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Hired by Japanese toy giant Bandai to create a manga series for Digimon, Hong Kong artist is now out of luck, love and money

  • Yu Yuen-wong hit the jackpot in the late 1990s but life has been rough since the local industry imploded

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Despite its declining fortunes Yu Yuen-wong stayed in the comics profession and toughed it out. Photo: Xiaomei Chen

Cartoonist Yu Yuen-wong was at the height of his powers in 2005 when he made enough money to buy his own flat – a 700 sq ft home in Tseung Kwan O worth HK$2 million (US$255,000). It was meant to be a love nest for him and his then girlfriend, whom he planned to marry.

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Little did he know that in four years his dreams would come crashing down after an industry slump.

“My life is like a manga story about adventure, [and] in the beginning I was very lucky,” says Yu, now in his 40s.

His good fortune began in 1999, when Japanese toy giant Bandai hired him to create a manga series for Digimon, one of the brand’s successful anime franchises about mini-monsters.

One of the Digimon titles Yu Yuen-wong worked on. Photo: Handout
One of the Digimon titles Yu Yuen-wong worked on. Photo: Handout
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He published 20 Digimon books, some of which were sold in 28 countries and regions including Taiwan, Thailand and Malaysia. Yu could earn up to HK$60,000 (US$7,650) in royalties for each title, while also receiving HK$20,000 monthly from magazines that serialised his work.

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