Born on July 29, 1960 in Asahikawa, Kamikawa, Hokkaido, the same exact town both Kazuhiro Fujita & Buichi Terasawa were both born in, Takeshi Maekawa would graduate from Daito Bunka University (where he was a member of the Manga Research Club OB) before making his debut in manga in late 1983. Said debut was with Tekken/Ironfist Chinmi (sometimes also referred to as Kung Fu Boy) in the pages of Monthly Shonen Magazine, which showed the rise of the titular Chinmi as he went from a mere martial arts student to a hero of the people when in need. While he also made other manga, like billiards series Break Shot (his other major work, at 16 volumes), soccer series The Striker, sumo series Hakkeyoi, & even a fellow martial arts series with Kung Fu Tao, Tekken Chinmi is the one that continues to run to this day... technically. You see, the original Tekken Chinmi ran until early 1997 & totaled 35 volumes, but the very next issue of Monthly Magazine saw the debut of New Tekken Chinmi, due to Chinmi now being a master in his own right, which ran until late 2004 for an additional 20 volumes. Then, after a two-year break, Maekawa returned to his iconic series in late 2006 with Tekken Chinmi Legends, still within the pages of the Monthly Magazine, which is still running to this day & currently at 28 volumes (making 83 volumes, in total), but has been on hiatus since 2021 due in part to circumstances following the COVID-19 pandemic; there is also Tekken Chinmi Gaiden, which collects various side-story one-shots & remains at four volumes since 2015. However, it was announced on May 8 that Tekken Chinmi Legends would finally be returning in the October 2025 issue of Monthly Shonen Magazine, marking the return of the magazine's longest-running manga series (by age) after a near five-year hiatus; Monthly Magazine's longest-running manga series (by length) is Dear Boys by Hiroki Yagami, at a current total of 95 volumes. I should also note that Tekken Chinmi did actually see English release (only in the UK) between 1995 & 1996 as Ironfist Chinmi, by way of Bloomsbury with a translation by the legendary Jonathan Clements, but only made it 12 volumes in before stopping; this looks to be the only manga Bloomsbury ever released. Still, it was published in right-to-left fashion, predating TokyoPop's industry standardizing move to that orientation in the US & Canada by around five years!
Naturally, with a manga as long-running & iconic for Monthly Shonen Magazine as this, as well as having won the Kodansha Manga Award for Shonen manga in 1987, it's understandable that an anime adaptation of Tekken Chinmi had to have happened at some point. That came to be throughout the second half of 1988 with a 20-episode TV anime produced by Ashi Pro & Toho, though it's not quite an exact 1:1 adaptation of the manga, complete with a couple of anime-only characters. However, despite having been re-aired since then & even being made available via streaming in Japan at points, the Tekken Chinmi anime has never received a proper home video release, whether that be via VHS, DVD, or Blu-Ray. The only exception would be Tekken Chinmi: Kenpo Daizukan/The Great Illustrated Guide to Kenpo, a VHS tape that came out sometime in 1989, but at just 32 minutes it's obviously nowhere near a "complete" representation of the anime. Obviously, I can't even guess as to why the Tekken Chinmi anime has never been available for purchase physically, outside of a single VHS tape that likely is just a themed recap, despite the manga being readily available in Japan digitally, both via individual volumes & even bundles. Personally, though, I do have a bit of a soft spot for Takeshi Maekawa, as when I was first really getting into manga in the mid-00s, shortly after really getting into anime, I actually came across old fan translations of some of Maekawa's works, namely the first couple volumes of Break Shot & his one-volume historical drama Hoshi no Ken. I quickly found out about Tekken Chinmi, but even back then its length made me hesitate to get into it (hell, the fan translation for the OG run apparently only finished up last year!), but I have always been curious about the anime, even if it has no English translation whatsoever; there's word of an English dub having been made, but I can't find any proof of its existence.
Is the Tekken Chinmi anime without a (proper) home video release "for good reason", or is it simply just a victim of factors beyond its control preventing an otherwise enjoyable anime from being traditionally purchasable? Time to check it out for myself & see if the Tekken Chinmi anime is more Marshall Law or Forest Law.