダー大戦 feat.スーパー戦隊|Heisei Raidā Tai Shōwa Raidā Kamen Raidā Taisen Fīcharingu Sūpā Sentai}}
* 2008: ''[[Kamen Rider Kiva: King of the Castle in the Demon World]]''
* 2008: ''[[Saraba Kamen Rider Den-O: Final Countdown]]''
* 2016: {{nihongo|''[[Kamen Rider 1 (film)|Kamen Rider 1]]''|仮面ライダー1号|Kamen Raidā Ichigō}}
* 2021: {{nihongo|''[[Saber + Zenkaiger: Super Hero Senki]]''|セイバー+ゼンカイジャー スーパーヒーロー戦記|Seibā Zenkaijā Sūpā Hīrō Senki}}
* 2009: ''[[Cho Kamen Rider Den-O & Decade Neo Generations: The Onigashima Warship]]''
* 2021: {{nihongo|''Kamen Rider: Beyond Generations''|仮面ライダー ビヨンド・ジェネレーションズ|Kamen Raidā Biyondo Jenerēshonzu}}
* 2009: ''[[Kamen Rider Decade: All Riders vs. Dai-Shocker]]''
* 2009: ''[[Kamen Rider × Kamen Rider W & Decade: Movie War 2010]]''
** ''Kamen Rider Decade: The Last Story''
** ''Kamen Rider W: Begins Night''
** ''Movie War 2010''
* 2010: ''[[Kamen Rider × Kamen Rider × Kamen Rider The Movie: Cho-Den-O Trilogy]]''
** ''Episode Red: Zero no Star Twinkle''
** ''Episode Blue: The Dispatched Imagin is Newtral''
** ''Episode Yellow: Treasure de End Pirates''
* 2010: ''[[Kamen Rider W Forever: A to Z/The Gaia Memories of Fate]]''
* 2010: ''[[Kamen Rider × Kamen Rider OOO & W Featuring Skull: Movie War Core]]''
** ''Kamen Rider Skull: Message for Double''
** ''Kamen Rider OOO: Nobunaga's Desire''
** ''Movie War Core''
* 2011: ''[[OOO, Den-O, All Riders: Let's Go Kamen Riders]]''
* 2011: ''[[Kamen Rider OOO Wonderful: The Shogun and the 21 Core Medals]]''
* 2011: ''[[Kamen Rider × Kamen Rider Fourze & OOO: Movie War Mega Max]]''
** ''Beginning: Fight! Legendary Seven Riders''
** ''Kamen Rider OOO: Ankh's Resurrection, the Medals of the Future, and the Leading Hope''
** ''Futo, The Conspiracy Advances: Gallant! Kamen Rider Joker''
** ''Kamen Rider Fourze: Nade-Shiko Ad-Vent''
** ''Movie War Mega Max: Gather! Warriors of Glory''
* 2012: ''[[Kamen Rider × Super Sentai: Super Hero Taisen]]''
* 2012: ''[[Kamen Rider Fourze the Movie: Space, Here We Come!]]''
* 2012: ''[[Kamen Rider × Kamen Rider Wizard & Fourze: Movie War Ultimatum]]''
** ''Kamen Rider Fourze''
** ''Kamen Rider Wizard''
** ''Movie War Ultimatum''
* 2013: ''[[Kamen Rider × Super Sentai × Space Sheriff: Super Hero Taisen Z]]''
* 2013: ''[[Kamen Rider Wizard in Magic Land]]''
* 2013: ''[[Kamen Rider × Kamen Rider Gaim & Wizard: The Fateful Sengoku Movie Battle]]''
** ''Kamen Rider Wizard: The Promised Place''
** ''Kamen Rider Gaim: Sengoku Battle Royale''
* 2014: ''[[Kamen Rider × Super Sentai × Space Sheriff: Super Hero Taisen Z]]''
* 2014: ''[[Heisei Riders vs. Shōwa Riders: Kamen Rider Taisen feat. Super Sentai]]''
* 2014: ''[[Kamen Rider Gaim: Great Soccer Battle! Golden Fruits Cup!]]''
* 2014: ''[[Kamen Rider × Kamen Rider Drive & Gaim: Movie War Full Throttle]]''
** ''Kamen Rider Gaim: The Advancing Last Stage''
** ''Kamen Rider Drive: A Challenge from Lupin''
** ''Movie War Full Throttle''
* 2015: ''[[Super Hero Taisen GP: Kamen Rider 3]]''
* 2015: ''[[Kamen Rider Drive: Surprise Future]]''
* 2015: ''[[Kamen Rider × Kamen Rider Ghost & Drive: Super Movie War Genesis]]''
* 2016: ''[[Kamen Rider 1 (film)|Kamen Rider 1]]''
* 2016: ''[[Kamen Rider Ghost: The 100 Eyecons and Ghost's Fated Moment]]''
* 2016: ''[[Kamen Rider Heisei Generations: Dr. Pac-Man vs. Ex-Aid & Ghost with Legend Riders]]''
* 2017: ''[[Kamen Rider × Super Sentai: Ultra Super Hero Taisen]]''
* 2017: ''[[Kamen Rider Ex-Aid the Movie: True Ending]]''
* 2017: ''[[Kamen Rider Heisei Generations Final: Build & Ex-Aid with Legend Rider]]''
* 2018: ''[[Kamen Rider Amazons the Movie: The Last Judgement]]''
* 2018: ''[[Kamen Rider Build the Movie: Be the One]]''
* 2018: ''[[Kamen Rider Heisei Generations Forever]]''
* 2019: ''[[Kamen Rider Zi-O the Movie: Over Quartzer]]''
* 2019: ''[[Kamen Rider Reiwa The First Generation]]''
* 2020: ''[[Kamen Rider Zero-One the Movie: Real×Time]]''
* 2020: ''[[Kamen Rider Saber Theatrical Short Story: The Phoenix Swordsman and the Book of Ruin]]''
* 2021: ''[[Saber + Zenkaiger: Super Hero Senki]]''
* 2021: ''Kamen Rider Revice'' (short film)
* 2021: ''Kamen Rider Beyond Generations''
* 2022: ''Kamen Rider Revice Battle Familia''
* 2022: ''Kamen Rider Geats × Revice: Movie Battle Royale''
* 2023: ''[[Shin Kamen Rider (film)|Shin Kamen Rider]]''
* 2023: ''[[Shin Kamen Rider (film)|Shin Kamen Rider]]''


== S.I.C. Hero Saga ==
===V-Cinema releases===
Published in ''Monthly Hobby Japan'', the [[Super Imaginative Chogokin|S.I.C.]] Hero Saga stories illustrated by S.I.C. figure dioramas portray stories featuring the characters from the Shotaro Ishinomori series. ''Kamen Rider'' has had three different stories: ''Missing Link'', {{nihongo|''Special Episode: Escape''|SPECIAL EPISODE -脱出-|Supesharu Episōdo Dasshutsu}}, and {{nihongo|''From Here to Eternity''|ここより永遠に|Koko yori Towa ni}}. ''Missing Link'' ran in the July to October 2002 issues, ''From Here to Eternity'' was featured in the special issue ''HOBBY JAPAN MOOK S.I.C. OFFICIAL DIORAMA STORY S.I.C. HERO SAGA vol.1 Kakioroshi'', and ''Special Episode: Escape'' was featured in the October 2006 issue of ''Hobby Japan''.
[[Direct-to-video]] releases, films focusing on secondary riders and storylines, began appearing during the franchise's Heisei era. Hyper Battle Videos are episodes included with ''[[Televi-Kun]]'' magazine.

* 1992: ''[[Shin Kamen Rider: Prologue]]''
* 1993: ''[[Kamen Rider SD]]'' – Only [[anime]] adaptation
* 2011: ''[[Kamen Rider W Returns]]''
** ''Kamen Rider Accel'' Chapter
** ''Kamen Rider Eternal'' Chapter
* 2015: ''[[Gaim Gaiden|Kamen Rider Gaim Gaiden]]''
** First Part
*** ''Kamen Rider Zangetsu'' Chapter
*** ''Kamen Rider Baron'' Chapter
** Second Part
*** ''Kamen Rider Duke'' Chapter
*** ''Kamen Rider Knuckle'' Chapter
** Third Part
*** ''Kamen Rider Zangetsu'' Chapter (Stage Show 2019)
*** ''Kamen Rider Gridon VS Kamen Rider Bravo'' Chapter (2 Special 2020)
* 2016: ''Kamen Rider Drive Saga''
** First Part
*** ''Kamen Rider Chaser'' Chapter
** Second Part
*** ''Kamen Rider Heart'' Chapter
*** ''Kamen Rider Mach'' Chapter
** Third Part
*** ''Kamen Rider Brain'' Chapter (2 Special 2019)
* 2017: ''Kamen Rider Ghost Re-Birth: Kamen Rider Specter''
* 2018: ''[[Kamen Rider Ex-Aid Trilogy: Another Ending]]''
** ''Brave & Snipe'' Chapter
** ''Para-DX with Poppy'' Chapter
** ''Genm vs. Lazer'' Chapter
* 2019: ''Kamen Rider Build New World''
** First Part
*** ''Kamen Rider Cross-Z'' Chapter
** Second Part
*** ''Kamen Rider Grease'' Chapter
* 2020: ''Kamen Rider Zi-O Next Time''
** ''Kamen Rider Geiz Majesty'' Chapter
* 2021: ''Kamen Rider Zero-One Others''
** ''Kamen Rider Metsuboujinrai'' Chapter
** ''Kamen Rider Vulcan & Valkyrie'' Chapter
* 2022: ''Kamen Rider Saber: Trio of Deep Sin''
* 2022: ''Kamen Rider OOO 10th: Core Medal of Resurrection''

===Hyper Battle videos===
* 2000: ''Kamen Rider Kuuga: vs. the Strong Monster Go-Jiino-Da''
* 2001: ''Kamen Rider Agito: Three rider TV-kun Special''
* 2002: ''Kamen Rider Ryuki Hyper Battle: Kamen Rider Ryuki vs. Kamen Rider Agito''
* 2003: ''Kamen Rider 555: The Musical''
* 2004: ''Kamen Rider Blade: Blade vs Blade''
* 2005: ''Kamen Rider Hibiki: Transform Asumu: You can be an Oni too''
* 2006: ''Kamen Rider Kabuto: Birth! Gatack Hyper Form!''
* 2007: ''Kamen Rider Den-O: Singing, Dancing, Great Time!!''
* 2008: ''Kamen Rider Kiva: You Can Also be Kiva''
* 2009: ''Kamen Rider Decade: Protect! The World of TV-Kun''
* 2010: ''Kamen Rider W: Donburi's α/Farewell Recipe of Love''
* 2011: ''Kamen Rider OOO: Quiz, Dance, and Takagarooba!?''
* 2012: ''Kamen Rider Fourze: Rocket Drill States of Friendship''
* 2013: ''Kamen Rider Wizard: Showtime with the Dance Ring''
* 2014: ''Kamen Rider Gaim: Fresh Orange Arms is Born!''
* 2015: ''Kamen Rider Drive'' Hyper Battle:
** ''Type TV-KUN: Hunter & Monster! Chase the Mystery of the Super Thief!''
** ''Type High Speed! The True Power! Type High Speed is Born!''
* 2016: ''Kamen Rider Ghost'' Hyper Battle:
** ''Ikkyu Eyecon Contention! Quick Wit Battle!!''
** ''Ikkyu Eyecon! Awaken, My Quick Wit Power!!''
** ''Truth! The Secret Of Heroes' Eyecons!''
*2017: ''Kamen Rider Ex-Aid "Tricks"''
**''Kamen Rider Lazer''
**''Kamen Rider Para-DX''
*2018: ''Kamen Rider Build''
** ''Birth! KumaTelevi!! VS Kamen Rider Grease!''
** ''Kamen Rider Prime Rogue''
*2019: ''Kamen Rider ZI-O: Kamen Rider Bi Bi Bi no Bibill Geiz''
*2019: ''Kamen Rider Zero-One: What Will Pop Out of the Kangaroo? Think About It by Yourself! Yes! It must be me, Aruto!''
*2021: ''Kamen Rider Saber: Gather! Hero! The Explosive Dragon TVKun''
*2022: ''Kamen Rider Revice: Koala VS Kangaroo!! Do you want to avoid love at the wedding?!''

===Web exclusive===
* 2015: ''D-Video Special: Kamen Rider 4''
* 2016: ''Kamen Rider Ghost: Legendary! Riders' Souls!''
* 2016–2017: ''[[Kamen Rider Amazons]]''
* 2017: ''Kamen Sentai Gorider''
* 2018: ''Kamen Rider Build: Raising the Hazard Level ~7 Best Matches~''
* 2019: ''Kamen Rider Zi-O Spin-off''
** ''Rider Time: Kamen Rider Shinobi''
** ''Rider Time: Kamen Rider Ryuki''
** ''Rider Time: Kamen Rider Zi-O VS Decade -7 of Zi-O!-''
** ''Rider Time: Kamen Rider Decade VS Zi-O -Decade Mansion's Death Game-''
* 2021: ''Kamen Rider Saber Spin Off: Swordsmen Chronicles''
* 2021: ''Kamen Rider Genms -The Presidents-''
* 2021: ''Kamen Rider Saber × Ghost''
* 2021: ''Kamen Rider Specter × Blades''
* 2022: ''Kamen Rider Revice: The Mystery''
* 2022: ''Kamen Rider Genms -Smart Brain and the 1000% Crisis-''
* 2022: ''Revice Legacy''
** ''Revice Legacy: Kamen Rider Vail''
** ''Part 2''
** ''Part 3''
* 2022: ''[[Kamen Rider Black Sun]]''

===Others===
* 2016: ''The Legend of Hero Alain''
* 2017: ''Kamen Rider Snipe: Episode ZERO''
* 2018: ''ROGUE''
* 2020: ''Project Thouser''
* 2021: ''Kamen Rider Saber Spin-Off: Sword of Logos Saga''
* 2022: ''DEAR GAGA''
* 2022: ''[[Fuuto PI#Anime|Fuuto PI]]''

=={{anchor|Thailand}}Adaptations outside Japan==

===Taiwan===
In 1975–1976, Tong Hsing Film Co., Ltd. in Taiwan produced a Super Riders series based on the Japanese version.
* 1975: ''[[:zh:閃電騎士V3|The Super Rider V3]]'' based on ''[[Kamen Rider V3]]''
* 1976: ''[[:zh:閃電五騎士|The Five Of Super Rider]]'' based on ''[[Kamen Rider X]]''
* 1976: ''[[:zh:閃電騎士大戰地獄軍團|The Super Riders]]'' based on ''Kamen Rider vs. Shocker'' and ''Kamen Rider vs. Hell Ambassador''


New characters introduced during the ''Missing Link'' story are the twelve {{nihongo|Shocker Riders|ショッカーライダー|Shokkā Raidā|each with different colored scarves}} and the {{nihongo|Shocker Tank|ショッカータンク|Shokkā Tanku}}.
===United States===
In 1995, [[Saban Entertainment|Saban]] produced the first American ''[[Masked Rider (TV series)|Masked Rider]]'' series after its success adapting [[Super Sentai]] into ''[[Power Rangers]]'' and the [[Metal Hero Series]] (''[[VR Troopers]]'' and ''[[Beetleborgs]]''). Unfortunately, the show was panned by critics and fans from the series, and it only lasted one 40-episode season, with the first 27 debuting on [[Fox Kids]], while the other 13 debuted in syndication.


;''Missing Link'' chapter titles
In 2009, a new series, produced by Michael and [[Steve Wang]], was broadcast: ''[[Kamen Rider: Dragon Knight]]'', which was adapted from ''[[Kamen Rider Ryuki]]''. Although it was canceled before finishing its syndicated run, it won the first Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Stunt Coordination at the [[37th Daytime Emmy Awards]].
#{{nihongo|Infiltration|潜入|Sen'nyū}}
<ref name="emmywin">{{cite web|url=http://www.welovesoaps.net/2010/06/winners-daytime-entertainment-creative.html|title=WINNERS: Daytime Entertainment Creative Arts Emmy Awards|date=June 26, 2010|access-date=27 June 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.toei.co.jp/release/tv/1192155_963.html|title=「KAMEN RIDER DRAGON KNIGHT」第37回デイタイム・エミー賞において最優秀スタントコーディネーション賞を受賞! {{!}} 東映[テレビ]|date=2010-06-29|access-date=2010-07-04|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100701193143/http://www.toei.co.jp/release/tv/1192155_963.html|archive-date=2010-07-01}}</ref>
#{{nihongo|Disappearance|失踪|Shissō}}
#{{nihongo|Awakening|覚醒|Kakusei}}
#{{nihongo|Puppet|傀儡|Kairai}}


== Cast ==
===Unofficial Thailand adaptation===
* Takeshi Hongo: {{nihongo|[[Hiroshi Fujioka]]|藤岡 弘|Fujioka Hiroshi}}
In 1975, Chaiyo Productions made an unofficial Kamen Rider movie entitled ''[[Hanuman and the Five Riders]]'', which used original footage of Chaiyo's Hanuman character, spliced with footage from the "Five Riders Vs. King Dark" movie. However, Chaiyo went ahead with the production without authorisation after Toei denied them permission to make an official movie with them, putting the legality of the movie into question.
* Hayato Ichimonji: {{nihongo|Takeshi Sasaki|佐々木 剛|Sasaki Takeshi}}
* Kazuya Taki: {{nihongo|[[Jirō Yabuki|Jirō Chiba]]|千葉 治郎|Chiba Jirō}}
* Tōbei Tachibana: {{nihongo|[[Akiji Kobayashi]]|小林 昭二|Kobayashi Akiji}}
* Ruriko Midorikawa: {{nihongo|Chieko Maki|真樹 千恵子|Maki Chieko}}
* Hiromi Nohara: {{nihongo|[[Yoko Shimada]]|島田 陽子|Shimada Yōko}}
* Shiro: {{nihongo|Jō Honda|本田 じょう|Honda Jō}}
* Yuri: {{nihongo|Wakako Oki|沖 わか子|Oki Wakako}}
* Mari: {{nihongo|[[Linda Yamamoto]]|山本 リンダ|Yamamoto Rinda}}
* Michi: {{nihongo|Katsumi Nakajima|中島 かつみ|Nakajima Katsumi}}
* Goro Ishikura: {{nihongo|Yasuharu Miura|三浦 康晴|Miura Yasuharu}}
* Emi: {{nihongo|[[Emily Hatoyama|Emily Takami]]|高見 エミリー|Takami Emirī}}
* Mika: {{nihongo|Yōko Sugibayashi|杉林 陽子|Sugibayashi Yōko}}
* Tokko: {{nihongo|Machiko Nakajima|中島 真智子|Nakajima Machiko}}
* Naoki: {{nihongo|Tomonori Yazaki|矢崎 知紀|Tomonori Yazaki}}
* Mitsuru: {{nihongo|Yoshikazu Yamada|山田 芳一|Yamada Yoshikazu}}
* Yokko: {{nihongo|Yoshiko Nakada|中田 喜子|Nakada Yoshiko}}
* Choko: {{nihongo|Mimi Hagiwara|ミミ萩原|Hagiwara Mimi}}
* Colonel Zol: {{nihongo|Jirō Miyaguchi|宮口 二朗|Miyaguchi Jirō}}
* Doctor Death: {{nihongo|[[Hideyo Amamoto]]|天本 英世|Amamoto Hideyo}}
* Ambassador Hell: {{nihongo|Kenji Ushio|潮 健児|Ushio Kenji}}
* General Black: {{nihongo|Matasaburō Niwa|丹羽 又三郎|Niwa Matasaburō}}
* Shocker/Gelshocker Leader (Voice): {{nihongo|[[Gorō Naya]]|納谷 悟朗|Naya Gorō}}
* Narration: {{nihongo|[[Shinji Nakae]]|中江 真司|Nakae Shinji}}


== International Broadcasts ==
==Merchandise==
* In the [[Philippines]], it was aired on [[DZKB-TV|RPN-9]] as Masked Rider from 1975 to 1977 with an English dub.
{{As of|2021|3}}, [[Bandai Namco]] has sold {{nowrap|14.50 million}} ''Kamen Rider'' transformation belts since February 2000.<ref>{{cite book |title=Fact Book 2021 |date=2021 |publisher=[[Bandai Namco Group]] |page=3 |url=https://www.bandainamco.co.jp/cgi-bin/releases/index.cgi/file/view/10492?entry_id=7280 |access-date=2 October 2021}}</ref>


==Homages and parodies==
== Staff ==
* Creator: [[Shotaro Ishinomori]]
<!-- Do not mention any specific examples that need multiple sentences to describe. -->
* Scriptwriters: Masaru Igami, Shinichi Ichikawa, Masayuki Shimada, Mari Takizawa, Hisashi Yamazaki, Takao Nagaishi, Masahiro Tsukada, Ikurō Suzuki, Takeo Ōno, Fumio Ishimori, Kimiyuki Hasegawa, Kimio Hirayama, Minoru Yamada, Gorō Oketani, Shotaro Ishinomori
The ''Kamen Rider'' franchise has been parodied in and outside Japan. One parody is of the ''Kamen Rider'' ''henshin'' (metamorphosis) pose.
* Directors: Kōichi Takemoto, Itaru Orita, Hidetoshi Kitamura, Minoru Yamada, Issaku Uchida, Katsuhiko Taguchi, Masahiro Tsukada, Shotaro Ishinomori, Atsuo Okunaka
* Music: [[Shunsuke Kikuchi]]


== Songs ==
In video games, [[Skullomania]] (from ''[[Street Fighter EX]]'') and [[list of The King of Fighters characters#May Lee|May Lee]] (from ''[[The King of Fighters]]'') are examples of ''Kamen Rider'' parodies. The titular protagonist of the ''[[Viewtiful Joe]]'' game series is modeled after the heroes of ''Kamen Rider'' and other tokusatsu series of the 1960s and 1970s, according to character designer Kumiko Suekane. In the ''[[Pokémon]]'' franchise, the grasshopper-based Pokémon known as [[List of generation IX Pokémon#Lokix|Lokix]] appears to take inspiration from the heroes of the ''Kamen Rider'' series, further evidenced by the original Kamen Rider's grasshopper motif (which is also shared with other primary Riders).
;Opening themes
* {{nihongo|"Let's Go!! Rider Kick"|レッツゴー!!ライダーキック|Rettsu Gō!! Raidā Kikku}}
** Lyrics: [[Shotaro Ishinomori]]
** Composition & Arrangement: [[Shunsuke Kikuchi]]
** Artist: [[Hiroshi Fujioka]] / [[Masato Shimon]] (as Koichi Fuji) & {{nihongo|Male Harmony|メール・ハーモニー|Mēru Hāmonī}}
** Episodes: 1–13 (Fujioka), 14–88 (Fuji)
* {{nihongo|"Rider Action"|ライダーアクション|Raidā Akushon}}
** Lyrics: Shotaro Ishinomori
** Composition & Arrangement: Shunsuke Kikuchi
** Artist: [[Masato Shimon]]
** Episodes: 89–98


;Ending themes
In anime, examples include ''[[Fair, then Partly Piggy]]'', ''[[My-HiME]]'' (and its sequel, ''[[My Otome]]''), ''[[Dragon Ball Z]]'', and ''[[Franken Fran]]''. In the ''[[Crayon Shin-chan]]'' series, the title character interacts with Kamen Riders in crossover specials. ''[[Detective Conan]]'' has a recurring TV series the detective boys like to watch, ''Kamen Yaiba''. In ''[[One-Punch Man]]'', the C-Class Hero Mumen Rider is a parody, being an ordinary man in a world of superhuman beings, riding a bicycle rather than a motorcycle. However, despite his weakness, he is extremely heroic and his actions form a counterpoint to his parodic character conception. The series has also been parodied and homaged in the [[Disney Channel]] series ''[[Amphibia (TV series)|Amphibia]]''.
* {{nihongo|"Kamen Rider no Uta"|仮面ライダーの歌|Kamen Raidā no Uta|"The Song of Kamen Rider"}}
** Lyrics: [[Toei Company#Saburo Yatsude|Saburō Yatsude]]
** Composition & Arrangement: Shunsuke Kikuchi
** Artist: Koichi Fuji, Male Harmony
** Episodes: 1–71
* "Rider Action"
** Lyrics: Shotaro Ishinomori
** Composition & Arrangement: Shunsuke Kikuchi
** Artist: Masato Shimon
** Episodes: 72–88
* {{nihongo|"Lonely Kamen Rider"|ロンリー仮面ライダー|Ronrī Kamen Raidā}}
** Lyrics: Mamoru Tanaka
** Composition & Arrangement: Shunsuke Kikuchi
** Artist: Masato Shimon
** Episodes: 89–98


== Legacy ==
In live-action, parodies include "Kamen Renaider" by [[SMAP]]'s [[Takuya Kimura]] and [[Shingo Katori]], a parody of ''Ryuki''; "Kamen Zaiber", a parody of the original series; "Kamen Norider" by the [[Tunnels (owarai)|Tunnels]], a parody of [[Kamen Rider 1]] and as well as the first series; "Kamen Rider HG", [[Masaki Sumitani|Hard Gay]]'s parody of the original for a Japanese TV show, and "Ridermen" (a short skit with a man called Ridermen, a parody of the [[Riderman]] on the set of ''[[Kamen Rider Kuuga]]''.
The Kamen Rider original series famously spearheaded launched the "Second Kaiju Boom" or "Henshin Boom" on Japanese television in the early 1970s, greatly impacting the superhero and action-adventure genre in Japan.<ref>{{Cite book |editor=Takeshobo|date=1995-11-30 |script-title=ja:超人画報 国産架空ヒーロー四十年の歩み|trans-title=The Super Heroes Chronicles: The History of Japanese Fantastic Televisions, Movies and Videos, 1957-1995 |publisher=[[Takeshobo]] |pages=85|chapter=BonusColumn「変身ブーム到来!!」|trans-chapter=Bonus Column 'The Henshin Boom Arrives!'|id=C0076 |isbn=4-88475-874-9|language=ja}}</ref> The famous "henshin sequence", in which the title hero performs ritualistic poses and shouting a keyword to transform into his superhero form has since become a staple in Japanese pop-culture, inspiring superheroes, and magical girl genres. Kamen Rider went later produce a great number of [[Spin-off (media)|spin-off]]s which remain in production today. Several [[Kamen Rider (franchise)|Kamen Rider]] series were aired in Japan after the first Kamen Rider finished. After ''[[Kamen Rider Black RX]]'' ended production in 1989, the series was put on hold.


There were three movies released as the 1990s "Movie Riders", which were ''[[Shin Kamen Rider: Prologue]]'', ''[[Kamen Rider ZO]]'' and ''[[Kamen Rider J]]''. After the original creator Shōtarō Ishinomori's death in 1998, the Kamen Rider franchise continued in 2000 with ''[[Kamen Rider Kuuga]]''. As of 2023, thirty-four Kamen Rider series have been made, with the newest being ''[[Kamen Rider Gotchard]]'' which premiered in September 2023.
[[Akimasa Nakamura]], a Japanese astronomer named two [[minor planet]]s in honor of the series: [[12408 Fujioka]] for actor [[Hiroshi Fujioka]], known for his portrayal of [[Kamen Rider 1|Takeshi Hongo/Kamen Rider 1]],<ref name="planets">{{Cite book|title=Dictionary of Minor Planet Names|last=Schmadel|first=Lutz D.|author-link=Lutz D. Schmadel| year=2003| publisher=Springer| location=Germany| isbn=3-540-00238-3| pages=781, 788}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/sbdb.cgi?sstr=12408+Fujioka|title=JPL Small-Body Database Browser - 12408 Fujioka (1995 SP2)|access-date=2008-04-06}}</ref> and [[12796 Kamenrider]] for the series itself.<ref name="planets" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/sbdb.cgi?sstr=12796+Kamenrider|title=JPL Small-Body Database Browser – 12796 Kamenrider (1995 WF)|access-date=2008-04-06}}</ref>


As of 2005, a remake of the Kamen Rider series in the Heisei era was made and reimagined with ''[[Kamen Rider The First]]'' and continued with ''[[Kamen Rider The Next]]'' released in 2007.
==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}


The cultural impact of the series in Japan resulted in astronomer [[Akimasa Nakamura]] naming two [[minor planet]]s in honor of the series: [[12408 Fujioka]], after actor [[Hiroshi Fujioka]], known for his portrayal of Takeshi Hongo/Kamen Rider 1,<ref name="planets">{{cite book |title=Dictionary of Minor Planet Names|url=https://archive.org/details/dictionaryminorp00schm|url-access=limited|last=Schmadel|first=Lutz D.|author-link=Lutz D. Schmadel|year=2003|publisher=Springer|location=Germany|isbn=3-540-00238-3|pages=[https://archive.org/details/dictionaryminorp00schm/page/n794 781], 788}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/sbdb.cgi?sstr=12408+Fujioka|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160112092320/http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/sbdb.cgi?sstr=12408+Fujioka|url-status=dead|archive-date=2016-01-12|title=JPL Small-Body Database Browser - 12408 Fujioka (1995 SP2)|access-date=2008-04-06}}</ref> and [[12796 Kamenrider]], after the series itself.<ref name=" planets" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/sbdb.cgi?sstr=12796+Kamenrider|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160112092320/http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/sbdb.cgi?sstr=12796+Kamenrider|url-status=dead|archive-date=2016-01-12|title=JPL Small-Body Database Browser - 12796 Kamenrider (1995 WF)|access-date=2008-04-06}}</ref>
==External links==


As of 2021, starting from ''Kamen Rider: Beyond Generations'', Hiroshi Fujioka's son, Maito portrays Takeshi Hongo's younger self.<ref>{{cite web |title=藤岡弘、の息子・藤岡真威人、仮面ライダー1号/本郷猛役に挑戦!「やらなきゃならない宿命」 |url=https://eiga.com/news/20211130/2/ |publisher=Eiga |access-date=29 November 2021 |language=ja |date=29 November 2021}}</ref>
===TV Asahi===
* ''[https://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/geats/ Kamen Rider Geats]''
* ''[https://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/revice/ Kamen Rider Revice]''
* ''[https://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/saber/ Kamen Rider Saber]''
* ''[http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/zero-one/ Kamen Rider Zero-One]''
* ''[http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/zi-o/ Kamen Rider Zi-O]''
* ''[http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/build/ Kamen Rider Build]''
* ''[http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/ex-aid/ Kamen Rider Ex-Aid]''
* ''[http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/ghost/ Kamen Rider Ghost]''
* ''[http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/drive/ Kamen Rider Drive]''
* ''[http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/gaimu/ Kamen Rider Gaim]''
* ''[http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/wizard Kamen Rider Wizard]''
* ''[http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/fourze Kamen Rider Fourze]''
* ''[http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/ooo Kamen Rider OOO]''
* ''[http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/double Kamen Rider W]''
* ''[http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/decade Kamen Rider Decade]''
* ''[http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/kiva/ Kamen Rider Kiva]''
* ''[http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/den-o/ Kamen Rider Den-O]''
* ''[http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/kabuto Kamen Rider Kabuto]''
* ''[http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/hibiki Kamen Rider Hibiki]''
* ''[http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/blade Kamen Rider Blade]''
* ''[http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/555 Kamen Rider 555]''
* ''[http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/ryuki Kamen Rider Ryuki]''


As of 2023, another remake of the Kamen Rider series in the Reiwa era was made and reimagined with ''[[Shin Kamen Rider (film)|Shin Kamen Rider]]''.
===Toei===
* ''[http://www.toei.co.jp/tv/zi-o/ Kamen Rider Zi-O]''
* ''[http://www.toei.co.jp/tv/build/ Kamen Rider Build]''
* ''[http://www.toei.co.jp/tv/amazons2/ Kamen Rider Amazons Season 2]''
* ''[http://www.toei.co.jp/tv/ex-aid/ Kamen Rider Ex-Aid]''
* ''[http://www.toei.co.jp/tv/amazons/ Kamen Rider Amazons]''
* ''[http://www.toei.co.jp/tv/ghost Kamen Rider Ghost]''
* ''[http://www.toei.co.jp/tv/drive Kamen Rider Drive]''
* ''[http://www.toei.co.jp/tv/gaimu Kamen Rider Gaim]''
* ''[http://www.toei.co.jp/tv/wizard Kamen Rider Wizard]''
* ''[http://www.toei.co.jp/tv/fourze Kamen Rider Fourze]''
* ''[http://www.toei.co.jp/tv/OOO Kamen Rider OOO]''
* ''[http://www.toei.co.jp/tv/w Kamen Rider W]''
* ''[http://www.toei.co.jp/tv/decade Kamen Rider Decade]''
* ''[http://www.toei.co.jp/tv/kiva Kamen Rider Kiva]''
* ''[http://www.toei-video.co.jp/archive/ridernext/ Kamen Rider The Next]''
* ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20080710014043/http://tvarc.toei.co.jp/tv/den-o/ Kamen Rider Den-O]''
* ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20090818184418/http://tvarc.toei.co.jp/tv/kabuto/ Kamen Rider Kabuto]''
* ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20070611215502/http://www.toei-video.co.jp/DVD/sp21/rider1st.html#ce Kamen Rider The First]''
* ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20090831225106/http://tvarc.toei.co.jp/tv/hibiki/ Kamen Rider Hibiki]''
* ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20090803154902/http://tvarc.toei.co.jp/tv/blade/ Kamen Rider Blade]''
* ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20090925014454/http://tvarc.toei.co.jp/tv/555/ Kamen Rider 555]''
* ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20090901234445/http://tvarc.toei.co.jp/tv/ryuki/ Kamen Rider Ryuki]''
* ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20091003030049/http://tvarc.toei.co.jp/tv/agito/ Kamen Rider Agito]''
* ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20050104004124/http://www.toei-video.co.jp/DVD/sp21/riderguide.html Kamen Rider Kuuga]''


===Bandai===
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
* ''[http://rider.b-boys.jp/ Kamen Rider Ghost]''
* ''[http://www.b-boys.jp/drive/ Kamen Rider Drive]''
* ''[http://www.b-boys.jp/gaim/ Kamen Rider Gaim]''
* ''[http://www.b-boys.jp/wizard/ Kamen Rider Wizard]''
* ''[http://www.b-boys.jp/fourze/ Kamen Rider Fourze]''
* ''[http://www.b-boys.jp/ooo/ Kamen Rider OOO]''
* ''[http://www.b-boys.jp/enwiki/w/ Kamen Rider W]''
* ''[http://www.b-boys.jp/decade/ Kamen Rider Decade]''


== External links ==
===Others===
* [http://www.ishimoripro.com ''Ishimori@Style''] - Shotaro Ishinomori on [[Ishimori Productions]] official website
* [https://www.kamen-rider-official.com/ Kamen Rider Official] – The main site of the Kamen Rider franchise ,the background changes when next series premieres.
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20050104004124/http://www.toei-video.co.jp/DVD/sp21/riderguide.html ''Kamen Rider series on Region 2 DVD''] - A complete list of all official releases to date.
* [http://www.ishimoripro.com Ishimori@Style] – Shotaro Ishinomori with [[Ishimori Productions]] Official Website
* [http://www.toei-eigamura.com/?c=2 Toei Kyoto Studio Park] A theme park with official events, exhibitions and shops related to the ''Kamen Rider'' series
* [http://www.toei-eigamura.com/?c=2 ''Toei Kyoto Studio Park''] - A theme park with official events, exhibitions and shops related to the Kamen Rider.
* {{curlie|Arts/Television/Programs/Science_Fiction_and_Fantasy/K/Kamen_Rider/|''Kamen Rider''}}
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20120819220718/http://www.masked-rider.co.kr/index.jsp Bandai Korea's ''Kamen Rider'' site] – The site's look changes when the next series premieres in Korea


{{Kamen Rider}}
{{Kamen Rider}}
{{Shotaro Ishinomori}}


[[Category:Kamen Rider| ]]
[[Category:Kamen Rider television series|Kamen Rider]]
[[Category:Bandai brands]]
[[Category:1970s Japanese television series]]
[[Category:Bandai Namco franchises]]
[[Category:1971 Japanese television series debuts]]
[[Category:Manga series]]
[[Category:1973 Japanese television series endings]]
[[Category:Mass media franchises introduced in 1971]]
[[Category:Mainichi Broadcasting System original programming]]
[[Category:Japanese drama television series]]
[[Category:TV Asahi original programming]]
[[Category:Teen superhero television series]]
[[Category:Cyborgs in television]]
[[Category:Toei tokusatsu]]
[[Category:Human experimentation in fiction]]
[[Category:Japanese superheroes]]
[[Category:Japanese action television series]]
[[Category:Television series about neo-Nazism]]
[[Category:Television series about Nazis]]
[[Category:Terrorism in television]]
[[Category:Japanese horror fiction television series]]
[[Category:Japanese science fiction television series]]

Revision as of 09:38, 18 May 2024

Kamen Rider
Original Japanese title card
GenreTokusatsu
Superhero
Horror
Science fiction
Created byShotaro Ishinomori
Developed byMasaru Igami
Directed byKoichi Takemoto
StarringHiroshi Fujioka
Takeshi Sasaki
Jirō Chiba
Akiji Kobayashi
Wakako Oki
Voices ofGorō Naya
Narrated byShinji Nakae
Opening theme"Let's Go!! Rider Kick!" by Hiroshi Fujioka (#1–13) and Masato Shimon (#14–88)
"Rider Action" by Masato Shimon (#89–98)
Ending theme"Kamen Rider no Uta" by Masato Shimon (#1–71)
"Rider Action" by Masato Shimon (#72–88)
"Lonely Kamen Rider" by Masato Shimon (#89–98)
ComposerShunsuke Kikuchi
Country of originJapan
No. of episodes98
Production
Running time24 minutes
Production companiesToei Company
Ishimori Productions
Original release
NetworkMBS TV
NET
ReleaseApril 3, 1971 (1971-04-03) –
February 10, 1973 (1973-02-10)
Related
Kamen Rider V3
Manga
Written byShotaro Ishinomori
Published byKodansha
MagazineWeekly Shōnen Magazine
DemographicShōnen
Original run19711973
Volumes4

Kamen Rider (Japanese: 仮面ライダー, Hepburn: Kamen Raidā, lit.'Masked Rider') is a Japanese tokusatsu superhero television series and weekly science fiction manga created by manga artist Shotaro Ishinomori. The original airing consisted of a total of 98 episodes and were broadcast from April 3, 1971, to February 10, 1973, on Mainichi Broadcasting System and NET (now TV Asahi). The manga adaptation was also featured in Shōnen Magazine around the same period. The series has evolved into a franchise with many subsequent annual iterations.

The series spawned a second boom in tokusatsu shows, and was Toei's first commercialised series.[1] During its run the brand sold 620 million bags of popcorn (branded Kamen Rider Snack),[2] 3.8 million transformation belts[3] and 300,000 bikes.[4]

Story

The series takes place in a world plagued by Shocker, a mysterious worldwide terrorist organization formed mostly by remaining members of the Nazis. To further its plans for world domination, Shocker recruited its agents through kidnapping, turning their victims into mutant cyborgs (改造人間, kaizō ningen, lit.'transhuman') and, ultimately, brainwashing them. However, one victim named Takeshi Hongo escaped just before the final brainwashing. With his sanity and moral conscience intact, Takeshi wages a one-man war against Shocker's minions as the grasshopper-themed cyborg superhero Kamen Rider. Another victim of the cyborg process, freelance photographer Hayato Ichimonji, became Kamen Rider 2 after Kamen Rider, who eventually renamed himself "Kamen Rider 1", saved him from Shocker's brainwashing. Assisted by motorcycle race team manager Tobei Tachibana and FBI agent Kazuya Taki, the Kamen Riders fought in both solo and partnered missions against Shocker while later getting help from Tobei and Kazuya's Kamen Rider Kid Corps. Later, after many battles with Shocker the organization was wiped out and its leader created Gel-Shocker to fulfill his goals. After many battles with Gel-Shocker the Kamen Riders defeated the organization's leader and stopped Gel-Shocker. With Kazuya returning to America peace was restored, or so it seems.

Manga

Many manga based on the original Kamen Rider series have been published, but only one was penned and drawn by Ishinomori himself. Ishinomori was also the author of one chapter of the Kamen Rider Amazon manga and the entire Kamen Rider Black manga. However, those manga were based on sequels to Kamen Rider, rather than the original series.

The original manga, published in 1971, initially follows a path resembling the first few episodes of the TV series, from basic plot to creature designs. However, when Takeshi leaves the story, the series diverge greatly. In the TV show, Takeshi travels abroad to fight Shocker in other countries, leaving Japan's protection to Hayato Ichimonji, a freelance cameraman who was experimented on by Shocker but saved by Takeshi, becoming the second Kamen Rider. In the manga, Takeshi never left Japan. He was confronted by twelve "Shocker Riders" and was subsequently mortally wounded during his battle against them. Hayato Ichimonji, one of the twelve Shocker Riders, receives a head injury during the fight and regains his conscience as a result. He then turns against Shocker and takes Takeshi's role as Kamen Rider. In spite of the damage to his body, Takeshi's brain survives and guides Hayato, the two fighting as one.

Takeshi eventually returns as a Rider in both stories, but starting with Hayato's debut, villains and even basic story development greatly diverge between the two versions. The manga portrays a seemingly hopeless battle against Shocker, an organization with ties to governmental conspiracies that seems much bigger than either of the two Riders. The live action TV shows portray the Riders as heroes strong enough to bring down Shocker, only to see it replaced by similar organizations led by Shocker's mysterious leader. The Shocker Riders eventually appear in the TV series, too, but they looked different and had different abilities. There were also only six Shocker Riders, rather than the manga's 12.

In February 2021, Seven Seas Entertainment announced they licensed the original manga for publication in one omnibus edition.[5]

Characters

Kamen Riders

  • Takeshi Hongo/Kamen Rider 1 (本郷 猛/仮面ライダー1号, Hongō Takeshi/Kamen Raidā Ichigō): The first main protagonist. A biochemistry lab student at Jonan University who also races motorcycles as part of the Tachibana Racing Club.
  • Hayato Ichimonji/Kamen Rider 2 (一文字 隼人/仮面ライダー2号, Ichimonji Hayato/Kamen Raidā Nigō): The other main protagonist. A freelance photographer who becomes the second Kamen Rider after Takeshi saves him from Shocker.

Allies

  • Tobei Tachibana (立花 藤兵衛, Tachibana Tōbee): Takeshi's racing mentor and confidant. He is often called "Boss" by other members of his racing club. He runs a small café named Snack Amigo where Hongo and other members of Tachibana's racing club gather in early episodes, and its employees occasionally assist Hongo in countering Shocker's plans. At the same time as Takeshi's departure, he opens a motorcycle goods shop named Tachibana Auto Corner and sets up the Tachibana Racing Club. He is often seen smoking a pipe.
  • Kazuya Taki (滝 和也, Taki Kazuya, 11, 13-19, 21-82 & 84-98): An FBI agent assigned to investigate Shocker activities in Japan. While not himself a cyborg, Kazuya was skilled in martial arts and often used them alongside both Kamen Riders to battle the combatants who invariably accompanied a Shocker commander.
  • Hiroshi Midorikawa (緑川 弘, Midorikawa Hiroshi, 1): Takeshi's teacher at university and an authority on biochemistry. He is a Shocker scientist, but freed Takeshi and was killed by Man Spider, an agent of Shocker.
  • Ruriko Midorikawa (緑川 ルリ子, Midorikawa Ruriko, 1-13): The daughter of Doctor Midorikawa, she initially blames Takeshi for her father's death, but eventually learns the truth and becomes his ally. In episode 14, it is revealed that she accompanied Takeshi on his quest to defeat Shocker activities in Europe.
  • Hiromi Nohara (野原 ひろみ, Nohara Hiromi, 1-25 & 34): Ruriko's fellow student, who works as a waitress at Snack Amigo.
  • Shiro (史郎, Shirō, 2-15): A bartender at Snack Amigo.
  • Rider Girls (ライダーガールズ, Raidā Gāruzu): Female members of the Tachibana Racing Club who assist both Kamen Riders.
    • Yuri (ユリ, 14-98): Hiromi's friend who is a first-degree black belt in karate.
    • Mari (マリ, 14-25 & 29-38): Hiromi's friend who has experience in fencing.
    • Michi (ミチ, 14-25): Hiromi's friend who has experience in aikido and is a small-displacement rider.
    • Emi (エミ, 40-68): Takeshi's assistant from Switzerland who has experience in aikido.
    • Mika (ミカ, 40-52): Takeshi's assistant from Switzerland who is good at fortune-telling by playing cards.
    • Tokko (トッコ, 53-69): She is in charge of cooking in the Tachibana Racing Club.
    • Yokko (ヨッコ, 70-98): After the Kamen Rider Kid Corps was set up, she was in charge of communication and administration.
    • Choko (チョコ, 70-98): She likes food.
  • Goro Ishikura (石倉 五郎, Ishikura Gorō, 14-65): A bright boy who frequents the Tachibana Racing Club.
  • Kamen Rider Kid Corps (少年仮面ライダー隊, Shōnen Kamen Raidā-tai): A nationwide organization, with Tobei as the president and Kazuya as the captain, that is composed of boys and girls in episode 74.
    • Naoki & Mitsuru (ナオキ&ミツル, 62-98): Boys who serve as leading members.

Shocker

Shocker (ショッカー, Shokkā) is a terrorist organization formed by former Nazis. Shocker's goal is to conquer the world. To this end, their scientists turn humans into superhuman cyborgs by surgically altering them with animal and insect DNA with robotic cybernetics. Virtually all of its members are modified the same way. Even a Shocker Combatant is tougher, faster, and stronger than an ordinary human civilian. The original manga showed that Shocker had influence over the governments of the world. Its founders had ties to the Nazis, Illuminati and the Kamen Rider Spirits manga makes references to the group's support by the Badan Empire.

Ruthless and merciless, Shocker would often kidnap prominent scientists and force them to work for the organization, then kill them when their usefulness was at an end, or if they attempted to escape. The decision to kidnap and modify college student Takeshi Hongo proved to be their undoing. He was intended to be another of Shocker's powerful cyborg warriors, a grasshopper-human hybrid, but he escaped and opposed them as Kamen Rider 1. A later attempt to create a second, more powerful Kamen Rider backfired when the intended victim, Hayato Ichimonji, was rescued by the original Rider before he was brainwashed. Hayato joined Takeshi as Kamen Rider 2. The pair, known as the Double Riders, put an end to Shocker, and later its remnants, who formed Gelshocker after their disbandment.

In OOO, Den-O, All Riders: Let's Go Kamen Riders, Shocker, although with a membership and leadership covering Gelshocker members from the original TV series, obtained a Core Medal and modified it into the Shocker Medal. Though they were originally unable to use it, the appearance of the Greed Ankh in their time enabled the organization to obtain one of his Cell Medals and create the Shocker Greed. This altered time so that Shocker defeated the Double Riders and managed to conquer all of Japan and eventually the world, setting up a union with many of the other organizations that originally emerged after Shocker's destruction. The group is ultimately defeated by the Kamen Riders.

But as revealed in Kamen Rider OOO onwards, there are some surviving members of the Shocker organization, even from Badan Empire who went into hiding to gather data of the Kamen Riders' battles against some of their respective monsters many years ago. But during the events of Super Hero Taisen GP: Kamen Rider 3, Shocker's remaining scientists created a History Modification Machine that they use to send a time displaced cyborg called Kamen Rider Three back in time to destroy the Double Riders in the aftermath of Gelshocker's defeat, creating a new timeline where Shocker rules the world with some Kamen Riders in their service. Luckily, the apparent destruction of the History Modification Machine restores the timeline (with the exception of Go Shijima/Kamen Rider Mach who was killed by Cheetahkatatsumuri), only to be found out during the events of D-Video Special: Kamen Rider Four that Shocker secretly uses it to create time loops and alters the timeline once more, allowing to create Kamen Rider Four, as well as the revelation that they have been targeting Takumi Inui, due to his sacrifice-less wish to ensure that no one dies like what happened to one of his old allies to create a loop. As Takumi is about to destroy the machine, the Shocker Leader appears with an appearance identical to Takumi's. In the end, Takumi destroys the machine and disappears alongside the modified timeline, restored back to its original timeline once more. Though most of his allies who do not originate from the Kamen Rider 555 TV series like from Kamen Rider Drive, and even Kamen Rider Den-O's Kamen Rider Zeronos don't remember if they had encountered Takumi, only some of Takumi's old friends from the Kamen Rider 555 TV series, including Naoya Kaido still remember Takumi.

In the movie Kamen Rider 1, there is a civil war between the original Shocker and a newly formed organization called Nova Shocker in an attempt to kidnap Mayu, Tobei Tachibana's granddaughter, and release the Alexander Gamma Eyecon from her body, in order to obtain its power. As all of the revived Ambassador Hell's Shocker faction had been annihilated completely, leaving only himself, and also after he witnessed how dangerous the Alexander Gamma Eyecon is, he makes an uneasy alliance with Kamen Riders Ghost, Specter and a newly improved Kamen Rider 1.

  • Shocker Leader (ショッカー首領, Shokkā Shuryō): The high ruler of the organization and main antagonist of the series. He appears for the first time in short video footage shown in episode 34, although his appearance there is mostly hidden by shadows. He talks with his followers through speakers on Shocker's emblems in the multiple outposts. The Shocker Leader is a cruel being who does not have qualms in sacrificing his minions during moments of crisis or failure.[6] The Shocker Leader would later become the Gel-Shocker Leader (ゲルショッカー首領, Gerushokkā Shuryō) when Shocker merges with Geldam to form Gel-Shocker. He takes various forms, his first being a cyclopean gorgon in crimson robes in the original series, his second being a skeletal creature in Kamen Rider V3, following a skull-faced insect who leads a mini-restoration of Shocker known as Black Satan, and his true form is known as the Great Leader Rock (岩石大首領, Ganseki Daishuryō) in Kamen Rider Stronger where he is a giant humanoid rock man controlled by a large one-eyed cybernetic brain.
  • Colonel Zol/Wolf-Man (ゾル大佐/狼男, Zoru-taisa/Ōkami Otoko, 26-39, Kamen Rider vs. Shocker & V3 27 & 28) (a.k.a. Golden Wolf-Man (黄金狼男, Ōgon Ōkami Otoko)): From Shocker's Near and Middle East Branch, his true form was a wolf-like monster. He was also a disguise specialist, able to mimic Taki's appearance almost perfectly using only makeup during his debut. His personal mark, worn by the Combatants of his own Shocker outpost and used in his official correspondence, was the Shocker emblem, but with the bird's head replaced by a wolf's.[7] He confronted Kamen Rider 2 himself in episode 39 and after a lengthy fight was toppled off a cliff by Kamen Rider 2's Rider Punch, destroying him. Gold Wolf-Man briefly appeared in Kamen Rider vs Shocker among the members of the resurrected monster army. In Kamen Rider V3, episode 27, Colonel Zol is resurrected alongside the other three great Shocker and Gelshocker commanders from the original TV series by Destron. He aims to become a Destron commander, replacing Doctor G. However, in episode 28, after Kamen Rider V3 escaped from Destron's base, a self-destruction sequence was activated, and Colonel Zol was unable to escape, dying again with it. In the Kamen Rider Spirits manga, he is revived with other Shocker commanders as a soulless pawn of the Badan Empire.
  • Doctor Death/Ikadevil (死神博士/イカデビル, Shinigami-hakase/Ikadebiru, 40-52, Kamen Rider vs. Shocker, 61, 63 & 68, V3 27 & 28, Decade: All Riders vs Great-Shocker & Let's Go Kamen Riders): From Shocker's branch in Switzerland, he took over Japan's command after Zol's death until Ambassador Hell appeared. However, he returned to Japan in episode 61, working together with Ambassador Hell and also attempting his own plans. He had cold and calculating behavior. In episode 68, he captured Tobei to help train him for his battle with Kamen Rider 1, but that only resulted in Tobei learning about his weak point, his head. Discarding his cape when he faced Takeshi for the last time, Death assumed his squid-like monster form to fight Rider 1 with his tentacle whip, while Taki was held off by the Shocker Combatants. With Tobei's guidance, Kamen Rider 1 managed to overpower Ikadevil and weaken him with a Rider Chop before sending Squiddevil falling to his death with his Rider Drill Shoot. Ikadevil tried to rise once more, only to fall down and explode. Doctor Death was resurrected by Destron in Kamen Rider V3, episode 27, and speculated about how he had been brought back to replace Doctor G, only to learn that he was there just for a new operation. Shortly afterwards, in episode 28, he died when Destron's base accidentally self-destructed. He is revived as a soulless pawn of the Badan Empire alongside Colonel Zol and Ambassador Hell in the Kamen Rider Spirits manga.
  • Ambassador Hell/Garagaranda (地獄大使/ガラガランダ, Jigoku-taishi/Garagaranda, 53-62, 64-67, Kamen Rider vs. Ambassador Hell & 69-79, V3 27 & 28, Decade: All Riders vs Great-Shocker & Let's Go Kamen Riders): Summoned from Shocker's branch in Southeast Asia, he took command of the organisation in Japan. His true name was Damon (ダモン) according to Kamen Rider Spirits. He used an electromagnetic whip and an iron claw as his weapons. In episode 79, after capturing the Riders' friends, he called Hongo out as he assumed his rattlesnake-like monster form, able to burrow underground and use his whip arm as a weapon. Kamen Rider 1 battled Garagaranda while Kazuya freed Tobei and the others, managing to use his Rider Kick on the monster. Reverting to his normal form, Hell cursed the Riders and screamed to Shocker's perseverance before he died, exploding. Afterwards, the Shocker Leader destroyed the original Shocker. In spite of his failure, Ambassador Hell was resurrected by Destron in Kamen Rider V3, episode 27. In episode 28, his sneaky behavior ended up leading to the prisoner V3 capturing him and escaping from the Destron base. Soon afterwards, Ambassador Hell returned to the base, only to die in its self-destruction. Ambassador Hell returns in the Kamen Rider Spirits manga, working for the Badan Empire. But his difference among the other revived members is that he had his own consciousness, and it is revealed that the Silver Skull used to revive him is capable of bringing back the dead person's memories. In Kamen Rider ZX, the Ambassador of Darkness, Ambassador Hell's younger cousin, appeared as a Badan Empire leader.
  • Shocker Combatants (ショッカー戦闘員, Shokkā Sentōin): Black uniformed soldiers, some of the later versions having skeleton markings on their torsos. They are normally easily defeated by the Riders, often without even needing to transform. Their trademark is a high-pitched battle-cry.
  • Big Machine (ビッグマシン, Biggu Mashin): A character who only appears in Ishinomori's original Kamen Rider manga. Big Machine is Shocker's highest commander and main antagonist in the manga. He also seems to be the one called "Shocker Leader" by some of the lower ranking Shocker members. He has a fully mechanized body and is behind Shocker's "October Project", which involves using a supercomputer to brainwash the population of Japan. He's able to match up the Riders in combat and launch attacks that disrupt electronic equipment, including Rider 1's and 2's own bodies. The design of his body was the base of Ambassador Hell's design in the TV show, although it was altered to allow a human face and, unlike Big Machine, Ambassador Hell was kept a separate character from the Shocker Leader. In Kamen Rider × Super Sentai: Superhero Taisen, Big Machine is reimagined as a project of the Shocker/Zangyack Alliance to create a giant robot from the Crisis Fortress and the Gigant Horse.

Shocker Kaijin

The Shocker Kaijin are monsters used by Shocker who are formerly humans who were enhanced with animal DNA and cybernetics.

  • Spider Man (蜘蛛男, Kumo Otoko, 1, 13, Rider vs Shocker) – A spider kaijin with heightened strength and agility. Spider Man was responsible for the capture of Takeshi Hongo, who would later become the first Kamen Rider. Not to be confused with the Marvel Comics character with a similar name.
  • Bat Man (蝙蝠男, Kōmori Otoko, 2, 13, Rider vs Shocker) (a.k.a. Human Bat (人間蝙蝠, Ningen Kōmori)) - A bat monster. Not to be confused with the similarly named DC Comics character.
  • Scorpion Man (さそり男, Sasori Otoko, 3, 13, Rider vs Shocker) (a.k.a. Scorpion Human (さそり人間, Sasori Ningen)) - A scorpion monster.
  • Sarracenian (サラセニアン, Sarasenian, 4, 13, 27, Rider vs Shocker) (a.k.a. Sarracenia Human (サラセニア人間, Sarasenia Ningen)) - A sarracenia monster.
  • Mantis Man (かまきり男, Kamakiri Otoko, 5, 13) - A mantis monster.
  • Grimreaper Chameleon (死神カメレオン, Shinigami Kamereon, 6-7, 13, Rider vs Shocker) (a.k.a. Chameleon Man (カメレオン男, Kamereon Otoko)) - A chameleon monster.
  • Wasp Woman (蜂女, Hachi Onna, 8, 13, Kamen Rider: Seigi No keifu) - A female bee monster armed with a rapier as her weapon.
  • Cobra Man (コブラ男, Kobura Otoko, 9) - A cobra monster.
  • Gebacondor (ゲバコンドル, Gebakondoru, 11, 13, 27, Rider vs Shocker) - A condor monster.ider vs Shocker movie, but did not actually have an active participation there.
  • Yamogeras (ヤモゲラス, Yamogerasu, 12, 13, Rider vs Shocker) - A gecko monster.
  • Tokageron (トカゲロン, Tokageron, 13) - Originally an arrogant soccer player named Ken Nomoto (野本健, Nomoto Ken), he fell into Shocker's sights due to his leg strength. Though he escapes Grimreaper Chameleon, Nomoto is captured by Spider Man as he was then converted into a lizard cyborg. Retaining his arrogance, Togakeron is used in Shocker's scheme down the Tokyo Atomic Energy lab's barrier with Shocker's "Barrier Destruction Ball" bomb for the Revived Kaijin Corps (再生怪人軍団, Saisei Kaijin Gundan, 13) to storm in and get the materials within. Though he defeats Kamen Rider #1's Rider Kick, Hongo musters the new Lightning Rider Kick and uses it to kick the Barrier Destruction Ball back to Tokageron and the defeated Revived Kaijin Corps, destroying them all as the bomb detonates.
  • Saboteguron (サボテグロン, Saboteguron, 14-15, Rider vs Shocker) - A cactus monster.
  • Phirasaurus (ピラザウルス, Pirazaurusu, 16-17) (a.k.a. Phirasaurus Human (人間ピラザウルス, Ningen Pirazaurusu)) – A piranha/dinosaur monster.
  • Hitodanger (ヒトデンジャー, Hitodenjā, 18) - A giant starfish monster.
  • Kanibubbler (カニバブラー, Kanibaburā, 19, 37, Rider vs Shocker) - A crab monster.
  • Dokugandar's Caterpillar Form (ドクガンダー, Dokugandā, 20, Rider vs Shocker) – A caterpillar monster.
    • Dokugandar's Imago Form (21, Rider vs Shocker) - Dokugandar's moth monster form. The form Dokugandar took after breaking from its white cocoon.
  • Amazonia (アマゾニア, Amazonia, 22) - A piranha monster.
  • Musasabeedle (ムササビードル, Musasabīdoru, 23, Rider vs Shocker, Rider vs Ambassador Hell) - A Japanese giant flying squirrel monster.
  • Kinokomorgu (キノコモルグ, Kinokomorugu, 24-25, Rider vs Shocker, Rider vs Ambassador Hell) – A mushroom monster.
  • Colonel Zol's Kaijin - These are the Kaijin used by Colonel Zol.
    • Antlion Thunder (地獄サンダー, Jigoku Sandā, 26, Rider vs Shocker) - An antlion monster.
    • Mukaderas (ムカデラス, Mukaderasu, 27, 37, Rider vs Shocker) - A centipede monster.
    • Mogurang (モグラング, Mogurangu, 28, 37, 41, Rider vs Shocker) – A mole monster.
    • Kuragedarl (クラゲダール, Kuragedāru, 29) - A jellyfish monster.
    • Zanburonzo (ザンブロンゾ, Zanburonzo, 30, Rider vs Shocker, Rider vs Ambassador Hell) - A trilobite monster.
    • Arigabari (アリガバリ, Arigabari, 31) - A giant anteater monster.
    • Dokudahlian (ドクダリアン, Dokudarian, 32, Rider vs Shocker, V3 27-28) – A flower monster.
    • Armadillong (アルマジロング, Arumajirongu, 33, 37, 41, Rider vs Shocker) – An armadillo monster.
    • Gamagirah (ガマギラー, Gamagirā, 34, Rider vs Shocker) – A toad monster.
    • Arikimedes (アリキメデス, Arikimedesu, 35, Rider vs Shocker) - A queen ant monster.
    • Egyptas (エジプタス, Ejiputasu, 36) – An Egyptian mummy altered into a mummy monster by Shocker Japan under Colonel Zol's orders.
    • Torikabuto (トリカブト, Torikabuto, 37, Rider vs Shocker) – An aconitum monster.
    • Eiking (エイキング, Eikingu, 38, Kamen Rider: Seigi No keifu, Rider vs Shocker, Rider vs Ambassador Hell) - A stingray monster.
    • Wolf Man (狼男, Ōkami Otoko, 39) (a.k.a. Experimental Wolf Man (実験用狼男, Jikkenyō Ōkami Otoko)) - An experimental wolf monster created by the wolf virus.
  • Doctor Death's Kaijin - These are the Kaijin used by Doctor Shinigami.
    • Snowman (スノーマン, Sunōman, 40) - A yeti monster.
    • Ghoster (ゴースター, Gōsutā, 41) - A magma monster.
    • Fly Man (ハエ男, Hae Otoko, 42) - A fly monster.
    • Pranodon (プラノドン, Puranodon, 43) - A pteranodon monster.
    • Kabibinga (カビビンガ, Kabibinga, 44) - A mold monster
    • Namekujira (ナメクジラ, Namekujira, 45) - A slug monster.
    • Bearkonger (ベアーコンガー, Beākongā, 46) - A brown bear/cougar monster.
    • Todogirah (トドギラー, Todogirā, 47) - A steller sea lion monster.
    • Hiruguerrilla (ヒルゲリラ, Hirugerira, 48) - A leech monster.
    • Isoginchak (イソギンチャック, Isoginchakku, 49) - A sea anemone monster.
    • Kamestone (カメストーン, Kamesutōn, 50,Kamen Rider: Seigi No keifu) - A turtle monster.
    • Unicornos (ユニコルノス, Yunikorunosu, 51) - A unicorn monster.
    • Gilgalass (ギルガラス, Girugarasu, 52, Kamen Rider: Seigi No keifu) - A jungle crow monster.
    • Namazugiller (ナマズギラー, Namazugirā, 61, Kamen Rider: Seigi No keifu) - An electric catfish monster.
    • Saigang (サイギャング, Saigyangu, 63, 66) - A rhinoceros monster.
  • Ambassador Hell's Kaijin - These are the Kaijin used by Ambassador Hell.
    • Jaguarman (ジャガーマン, Jagāman, 53, 66) - A jaguar monster.
    • Sea Snake Man (海蛇男, Umihebi Otoko, 54) - A sea snake monster.
    • Cockroach Man (ごきぶり男, Gokiburi Otoko, 55) - A cockroach monster.
    • Dokumondo (ドクモンド, Dokumondo, 57) - A ground spider monster.
    • Poison Lizard Man (毒トカゲ男, Dokutokage Otoko, 58, 66) - A frilled lizard monster.
    • Earthworm Man (ミミズ男, Mimizu Otoko, 59) - An earthworm monster.
    • Owl Man (フクロウ男, Fukurō Otoko, 60) - An owl monster.
    • Harinezuras (ハリネズラス, Harinezurasu, 62, 66) - A hedgehog monster.
    • Semiminga (セミミンガ, Semiminga, 64, Kamen Rider: Seigi No keifu) - A cicada monster.
    • Kabutorong (カブトロング, Kabutorongu, 65) - A Japanese rhinoceros beetle monster.
    • Kamikirikid (カミキリキッド, Kamikirikiddo, 66, Kamen Rider: Seigi No keifu) - A longhorn beetle monster.
    • Girizames (ギリザメス, Girizamesu, 67) - A sawshark monster.
    • Gillerkorogi (ギラーコオロギ, Girākōrogi, 69) - A cricket monster.
    • Elekibotaru (エレキボタル, Erekibotaru, 70) - A firefly monster.
    • Abugomens (アブゴメス, Abugomesu, 71) - A horse-fly monster.
    • Mosquiras (モスキラス, Mosukirasu, 72) - A mosquito monster.
    • Shiomaneking (シオマネキング, Shiomanekingu, 72-73, V3 27-28) - A fiddler crab monster.
    • Shiracuras (シラキュラス, Shirakyurasu, 74) - A crab louse monster.
    • Bararanga (バラランガ, Bararanga, 75) - A rose monster.
    • Seadragon I (シードラゴンⅠ世, Shīdoragon Issei, 76) - A seahorse monster.
    • Seadragon II (シードラゴンⅡ世, Shīdoragon Nisei, 76) - A seahorse monster.
    • Seadragon III (シードラゴンⅢ世, Shīdoragon Sansei, 76) - A seahorse monster.
    • Imoriges (イモリゲス, Imorigesu, 77, V3 27-28) - A newt monster.
    • Unidogma (ウニドグマ, Unidoguma, 78, V3 27-28) - A sea urchin monster.

Gel-Shocker

Gel-Shocker (ゲルショッカー, Gerushokkā) was formed after the disbandment of Shocker, with the remnants of the organization absorbing another organization Geldam (ゲルダム団, Gerudamu-dan) trained in the deserts of Africa. After Ambassador Hell's defeat, the Shocker Leader reorganized the organization from the ground up, destroying all remaining secret bases and even killing the remaining troop contingent in a bloody forest massacre witnessed by unfortunate campers.

  • General Black (ブラック将軍, Burakku-shōgun): The leader of Gel-Shocker. General Black is a commander originally from Geldam who had a monstrous leech/chameleon hybrid form called Hilchameleon (ヒルカメレオン, Hirukamereon) who had the ability to suck blood by hugging humans, which was later used to revive Gel-Shocker monsters after already being defeated by the Double Riders, throwing leeches which cause the target to follow his orders and turn himself invisible. Later, he fought the Double Riders on a roller coaster and was defeated by their Rider Double Chop while turning invisible. Weakened, he reverted to his human form and cursed the Double Riders before exploding. Eventually, General Black was resurrected and worked for Destron in an important operation but ended up dying in the self-destruction of a Destron base. Black returned as a soulless pawn of the Badan Empire in the Kamen Rider Spirits manga, but he was defeated by a Rider Double Kick performed by Kamen Riders 2 and ZX.
  • Gel-Shocker Combatants (ゲルショッカー戦闘員, Geru Shokkā Sentōin): Gel-Shocker Combatants wore bright purple and yellow costumes, were capable of traveling from one place to another by transforming into sheets that would drop down onto unsuspecting victims, and were capable of taking more blunt abuse than their predecessors.
  • Shocker Riders (ショッカーライダー, Shokkā Raidā): There were 12 of them instead of the 6 created by Gel-Shocker that later appeared in the TV series. Hayato Ichimonji was one of them. In episode 15, Hayato had a brief flashback about his capture by Shocker. A Shocker surgeon told him that he'd become a cyborg to fight against the Kamen Rider. Afterwards, Hayato mentioned that he was saved by Kamen Rider #1, but the specific circumstances of that event are not clear.

Gel-Shocker Kaijin

The Gel-Shocker Kaijin are the Kaijin of Gel-Shocker who are hybrids of two different animals or an animal and a plant.

  • Ganikoumoru (ガニコウモル, Ganikōmoru, 78-80, 97): A crab/bat monster who is the only monster of Geldam before it combined with the remnants of Shocker. Destroyed by Kamen Rider 1. He was later revived in a new appearance called Revived Ganikoumoru (再生ガニコウモル, Saisei Ganikōmoru, 97)
  • Sasori Tokagues (サソリトカゲス, Sasori Tokagesu, 81): A scorpion/lizard monster.
  • Kurage Wolf (クラゲウルフ, Kurage Urufu, 82): A jellyfish/wolf monster.
  • Ino Kabuton (イノカブトン, 83): A wild boar/Japanese rhinoceros beetle monster.
  • Isoguin Jaguar (イソギンジャガー, Isogin Jagā, 84): A sea anemone/jaguar monster created from a man named Yosuke Katsurojou.
  • Utsubo Games (ウツボガメス, Utsubo Gamesu, 85): A moray eel/turtle monster.
  • Washi Kamaguilli (ワシカマギリ, Washi Kamagiri, 86): An eagle/mantis monster.
  • Kumo Lion (クモライオン, Kumo Raion, 87): A golden silk spider/lion monster.
  • Neko Yamori (ネコヤモリ, 88): A cat/gecko monster.
  • Nezcondor (ネズコンドル, Nezukondoru, 89, 90): A house mouse/condor monster. He was later enhanced into Remodeled Nezcondor (改造ネズコンドル, Kaizō Nezukondoru, 90).
  • Mukade Tiger (ムカデタイガー, Mukade Taigā, 91): A centipede/tiger monster.
  • Haetori Bachi (ハエトリバチ, 92, 93): A Venus flytrap/bee monster.
  • Ei Dokugar (エイドクガー, Ei Dokugā, 93, 94): A ray/moth monster.
  • Namekuji Kinoka (ナメクジキノコ, 93, 94): A slug/mushroom monster.
  • Garaox (ガラオックス, Garaokkusu, 95): A jungle crow/ox monster.
  • Saboten Bat (サボテンバット, Saboten Bat, 96): A cactus/bat monster.

Episode list

  1. The Eerie Man Spider (怪奇蜘蛛男, Kaiki Kumo Otoko) (Original Airdate: April 3, 1971)
  2. The Terrifying Man Bat (恐怖蝙蝠男, Kyōfu Kōmori Otoko) (Original Airdate: April 10, 1971)
  3. The Monstrous Scorpion Man (怪人さそり男, Kaijin Sasori Otoko) (Original Airdate: April 17, 1971)
  4. The Man-Eating Sarracenian (人喰いサラセニアン, Hitokui Sarasenian) (Original Airdate: April 24, 1971)
  5. The Monstrous Mantis Man (怪人かまきり男, Kaijin Kamakiri Otoko) (Original Airdate: May 1, 1971)
  6. The Deadly Chameleon (死神カメレオン, Shinigami Kamereon) (Original Airdate: May 8, 1971)
  7. The Deadly Chameleon! Showdown at the Old World's Fair! (死神カメレオン決闘!万博跡, Shinigami Kamereon Kettō! Banpaku Ato) (Original Airdate: May 15, 1971)
  8. The Creepy Wasp Woman! (怪異!蜂女, Kaii! Hachi Onna) (Original Airdate: May 22, 1971)
  9. The Monstrous Cobra Man (恐怖コブラ男, Kyōfu Kobura Otoko) (Original Airdate: May 29, 1971)
  10. The Reborn Cobra Man (よみがえるコブラ男, Yomigaeru Kobura Otoko) (Original Airdate: June 5, 1971)
  11. Blood-Sucking Monster Gebacondor (吸血怪人ゲバコンドル, Kyūketsu Kaijin Gebakondoru) (Original Airdate: June 12, 1971)
  12. The Murderous Yamogeras (殺人ヤモゲラス, Satsujin Yamogerasu) (Original Airdate: June 19, 1971)
  13. Tokageron and the Monster Army! (トカゲロンと怪人大軍団, Tokageron to Kaijin Dai Gundan) (Original Airdate: June 26, 1971)
  14. The Devilish Saboteguron Attacks! (魔人サボテグロンの襲来, Majin Saboteguron no Shūrai) (Original Airdate: July 3, 1971)
  15. Saboteguron Strikes Back (逆襲サボテグロン, Gyakushū Saboteguron) (Original Airdate: July 10, 1971)
  16. The Devil Wrestler Pirasaurus (悪魔のレスラーピラザウルス, Akuma no Resurā Pirazaurusu) (Original Airdate: July 17, 1971)
  17. Deathmatch in the Ring! Defeat Pirasaurus (リングの死闘倒せ!ピラザウルス, Ringu No Shitō Taose! Pirazaurusu) (Original Airdate: July 24, 1971)
  18. Fossil Man Hitodanger (化石男ヒトデンジャー, Kaseki-Otoko Hitodenjā) (Original Airdate: July 31, 1971)
  19. The Monstrous Kanibubbler Appears in Hokkaido (怪人カニバブラー北海道に現る, Kaijin Kanibaburā Hokkaidō ni Arawaru) (Original Airdate: August 7, 1971)
  20. The Fire-Breathing Caterpillar Monster, Dokugandar (火を吹く毛虫怪人ドクガンダー, Hi o Fuku Kemushi Kaijin Dokugandā) (Original Airdate: August 14, 1971)
  21. Dokugandar, Battle at Osaka Castle! (ドクガンダー 大阪城の対決!, Dokugandā Ōsaka-jō no Taiketsu!) (Original Airdate: August 21, 1971)
  22. Monstrous Merman Amazonia (怪魚人アマゾニア, Kaigyojin Amazonia) (Original Airdate: August 28, 1971)
  23. Soaring Monster Masasabedle (空飛ぶ怪人ムササビードル, Soratobu Kaijin Musasabīdoru) (Original Airdate: September 4, 1971)
  24. Poisonous Monster Kinokomorgue Attacks! (猛毒怪人キノコモルグの出撃!, Mōdoku Kaijin Kinokomorugu no Shutsugeki!) (Original Airdate: September 11, 1971)
  25. Defeat Kinokomorgue! (キノコモルグを倒せ!, Kinokomorugu o Taose!) (Original Airdate: September 18, 1971)
  26. The Terrifying Antlion Pit (恐怖のあり地獄, Kyōfu no Arijigoku) (Original Airdate: September 25, 1971)
  27. Mukaderas's Monster School (ムカデラス怪人教室, Mukaderasu Kaijin Kyōshitsu) (Original Airdate: October 2, 1971)
  28. Underground Monster Mogurang (地底怪人モグラング, Chitei Kaijin Mogurangu) (Original Airdate: October 9, 1971)
  29. The Electric Monster Kuragedarl (電気怪人クラゲダール, Denki Kaijin Kuragedāru) (Original Airdate: October 16, 1971)
  30. Reborn Fossil: The Bloodsucking Trilobite (よみがえる化石吸血三葉虫, Yomigaeru Kaseki Kyūketsu San'yōchū) (Original Airdate: October 23, 1971)
  31. Deathmatch! The Ant-eating Devil Arigabari (死斗!ありくい魔人アリガバリ, Shitō! Arikui Majin Arigabari) (Original Airdate: October 30, 1971)
  32. The Man-Eating Flower, Dokudahlian (人喰い花ドクダリアン, Hitokui Hana Dokudarian) (Original Airdate: November 6, 1971)
  33. Steel Monster Armadillong (鋼鉄怪人アルマジロング, Kōtetsu Kaijin Arumajirongu) (Original Airdate: November 13, 1971)
  34. Japan in Peril! Gamagiller's Invasion (日本危うし!ガマギラーの侵入, Nihon Ayaushi! Gamagirā no Shin'nyū) (Original Airdate: November 20, 1971)
  35. The Killer Queen Ant, Arikimedes (殺人女王蟻アリキメデス, Satsujin Joōari Arikimedesu) (Original Airdate: November 27, 1971)
  36. The Revived Mummy Monster, Egyptus (いきかえったミイラ怪人エジプタス, Ikikaetta Miira Kaijin Ejiputasu) (Original Airdate: December 4, 1971)
  37. Poison Gas Monster Torikabuto's Operation: G (毒ガス怪人トリカブトのG作戦, Dokugasu Kaijin Torikabuto no Jī Sakusen) (Original Airdate: December 11, 1971)
  38. Lightning Monster Rayking's Worldwide Blackout Operation (稲妻怪人エイキングの世界暗黒作戦, Inazuma Kaijin Eikingu no Sekai Ankoku Sakusen) (Original Airdate: December 18, 1971)
  39. The Monstrous Wolf Man's Killer Party (怪人狼男の殺人大パーティー, Kaijin Ōkami Otoko no Satsujin Dai Pātī) (Original Airdate: December 25, 1971)
  40. Deathmatch! The Monstrous Snowman vs. The Two Riders! (死斗!怪人スノーマン対二人のライダー, Shitō! Kaijin Sunōman Tai Futari no Raidā) (Original Airdate: January 1, 1972)
  41. Magma Monster Ghoster! The Great Battle of Sakurajima (マグマ怪人ゴースター 桜島大決戦, Maguma Kaijin Gōsutā Sakurajima Dai Kessen) (Original Airdate: January 8, 1972)
  42. The Demonic Assassin, the Eerie Fly Man (悪魔の使者 怪奇ハエ男, Akuma no Shisha Kaiki Hae Otoko) (Original Airdate: January 15, 1972)
  43. The Monster-Bird Pranodon Attacks (怪鳥人プラノドンの襲撃, Kai Chōjin Puranodon no Shūgeki) (Original Airdate: January 22, 1972)
  44. Graveyard Monster Kabibinga (墓場の怪人カビビンガ, Hakaba no Kaijin Kabibinga) (Original Airdate: January 29, 1972)
  45. The Monstrous Namekujira's Gas Explosion Plan (怪人ナメクジラのガス爆発作戦, Kaijin Namekujira no Gasu Bakuhatsu Sakusen) (Original Airdate: February 5, 1972)
  46. Showdown!! Snowy Mountain Monster Bearkonger (対決!!雪山怪人ベアーコンガー, Taiketsu!! Yukiyama Kaijin Beākongā) (Original Airdate: February 12, 1972)
  47. The Deadly Ice Devil Todogiller (死を呼ぶ氷魔人トドギラー, Shi o Yobu Kōri Majin Todogirā) (Original Airdate: February 19, 1972)
  48. Hiruguerrilla of the Vampire Swamp (吸血沼のヒルゲリラ, Kyūketsu Numa no Hirugerira) (Original Airdate: February 26, 1972)
  49. The Man-Eating Monster, Isoginchak (人喰い怪人イソギンチャック, Hitokui Kaijin Isoginchakku) (Original Airdate: March 4, 1972)
  50. The Monstrous Kamestone's Killer Aurora Plan (怪人カメストーンの殺人オーロラ計画, Kaijin Kamesutōn no Satsujin Ōrora Keikaku) (Original Airdate: March 11, 1972)
  51. Rock Monster Unicornos Versus the Double Rider Kick (石怪人ユニコルノス対ダブルライダーキック, Ishi Kaijin Yunikorunosu Tai Daburu Raidā Kikku) (Original Airdate: March 18, 1972)
  52. My Name is Monster Bird Gilgalass! (おれの名は 怪鳥人ギルガラスだ!, Ore no Na wa Kai Chōjin Girugarasu da!) (Original Airdate: March 25, 1972)
  53. The Monstrous Jaguar Man's Deadly Motorcycle Battle (怪人ジャガーマン決死のオートバイ戦, Kaijin Jagāman Kesshi Ōtobai Ikusa) (Original Airdate: April 1, 1972)
  54. Umihebiotoko of the Ghost Village (ユウレイ村の海蛇男, Yūrei Mura no Umihebi Otoko) (Original Airdate: April 8, 1972)
  55. Cockroach Man!! The Dreadful Germ-Filled Ad Balloon (ゴキブリ男!!恐怖の細菌アドバルーン, Gokiburi Otoko!! Kyōfu no Saikin Adobarūn) (Original Airdate: April 15, 1972)
  56. Poison Butterfly of the Amazon, Gireela (アマゾンの毒蝶ギリーラ, Amazon no Doku Chō Girīra) (Original Airdate: April 22, 1972)
  57. Purseweb Man Dokumondo (土ぐも男ドクモンド, Tsuchigumo Otoko Dokumondo) (Original Airdate: April 29, 1972)
  58. The Monstrous Dokutokageotoko, Deathmatch in Fear Valley!! (怪人毒トカゲ おそれ谷の決闘!!, Kaijin Doku Tokage Osoredani no Kettō!!) (Original Airdate: May 6, 1972)
  59. The Monstrous Mimizuotoko of the Bottomless Swamp! (底なし沼の怪人ミミズ男!, Sokonashi Numa no Kaijin Mimizu Otoko!) (Original Airdate: May 13, 1972)
  60. The Monstrous Owl Man's Killer X-Rays (怪奇フクロウ男の殺人レントゲン, Kaiki Fukurō Otoko no Satsujin Rentogen) (Original Airdate: May 20, 1972)
  61. The Monstrous Namazugiller's Electric Hell (怪人ナマズギラーの電気地獄, Kaijin Namazugirā no Denki Jigoku) (Original Airdate: May 27, 1972)
  62. The Monstrous Harinezuras's Killer Skull Plan (怪人ハリネズラス 殺人どくろ作戦, Kaijin Harinezurasu Satsujin Dokuro Sakusen) (Original Airdate: June 3, 1972)
  63. The Monstrous Saigang's Deadly Auto Race (怪人サイギャング 死のオートレース, Kaijin Saigyangu Shi no Ōto Rēsu) (Original Airdate: June 10, 1972)
  64. The Monstrous Semiminga's Song of Slaughter! (怪人セミミンガ みな殺しのうた!, Kaijin Semiminga Minagoroshi no Uta!) (Original Airdate: June 17, 1972)
  65. The Monstrous Beetle Professor and the Shocker School (怪人昆虫博士とショッカースクール, Kaijin Konchū Hakase to Shokkā Sukūru) (Original Airdate: June 24, 1972)
  66. The Shocker Graveyard: Monsters Revived (ショッカー墓場よみがえる怪人たち, Shokkā Hakaba Yomigaeru Kaijin-tachi) (Original Airdate: July 1, 1972)
  67. The Shocker Leader Appears!! Rider in Danger (ショッカー首領出現!!ライダー危うし, Shokkā Shuryō Shutsugen!! Raidā Ayaushi) (Original Airdate: July 8, 1972)
  68. The Terrifying Truth of Doctor Death? (死神博士恐怖の正体?, Shinigami-hakase Kyōfu no Shōtai?) (Original Airdate: July 15, 1972)
  69. The Monstrous Gillerkorogi's Nails of Death (怪人ギラーコオロギせまる死のツメ, Kaijin Girākōrogi Semaru Shi no Tsume) (Original Airdate: July 22, 1972)
  70. The Monstrous Elekibotaru's Fireball Attack!! (怪人エレキボタル火の玉攻撃!!, Kaijin Erekibotaru Hi no Tama Kōgeki!!) (Original Airdate: July 29, 1972)
  71. The Mt. Rokko Pursuit of the Monstrous Abugomes! (怪人アブゴメス六甲山大ついせき!, Kaijin Abugomesu Rokkōsan Daitsuiseki!) (Original Airdate: August 5, 1972)
  72. The Blood-Sucking Mosquilas Versus the Two Riders (吸血モスキラス対二人ライダー, Kyūketsu Mosukirasu Tai Futari Raidā) (Original Airdate: August 12, 1972)
  73. Double Riders! Defeat Shiomaneking (ダブルライダー!倒せシオマネキング, Daburu Raidā! Taose Shiomanekingu) (Original Airdate: August 19, 1972)
  74. The Deadly Blood-Sucker! Give It Your All, Rider Kid Corps (死の吸血魔 がんばれ!!ライダー少年隊, Shi no Kyūketsuma Ganbare!! Raidā Shōnentai) (Original Airdate: August 26, 1972)
  75. The Monstrous Poison Flower Bararanga Secret of the Terror House (毒花怪人バラランガ 恐怖の家の秘密, Dokubana Kaijin Bararanga Kyōfu no Ie no Himitsu) (Original Airdate: September 2, 1972)
  76. Three Electric Monsters: the Seadragons!! (三匹の発電怪人シードラゴン!!, Sanbiki no Hatsuden Kaijin Shīdoragon!!) (Original Airdate: September 9, 1972)
  77. The Monster Imoriges, Showdown at Hell Ranch!! (怪人イモリゲスじごく牧場の決闘!!, Kaijin Imorigesu Jigoku Bokujō no Kettō!!) (Original Airdate: September 16, 1972)
  78. The Terrifying Unidogma + Ghost Monsters (恐怖のウニドグマ+ゆうれい怪人, Kyōfu no Unidoguma + Yūrei Kaijin) (Original Airdate: September 23, 1972)
  79. Ambassador Hell!! His Fearsome True Form? (地獄大使!!恐怖の正体?, Jigoku-taishi!! Kyōfu no Shōtai?) (Original Airdate: September 30, 1972)
  80. Gelshocker's Debut! The Last Day of Kamen Rider!! (ゲルショッカー出現!仮面ライダー最後の日!!, Gerushokkā Shutsugen! Kamen Raidā Saigo no Hi!!) (Original Airdate: October 7, 1972)
  81. Kamen Rider Dies Twice!! (仮面ライダーは二度死ぬ!, Kamen Raidā wa Nido Shinu!) (Original Airdate: October 14, 1972)
  82. The Monstrous Kuragewolf, the Rush Hour of Terror (怪人クラゲウルフ 恐怖のラッシュアワー, Kaijin Kurageurufu Kyōfu no Rasshuawā) (Original Airdate: October 21, 1972)
  83. Monstrous Inokabuton, Defeat Kamen Rider With Insanity Gas (怪人イノカブトン 発狂ガスでライダーを倒せ, Kaijin Inokabuton Hakkyō Gasu de Raidā o Taose) (Original Airdate: October 28, 1972)
  84. Rider in Peril! Isoginjaguar's Hellish Trap (危うしライダー!イソギンジャガーの地獄罠, Ayaushi Raidā! Isoginjagā no Jigoku Wana) (Original Airdate: November 4, 1972)
  85. The Sludge Monster's Terrifying Killer Smog (ヘドロ怪人恐怖の殺人スモッグ, Hedoro Kaijin Kyōfu no Satsujin Sumoggu) (Original Airdate: November 11, 1972)
  86. The Monstrous Washikamagiri's Human Hunt (怪人ワシカマギリの人間狩り, Kaijin Washikamagiri no Ningen Gari) (Original Airdate: November 18, 1972)
  87. Gelshocker's Deliveryman of Death! (ゲルショッカー 死の配達人!, Gerushokkā Shi no Haitatsunin!) (Original Airdate: November 25, 1972)
  88. Scary Story! The Bloodthirsty Black Cat Paintings! (怪奇!血をよぶ黒猫の絵, Kaiki! Chi o Yobu Kuroneko no E) (Original Airdate: December 2, 1972)
  89. The Terrifying Pet Operation, Send Rider to Hell! (恐怖のペット作戦 ライダーを地獄へ落とせ!, Kyōfu no Petto Sakusen Raidā o Jigoku e Otose!) (Original Airdate: December 9, 1972)
  90. The Terrifying Pet Operation, Rider SOS (恐怖のペット作戦 ライダーSOS, Kyōfu no Petto Sakusen Raidā Esu Ō Esu) (Original Airdate: December 16, 1972)
  91. Enroll in the Gelshocker Terror School (ゲルショッカー恐怖学校に入学せよ, Gerushokkā Kyōfu Gakkō ni Nyūgaku Seyo) (Original Airdate: December 23, 1972)
  92. Evil! The Fake Kamen Rider!! (凶悪!にせ仮面ライダー!!, Kyōaku! Nise Kamen Raidā!!) (Original Airdate: December 30, 1972)
  93. The Eight Kamen Riders (8人の仮面ライダー, Hachinin no Kamen Raidā) (Original Airdate: January 6, 1973)
  94. The Truth Behind Gelshocker's Leader!! (ゲルショッカー首領の正体, Gerushokkā Shuryō no Shōtai) (Original Airdate: January 13, 1973)
  95. The Monstrous Garaox's Flying Cars!! (怪人ガラオックスの空飛ぶ自動車, Kaijin Garaokkusu no Sora Tobu Jidōsha) (Original Airdate: January 20, 1973)
  96. Takeshi Hongo Becomes a Cactus Monster!? (本郷猛 サボテン怪人にされる!?, Hongō Takeshi Saboten Kaijin ni Sareru!?) (Original Airdate: January 27, 1973)
  97. Takeshi Hongo Cannot Transform!! (本郷猛 変身不可能, Hongō Takeshi Henshin Fukanō) (Original Airdate: February 3, 1973)
  98. Gelshocker Destroyed! The Leader's End!! (ゲルショッカー全滅!首領の最後!!, Gerushokkā Zenmetsu! Shuryō no Saigo!!) (Original Airdate: February 10, 1973)

Films

S.I.C. Hero Saga

Published in Monthly Hobby Japan, the S.I.C. Hero Saga stories illustrated by S.I.C. figure dioramas portray stories featuring the characters from the Shotaro Ishinomori series. Kamen Rider has had three different stories: Missing Link, Special Episode: Escape (SPECIAL EPISODE -脱出-, Supesharu Episōdo Dasshutsu), and From Here to Eternity (ここより永遠に, Koko yori Towa ni). Missing Link ran in the July to October 2002 issues, From Here to Eternity was featured in the special issue HOBBY JAPAN MOOK S.I.C. OFFICIAL DIORAMA STORY S.I.C. HERO SAGA vol.1 Kakioroshi, and Special Episode: Escape was featured in the October 2006 issue of Hobby Japan.

New characters introduced during the Missing Link story are the twelve Shocker Riders (ショッカーライダー, Shokkā Raidā, each with different colored scarves) and the Shocker Tank (ショッカータンク, Shokkā Tanku).

Missing Link chapter titles
  1. Infiltration (潜入, Sen'nyū)
  2. Disappearance (失踪, Shissō)
  3. Awakening (覚醒, Kakusei)
  4. Puppet (傀儡, Kairai)

Cast

  • Takeshi Hongo: Hiroshi Fujioka (藤岡 弘, Fujioka Hiroshi)
  • Hayato Ichimonji: Takeshi Sasaki (佐々木 剛, Sasaki Takeshi)
  • Kazuya Taki: Jirō Chiba (千葉 治郎, Chiba Jirō)
  • Tōbei Tachibana: Akiji Kobayashi (小林 昭二, Kobayashi Akiji)
  • Ruriko Midorikawa: Chieko Maki (真樹 千恵子, Maki Chieko)
  • Hiromi Nohara: Yoko Shimada (島田 陽子, Shimada Yōko)
  • Shiro: Jō Honda (本田 じょう, Honda Jō)
  • Yuri: Wakako Oki (沖 わか子, Oki Wakako)
  • Mari: Linda Yamamoto (山本 リンダ, Yamamoto Rinda)
  • Michi: Katsumi Nakajima (中島 かつみ, Nakajima Katsumi)
  • Goro Ishikura: Yasuharu Miura (三浦 康晴, Miura Yasuharu)
  • Emi: Emily Takami (高見 エミリー, Takami Emirī)
  • Mika: Yōko Sugibayashi (杉林 陽子, Sugibayashi Yōko)
  • Tokko: Machiko Nakajima (中島 真智子, Nakajima Machiko)
  • Naoki: Tomonori Yazaki (矢崎 知紀, Tomonori Yazaki)
  • Mitsuru: Yoshikazu Yamada (山田 芳一, Yamada Yoshikazu)
  • Yokko: Yoshiko Nakada (中田 喜子, Nakada Yoshiko)
  • Choko: Mimi Hagiwara (ミミ萩原, Hagiwara Mimi)
  • Colonel Zol: Jirō Miyaguchi (宮口 二朗, Miyaguchi Jirō)
  • Doctor Death: Hideyo Amamoto (天本 英世, Amamoto Hideyo)
  • Ambassador Hell: Kenji Ushio (潮 健児, Ushio Kenji)
  • General Black: Matasaburō Niwa (丹羽 又三郎, Niwa Matasaburō)
  • Shocker/Gelshocker Leader (Voice): Gorō Naya (納谷 悟朗, Naya Gorō)
  • Narration: Shinji Nakae (中江 真司, Nakae Shinji)

International Broadcasts

  • In the Philippines, it was aired on RPN-9 as Masked Rider from 1975 to 1977 with an English dub.

Staff

  • Creator: Shotaro Ishinomori
  • Scriptwriters: Masaru Igami, Shinichi Ichikawa, Masayuki Shimada, Mari Takizawa, Hisashi Yamazaki, Takao Nagaishi, Masahiro Tsukada, Ikurō Suzuki, Takeo Ōno, Fumio Ishimori, Kimiyuki Hasegawa, Kimio Hirayama, Minoru Yamada, Gorō Oketani, Shotaro Ishinomori
  • Directors: Kōichi Takemoto, Itaru Orita, Hidetoshi Kitamura, Minoru Yamada, Issaku Uchida, Katsuhiko Taguchi, Masahiro Tsukada, Shotaro Ishinomori, Atsuo Okunaka
  • Music: Shunsuke Kikuchi

Songs

Opening themes
  • "Let's Go!! Rider Kick" (レッツゴー!!ライダーキック, Rettsu Gō!! Raidā Kikku)
  • "Rider Action" (ライダーアクション, Raidā Akushon)
    • Lyrics: Shotaro Ishinomori
    • Composition & Arrangement: Shunsuke Kikuchi
    • Artist: Masato Shimon
    • Episodes: 89–98
Ending themes
  • "Kamen Rider no Uta" (仮面ライダーの歌, Kamen Raidā no Uta, "The Song of Kamen Rider")
    • Lyrics: Saburō Yatsude
    • Composition & Arrangement: Shunsuke Kikuchi
    • Artist: Koichi Fuji, Male Harmony
    • Episodes: 1–71
  • "Rider Action"
    • Lyrics: Shotaro Ishinomori
    • Composition & Arrangement: Shunsuke Kikuchi
    • Artist: Masato Shimon
    • Episodes: 72–88
  • "Lonely Kamen Rider" (ロンリー仮面ライダー, Ronrī Kamen Raidā)
    • Lyrics: Mamoru Tanaka
    • Composition & Arrangement: Shunsuke Kikuchi
    • Artist: Masato Shimon
    • Episodes: 89–98

Legacy

The Kamen Rider original series famously spearheaded launched the "Second Kaiju Boom" or "Henshin Boom" on Japanese television in the early 1970s, greatly impacting the superhero and action-adventure genre in Japan.[9] The famous "henshin sequence", in which the title hero performs ritualistic poses and shouting a keyword to transform into his superhero form has since become a staple in Japanese pop-culture, inspiring superheroes, and magical girl genres. Kamen Rider went later produce a great number of spin-offs which remain in production today. Several Kamen Rider series were aired in Japan after the first Kamen Rider finished. After Kamen Rider Black RX ended production in 1989, the series was put on hold.

There were three movies released as the 1990s "Movie Riders", which were Shin Kamen Rider: Prologue, Kamen Rider ZO and Kamen Rider J. After the original creator Shōtarō Ishinomori's death in 1998, the Kamen Rider franchise continued in 2000 with Kamen Rider Kuuga. As of 2023, thirty-four Kamen Rider series have been made, with the newest being Kamen Rider Gotchard which premiered in September 2023.

As of 2005, a remake of the Kamen Rider series in the Heisei era was made and reimagined with Kamen Rider The First and continued with Kamen Rider The Next released in 2007.

The cultural impact of the series in Japan resulted in astronomer Akimasa Nakamura naming two minor planets in honor of the series: 12408 Fujioka, after actor Hiroshi Fujioka, known for his portrayal of Takeshi Hongo/Kamen Rider 1,[10][11] and 12796 Kamenrider, after the series itself.[10][12]

As of 2021, starting from Kamen Rider: Beyond Generations, Hiroshi Fujioka's son, Maito portrays Takeshi Hongo's younger self.[13]

As of 2023, another remake of the Kamen Rider series in the Reiwa era was made and reimagined with Shin Kamen Rider.

References

  1. ^ "Japanese Heroes Rule the World". Kadokawa Shoten.
  2. ^ Speak! Kamen Rider. KK Bestsellers. April 2013.
  3. ^ "Complete Selection Kamen Rider New No. 1 Transformation Belt". Retrieved 2023-12-22.
  4. ^ Kazumitsu, Takahashi. "Behind the scenes of hit products No. 5 Do-Re-Mi (Bridgestone Cycle)". OFM9 2004.
  5. ^ "Seven Seas Licenses Shotaro Ishinomori's Original Kamen Rider Manga". Anime News Network. February 28, 2021. Retrieved April 3, 2021.
  6. ^ Kamen Rider Episode 80
  7. ^ Kamen Rider Episode 39
  8. ^ "新着情報|三宮シネフェニックス". Archived from the original on 2011-08-24. Retrieved 2010-12-21.
  9. ^ Takeshobo, ed. (1995-11-30). "BonusColumn「変身ブーム到来!!」" [Bonus Column 'The Henshin Boom Arrives!']. 超人画報 国産架空ヒーロー四十年の歩み [The Super Heroes Chronicles: The History of Japanese Fantastic Televisions, Movies and Videos, 1957-1995] (in Japanese). Takeshobo. p. 85. ISBN 4-88475-874-9. C0076.
  10. ^ a b Schmadel, Lutz D. (2003). Dictionary of Minor Planet Names. Germany: Springer. pp. 781, 788. ISBN 3-540-00238-3.
  11. ^ "JPL Small-Body Database Browser - 12408 Fujioka (1995 SP2)". Archived from the original on 2016-01-12. Retrieved 2008-04-06.
  12. ^ "JPL Small-Body Database Browser - 12796 Kamenrider (1995 WF)". Archived from the original on 2016-01-12. Retrieved 2008-04-06.
  13. ^ "藤岡弘、の息子・藤岡真威人、仮面ライダー1号/本郷猛役に挑戦!「やらなきゃならない宿命」" (in Japanese). Eiga. 29 November 2021. Retrieved 29 November 2021.