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13.10.2022 - 02:03 / justjared.com
Kazuki Takahashi died in an incredibly tragic way.
The Japanese manga artist, best known as the creator of Yu-Gi-Oh!, died in July at the age of 60 in Japan while trying to rescue people from drowning, witnesses say.
Military newspaper Stars and Stripes reports that the artist died while trying to rescue three strangers swept up in a strong current, via TMZ.
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According to people at the scene, Kazuki dove into a riptide to try and bring woman and her 11-year-old daughter back to shore on July 4.
Major Robert Bourgeau, a 49-year-old U.S. Army officer and scuba diving instructor, also aided in the rescue mission. Multiple people saw the artist attempting to assist the effort.
Bourgeau managed to save the 11-year-old girl and the mother, but when he went to help a 39-year-old U.S. soldier also struggling, he feared he would lose his own life in the effort. Still, he was able to help yell orders to help the soldier navigate safely.
Kazuki‘s body was found about 1,000 feet offshore two days later.
Bourgeau says the man is a “hero…he died trying to save someone else.”
Our thoughts are with Kazuki Takahashi‘s loved ones at this difficult time.
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The creator of the best-selling trading card game in history is being hailed as a "hero" after he died trying to save an American girl off the coast of Okinawa. Kazuki Takahashi, 60, died in July after the tragic incident that went without clarification from officials for weeks. The Japanese Coast Guard explained that officials consulted with the family of the late comic artist, who expressed desire to downplay Takahashi's tragedy so as not to draw attention away from the ongoing care of the young girl.
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Kazuki Takahashi died a hero.
Stars and Stripes show that Takahashi was aiding in the rescue of an 11-year-old girl, her mother and a soldier caught in a current at Mermaid’s Grotto in Okinawa, Japan.According to the publication, US Army Major and scuba diving instructor Robert Bourgeau was at the popular dive spot with students when he heard the screams of an unidentified Japanese mother caught in the current and jumped into action.At some point during the rescue, Takahashi, 60, was seen by the students jumping into the water to assist in the rescue, but then disappeared beneath the waves.“He’s a hero,” Bourgeau said of Takahashi, adding, “He died trying to save someone else.”Bourgeau managed to physically save the woman and child and was able to verbally guide the soldier to safety.The anime and manga creator’s body was discovered two days after the rescue — seen floating off the coast of Okinawa by a person running a marine leisure business, according to an official at the Naha Coast Guard Nago station.The official also shared in a July interview that Takahashi’s body showed signs of being attacked by a marine creature, possibly sharks, but the cause of death was still under investigation.Later, a rental car was discovered at Mermaid’s Grotto under the trading card game creator’s name, allowing his family to identify his body.Bourgeau was nominated for the Soldier’s Medal for his rescue efforts.
Kazuki Takahashi, who created the popular manga “Yu-Gi-Oh”, tragically died in July at age 60 when his body was discovered floating off the coast of Naga City in Okinawa, Japan.
Yu-Gi-Oh! creator Kazuki Takahashi had died, with his death officially being recorded as drowning. A recent report from the U.S.