Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir (
French: Miraculous, les aventures de Ladybug et Chat Noir; commonly abbreviated as Miraculous Ladybug or simply Miraculous)[9][10][11][12][2] is a 2015 French animated
magical girlsuperhero[13] television series created by Thomas Astruc and developed by Jeremy Zag. The series is produced by the French company Miraculous Corp (a joint venture of
Mediawan and ZAG, Inc.),[14] and co-produced with Japanese studio
Toei Animation's European division, and several international companies.[a]
Prior to its debut in France on 19 October 2015 on
TF1's
TFOU block,[15] the series was first shown in South Korea on 1 September 2015 on
EBS1.[16] Internationally, it is mainly broadcast on Disney-owned channels or on
Disney+, with exceptions in some countries.
The series spawned a
media franchise with several products tied to it, including various comic books, novels, and video games. A film adaptation, Ladybug & Cat Noir: The Movie, was released theatrically in 2023, premiering in France.
The series takes place in modern-day Paris and revolves around the adventures of two teenagers,[17][18]Marinette Dupain-Cheng and
Adrien Agreste.[19] When evil arises, they transform into their
superhero personas, Ladybug and Cat Noir respectively, using magical jewels known as the "Miraculous". All the while, Marinette and Adrien struggle with their feelings for each other, not knowing each other's
secret identities: Marinette is in love with Adrien, but not Cat Noir, while Adrien is in love with Ladybug, but not Marinette.
Their
main enemy is the
supervillain Hawk Moth—whose secret identity, unknown to the heroes, is Adrien's father, Gabriel Agreste. Using the Butterfly Miraculous, he creates akumas, butterflies infused with negative energy, to "
akumatize" Paris' everyday citizens when they experience negative emotions, turning them into supervillains.[17][20] His goal is to steal Ladybug's and Cat Noir's Miraculous, intending to use them to wish his wife, Emilie, back to life, who fell into a coma by using the damaged Peacock Miraculous before the events of the series. He is sometimes aided by his assistant Nathalie Sancœur, who uses the Peacock Miraculous to create sentimonsters, magical lifeforms with a seemingly endless variety of forms and abilities.
As Hawk Moth's villains become tougher, Master Fu, the Guardian of the Miraculous, allows Marinette to borrow additional Miraculous and recruit her other classmates and friends as superheroes. Hawk Moth eventually exposes Master Fu, forcing him to make Marinette the new Guardian. Nathalie falls ill from using the Peacock Miraculous, but Hawk Moth repairs it and uses it together with the Butterfly Miraculous to become "Shadow Moth," able to create both villains and sentimonsters. Burdened by the stress of keeping her superhero life secret, Marinette reveals her secret identity to her best friend Alya Césaire.
At the end of the fourth season, Gabriel—adopting the new supervillain name "Monarch"—gains control of almost all of the Miraculous, leaving Ladybug and Cat Noir once again as the only two heroes. A battle with the heroes leaves Gabriel with magical damage that slowly spreads through his body. Marinette and Adrien eventually admit their feelings for each other and begin a romantic relationship (still ignorant of each other's secret identities). After a final battle with Marinette, Gabriel seizes the Ladybug and Cat Miraculous and makes his wish; but having had a change of heart, wishes to revive Nathalie, who had become gravely ill, at the cost of his own life. Marinette recovers most of the Miraculous and gives them into the custody of her friends, unaware that the manipulative liar Lila Rossi, a former classmate who bullied Marinette, claims the Butterfly Miraculous for herself.
The series is based on an original concept created by French writer and storyboarder Thomas Astruc.[29] He was inspired by a meeting with a certain lady and "decades of comics binge reading".[30] In an interview with
Nolife, Astruc said he was working as an animator on the show W.I.T.C.H. when he met a woman wearing a T-shirt with a ladybug on it. They began to share drawings, some of which were ladybug-themed. Astruc also noted that Marinette's signature pigtail hairstyle was fashioned after the woman. They also worked on the cartoon A.T.O.M. around 2004–05. Astruc first drew Ladybug on
sticky notes and remarked about how strong the Ladybug character was. He had no memories of seeing ladybug-themed superheroes in comics.[31]
Astruc had intended to make Ladybug a comic book series until he met Jeremy Zag, who loved the project and wanted to produce it as a
cartoon; Zag was 25 at the time and not originally from the cartoon industry.[31]
In developing Cat Noir, Astruc said that ladybugs represented good luck, so it was natural to partner her with a black cat character with bad luck powers. Cat Noir was a tribute to comic characters, like
Catwoman. So it was like having Catwoman and
Spider-Man in the same show but reversed genders and roles.[31]
A character named Félix was originally going to have the role of Cat Noir, as the holder of the Black Cat Miraculous, [32] but he was later scrapped in favor of Adrien Agreste because the creative team felt that Félix was a cliché of a male anime protagonist and that Adrien would allow them to tell more interesting stories.[33][34] In September 2015, Astruc indicated that he was open to revisiting the character of Félix,[35] but he abandoned it by February 2016, writing that the character was a poor idea.[36] In 2019, Félix was remade as Adrien's cousin and was renamed Félix Fathom, and became holder of the Peacock Miraculous.[needs update]
Hiring companies
In 2010, the show was announced at Cannes'
MIPCOM with French production groups Univergroup Pictures and Onyx Films heading the project and working with
Method Animation and Zagtoon. Aton Soumache of Onyx and Method[37] said that they want "to create a glamorous superhero character with a real European flair with Paris as [the] backdrop." The producers had also planned to animate it in stereoscopic 3D (currently, the show is produced using
CGI animation).[29]
In the summer of June 2012,
Toei Animation Co., Ltd. (known for Sailor Moon, Digimon, PreCure, One Piece & DragonBall) the famous Japanese animation studio branch owned & operated by
Toei Company, Ltd. in Tokyo, Japan, was announced as co-producers, alongside its European division.[37] Two years before 2012, Toei Animation had released a PreCure film
that was set in Paris, France, and was very interested in expanding their international audience.[31] Even after the production moved to CGI animation, Toei still remained co-producer, with the executive producers from the company being credited.[38]
On 21 November 2012, a
memorandum of understanding between Zagtoon, Method Animation,
SAMG Animation and
SK Broadband was announced: together, the companies would invest US$50 million through 2017 into five projects. The first of these projects was developed into Miraculous, which received an investment of $10 million. As a part of the deal, SK Broadband would have exclusive rights in South Korea for
video on demand release, available to the subscribers of the company's IPTV platform
B TV.[39][40]
In 2019, Zag and
Gloob signed an agreement where the Brazilian company will start to co-produce the next seasons of Miraculous, in addition to having exclusivity of exhibition in Brazil and the addition of a Brazilian character.[41]
Animation
When
Toei Animation and its European division joined as co-producers in the summer of June 2012, it was also announced that the show would be drawn in a colorful
manga-like style.[37] Later in September, Zagtoon, Method, & Toei released a traditionally-animated promotional video for MiraculousLadybug.[42][43] The video featured Marinette (in different clothes similar to the clothes in the current series) as Ladybug, and a (now-scrapped, later Adrien's cousin) different character named Félix as Cat Noir,[32] Marinette and Félix's
Kwamis, Tikki and Plagg, Hawk Moth / Gabriel (without the mask and with a different outfit, look, and lair compared to the current series), and also two akumatized villains from season 1 in the current show – The Mime and Mr. Pigeon. Their Miraculouses and their transformation sequences had different designs compared to the Miraculouses and the transformations in the current series.[44] The demo song from the promotional music video was performed & composed by
Noam, who would later compose, produce music and perform songs for the current series.[7][45][46]
The whole
anime concept was a complete success; but there were concerns about the marketability of traditional 2D animation and the difficulty in animating Ladybug's costume of red with black spots, as it caused some strobing effects.[31] Executive producer Jared Wolfson said that Zag wanted the animation to be cinematic and epic, unique and different, and said that they are continuing to partner with Toei as it brings in the Asian inspiration and that a 2D version of the show might be a potential product for future purposes.[47][48][49][50][51][52]
The aforementioned problem with 2D animation was resolved by moving to CGI animation; the switch also allowed for easier implementation of mobile camera angles.[31]SAMG Animation (later SAMG Entertainment), a CGI animation studio located in South Korea which officially joined in the production in the fall of November 2012,[39][40] produced modeling and animation.[53] Zag later recalled that SAMG was chosen for quality reasons in a video message he sent to a South Korean press conference held in 2015 by the Seoul-based company.[54] Astruc and assistant director, Wilfried Pain, instructed the animators not to improvise scenes so that they could keep things consistent and understandable.[31] Pain estimated about 350–400 shots are used in a typical 20-minute episode; with 10 panels per shot, that makes up to 4000 panels an episode.[31] Wolfson said that the show's animation brings dynamic camera angles and texturing.[47] A trailer with the new current CGI-animated style was released in October 2013, a year later.[55]
On 22 January 2018, Zag posted on Instagram that the crew was working on season 4 and season 5.[56][better source needed]
On 18 April 2021, It was confirmed that in addition to season 4 and 5 the show will have two more seasons (season 6 and 7).[57][58]
Themes, writing, and process
While the show is marketed as a Western
superhero narrative, its thematic base is the
Japanesemahō shōjo (magical girl) genre, with its focus on
transformation sequences, a school cast, the gathering of a team of heroes, animal friends, and end-of-episode collages.[13] In particular, Ladybug is strongly influenced by the genre's landmark entry Sailor Moon: Not only does the name of Marinette ("little sailor girl") recall Sailor Moon's title, but the main characters' magical companions reflect Sailor Moon's
Luna and
Artemis, the main villain's power resembles that of
Queen Beryl, and the show's entire plot parallels the story of
Sailor Saturn.[13]Ladybug features numerous other direct and indirect references to its inspiration.[13]
The concept for the show originally dealt with political themes, geared towards teens and young adults. However, after failing to gain traction with networks, it was retooled for a younger target audience.[59]: 40 Astruc said that he is delighted that the show is able to reach younger and older people.[31]
Each episode takes around 3 months to write, from scratch to final validation of broadcasters.[60] Assistant director, Wilfried Pain, said that each episode is composed of two parts: a sitcom aspect where the characters have to speak for themselves, and an action element where the camera is always moving.[31]
Noam Kaniel (Noam) writes the music and songs. Kaniel has also worked on action superhero shows such as M.A.S.K, X-Men, Code Lyoko, W.I.T.C.H., Fantastic Four, Power Rangers, Digimon Fusion and Glitter Force.[47][61] Kaniel and Zag wrote the theme song. Alain Garcia wrote the English lyrics, which are sung by Wendy Child and Cash Callaway.[62] The French version was performed by Marily and Noam Kaniel.[63] Starting from season 4 & 5,
Lou performed the theme song in both French and English.
Release
International broadcast
Astruc representatives have said that the show has reached over 120 countries.[31]
In France, TV channels or streaming services owners are required to participate in the financing of French productions. Since
The Walt Disney Company owns TV channels and a streaming service in France, they finance the series through their
French division which gives Disney the broadcasting rights in the
United States, and in select European,
Latin American,
Middle Eastern,
Asian, and
African regions, where the series airs on Disney-owned channels or
Disney+. It also give them the reruns rights on the French versions of
Disney Channel and Disney+.[64]
In countries where the series is not broadcast on Disney-owned channels or services, it airs on locals networks or cable TV channels.
Europe
In
France, the series is broadcast on
TF1 during the
TFOU programming block. Reruns airs on
Disney Channel, while
Netflix,
Disney+ and MyTF1max share the streaming rights.[65] It premiered on 19 October 2015 on TF1.[15] Season 2 premiered with a Christmas special in December 2016[66] with further new episodes in France on TF1's TFOU block on 26 October 2017[67][68] and other channels throughout Europe.[69] Netflix began streaming the series, starting with the Christmas special, on 20 December 2016.
In
Ukraine, the series originally aired with a Ukrainian-language voice-over of the English version on Pixel TV, beginning in November 2017. A Ukrainian dub later debuted in March 2019 on
PlusPlus, who would go on to release the last two episodes of season 3 before the season had finished airing anywhere else in the world.
Americas
In the
United States, the series originally debuted on
Nickelodeon on 6 December 2015.[75][76][77] The show aired on
KidsClick from 3 July 2017 to 29 March 2019, and that run on TV was ended on 31 March 2019 due to low ratings.[78][79] On 8 April 2019,
Disney Channel acquired the rights to broadcast the first two seasons with the third season being aired starting 1 June 2020 and ending 5 December with the episode "Christmaster". Disney later acquired the exclusive rights to stream the series & TV specials on their service,
Disney+ worldwide (excluding Brazil, China, & Canada). Disney Channel will premiere all of these seasons and specials first.[80] The first three seasons were only available on
Netflix until 1 February 2023, when they moved over to Disney+.[81]
In
Canada, the show premiered in French on 9 January 2016 on
Télé-Québec, a provincial public service television network in Quebec.[82] The series was broadcast in English on
Family Channel starting on 1 November 2016.[83]
South Korea was the first country to premiere the series; the Korean version was originally titled Ladybug, with girl group
Fiestar singing its translated theme song. It premiered on 1 September 2015 on
EBS1[16] and ran for 13 episodes until November 2015, with repeats through February 2016, and the second half of the season began airing on 1 March 2016.
SK Broadband, having participated in the production, provided the episodes on
video on demand exclusively to subscribers of their
IPTV platform
B TV, about a half-hour following the South Korean broadcast of each one on EBS1.[39][86] The
Disney Channel in South Korea has also aired the series as of 7 December 2015.[87]
In
Pakistan, the show was telecasted by
Kids Zone Pakistan with the Urdu dub in April 2019; the second season first aired on 22 October 2021, the third season on 3 May 2022, and the fourth on 31 December 2022. [citation needed]
In
India, the first five seasons aired on 29 April 2019, 14 December 2020, 12 April 2021, 9 May 2022 and 12 June 2023 respectively on
Disney Channel. The Miraculous World TV specials also aired on the same channel, with the New York special aired on 9 May 2021 and the Shanghai special aired on 14 November 2021.[94]
In
Uzbekistan, Miraculous was released on July 11, 2020, presented to the public under the name "Xonqizining sarguzashtlari".
Reception
Critical reception
Kimberly Cooper, a blog writer who has contributed to news media such as The Huffington Post,[97] wrote that the show has inspired teens and adults to create and propagate Miraculous remixes and liked that the show featured multiracial characters as with the film Big Hero 6, which had won an Oscar. She "quickly realized there was a far cooler and broader Miraculous movement underway".[98] Caitlin Donovan of the entertainment website, Epicstream, listed it as one of her top 10 animated series of 2015. She wrote that "the characters are so charming that the tropey aspects of the show are merely a lot of fun, rather than irritating" and commended the fight sequences and CGI animation. She wrote that "Marinette is an adorable lead who is genuinely awkward as a civilian, but confident as a superhero, which makes for an interesting contrast."[99] Ella Anders of BSCKids wrote that the show stands out because of "how it meshes both the magical girl and superhero genre together".[100] Robert Lloyd of the Los Angeles Times described the show as "clever, romantic, fun, the way some of us prefer our superhero stories." He found the characters to "have the look of extruded plastic common to CGI cartoons", but "within these limits the design is lovely and the animation elegant, and a lot of work has gone into the staging and execution of the action scenes."[1]
The North American Precis Syndicate called the show "authentic and aspirational – a story of today's modern everygirl superhero who comes to life. The series, about a young girl who taps into her superhero powers and innocent optimism to save Paris from the evil Hawk Moth, will no doubt inspire today's youth to try to save the day, each and every day in their own way."[101] Andrea Reiher of
Zap2It wrote that the "storylines are rich with family, friends, adventure, intrigue, villains, creativity and more, delivering themes that are relatable and relevant to kids and preteens" and anticipated it would be a huge hit on Nickelodeon.[102]
The show has also received negative criticism from both critics and fans of the show. Ryan Lewis of
CBR.com portrays a negative view of the show's primary conflict between the two main protagonists:
They know each other outside of crime-fighting but somehow never recognize each other's superhero identities. To the annoyance of many fans, this conflict is yet to be resolved, causing some to lose interest in the show for its overly drawn-out romantic tension.[103]
Several media reviewers anticipated Miraculous-brand toys to be among the hot superheroine properties for 2016.[104][105][106] Zag has partnered with
Bandai to release Miraculous-based toys as well as deals to make Miraculous-brand clothing and other merchandise.[2][47]
A
spin-off series, Miraculous Chibi, premiered on 31 August 2018 on YouTube and on major broadcast channels,[115][116] and since late 2019 on Disney Channel Latin America.
In September 2018, Jeremy Zag announced an animated film adaptation of Miraculous.[117] Production started after the production of the fourth and fifth seasons of the television series.[118] With a budget of
€80 million, it is the second most expensive French film ever made behind Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets.[119]
Titled Ladybug & Cat Noir: The Movie, the film explores the origins of the franchise. It was released on July 5, 2023 by
SND.[120]
Stage musical
In 2021, a stage musical adaptation titled Miraculous Ladybug : Le spectacle musical (
transl. Miraculous Ladybug: The Musical Show) was announced. The musical was originally set to premiere on 21 December 2021, at the
Dôme de Paris.[121] However, it was postponed due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. It premiered on 20 December 2022, at the Dôme de Paris, where it was played until 1 January 2023. After that, the show went on tour in France, and in French-speaking areas of Belgium and Switzerland.[122]
Manga adaptation
On 6 December 2020, Zag announced that a manga adaptation will begin serialization in
Kodansha's Monthly Shōnen Sirius magazine beginning in the March issue in January 2021.[123] On 20 November 2022, during their panel at
Anime NYC 2022,
Kodansha USA announced that they have licensed the manga in English.[124]
Game adaptations
An
endless runner video game was developed by TabTale and released in April 2018 as a mobile app.[125][126] In April 2019 Miraculous Ladybug & Cat Noir was announced as new mobile game[127] and in May 2019 the game was presented by Jeremy Zag.[128]
It was revealed by Venturebeat and Mars Rose that a Roblox game was being produced.[129] Titled Miraculous RP: Quests of Ladybug and Cat Noir, created by Toya Games, it was released in
beta on 4 May 2021, and fully released on 2 June the same year. This roleplay game is the first official Roblox game for a TV series franchise[130] and has reached 200 million plays as of September 2021.[131]
^Collins, Elle (3 December 2000).
"Teen French Heroes Ladybug & Cat Noir Arrive on Nickelodeon". Comics Alliance. Archived from
the original on 16 February 2016. Retrieved 27 February 2016. The influence of the Magical Girl genre is inescapable; when Marinette's mother is captured in a bubble and carried off into the sky, apparently along with every adult in Paris, Marinette transforms into Ladybug in a series of twirls, poses and dancing. She even has the guidance of a talking ladybug creature, known in the series as a kwami, fulfilling another Magical Girl trope.
^McLean, Tom (4 December 2015).
"ZAG's 'Miraculous' Debuts Dec. 6 on Nick". Animation Magazine. Retrieved 21 February 2016. ZAG Animation's long-in-the-works superhero animated series Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir, debuts in the United States at noon ET/PT Dec. 6 on Nickelodeon.
^Keslassy, Elsa (6 June 2012).
"Japan's Toei to co-produce 'Miraculous'". Variety. Zagtoon has enrolled Japan's Toei Animation to co-produce "Miraculous" (working title), a Paris-set comedy-action series
^
abcSK브로드밴드, 글로벌애니매이션 공동제작 [SK Broadband to Join in Multinational Animated Co-Production] (Press release) (in Korean).
SK Broadband. 29 November 2012. Retrieved 21 March 2016.
^
ab최인영 (21 November 2012).
SKB, 글로벌 애니메이션 제작 추진 [SK Broadband to Push Ahead with Multinational Animated Production] (in Korean). Seoul.
Yonhap News Agency. Retrieved 21 March 2016 – via
Naver.
^SK브로드밴드, B TV 미라큘러스 레이디버그 국내 최초 VOD 독점 방영 [SK Broadband to be the First in the Country to Release Miraculous Ladybug on VOD, Exclusively on B TV] (Press release) (in Korean).
SK Broadband. 31 August 2015. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
^12/7일 첫방영! 디즈니채널/ 미라큘러스 방영안내 [Miraculous on Disney Channel: a Network Premiere, from 7 December] (in Korean). SAMG Animation. 7 December 2015. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
^仏・韓・日共同制作アニメ『ミラキュラス』日本初放送 [Miraculous, a French-(South) Korean-Japanese Animated Co-production, to Have a Japanese Premiere]. Oricon News (in Japanese). 15 June 2018. Retrieved 9 July 2018.
^「ミラキュラス レディバグ&シャノワール」ディズニー・チャンネルにて7月23日(月)12:30より日本初放送! [Japanese Premiere of Miraculous: Ladybug & Chat Noir on Monday, 23 July at 12:30 on Disney Channel] (Press release) (in Japanese). The Walt Disney Company (Japan) Ltd. PR Times. 15 June 2018. Retrieved 9 July 2018.
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir. Authored by Jeremy Zag, Thomas Astruc, Fred Lenoir, Sebastien Thibaudeau, Matthieu Choquet, Nicole D'Andria,a depressed cat, Cheryl Black. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2016.
ISBN1-63229-166-5
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir: Spots on. Authored by Jeremy Zag, Thomas Astruc, Sebastien Thibaudeau, Denis Bardiau, Guillaume Mautalent, Sebastien Oursel, Nicole D'Andria and Cheryl Black. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2016.
ISBN1-63229-214-9
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir: Lucky Charm. Authored by Jeremy Zag, Thomas Astruc, Matthieu Choquet, Leonie de Rudder, Cedric Perrin, Jean-Christophe Herve, Nicole D'Andria and Cheryl Black. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2017.
ISBN1-63229-276-9
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir: Claws Out. Authored by Jeremy Zag, Thomas Astruc, Cedric Bacconnier, Sebastien Thibaudeau, Pascal Boutboul, Michael Delachenal, Nicole D'Andria, and Cheryl Black. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2017.
ISBN1-63229-257-2
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir: Akumatized. Authored by Jeremy Zag, Thomas Astruc, Regis Jaulin, Nicole D'Andria, and Cheryl Black. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2017.
ISBN1-63229-267-X
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir: Cataclysm. Authored by Jeremy Zag, Fred Lenoir, Guillaume Mautalent, Sebastien Oursel, Sebastien Thibaudeau, Nicole D'Andria and Cheryl Black. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2017.
ISBN1-63229-277-7
Miraculous Adventures of Ladybug and Cat Noir: Volume 1 The Trash Krakken. Authored by Thomas Astruc, Bryan Seaton, Nicole D'Andria, and Brian Hess. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2018.
ISBN1-63229-290-4
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir: De-Evilize. Authored by Jeremy Zag, Thomas Astruc, Matthieu Choquet, Fred Lenoir, Guillaume Mautalent, Sebastien Oursel, Sophie Lodwitz, Eve Pisler, Nicole D'Andria and Cheryl Black. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2018.
ISBN1-63229-312-9
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir: Season Two - Bye Bye, Little Butterfly!. Authored by Jeremy Zag, Thomas Astruc, Matthieu Choquet, Fred Lenoir, Sebastien Thibaudeau, Nolwenn Pierre, Nicole D'Andria and Cheryl Black. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2018.
ISBN1-63229-439-7
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir: Santa Claws Christmas Special. Authored by Jeremy Zag, Thomas Astruc, Fred Lenoir, Sebastien Thibaudeau, Noam Kaniel, Nicole D'Andria and Cheryl Black. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2018.
ISBN1-63229-455-9
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir: Season Two - The Chosen One. Authored by Jeremy Zag, Thomas Astruc, Matthieu Choquet, Fred Lenoir, Sebastien Thibaudeau, Nicole D'Andria and Cheryl Black. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2018.
ISBN1-63229-422-2
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir: Bug Out. Authored by Jeremy Zag, Thomas Astruc, Sebastien Thibaudeau, Matthieu Choquet, Nicole D'Andria, Leonie de Rudder and Cheryl Black. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2018.
ISBN1-63229-366-8
Miraculous Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir Coloring Book: Wonderful Coloring Book With Premium Exclusive images. Authored by Evan Owens. Published by Createspace Independent Publishing Platform, 2018.
ISBN1-72345-782-5
Miraculous Coloring Book: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir, This Amazing Coloring Book Will Make Your Kids Happier and Give Them Joy(ages 3-12). Authored by Mrs Qwerty. Published by Createspace Independent Publishing Platform, 2018.
ISBN1-72326-318-4
Miraculous Coloring Book: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir Coloring Book for Kids, Hand-Drawn scenes, Volume 1 (42Pages). Authored by Leya Karsten. Published by Independently Published, 2019.
ISBN1-07670-938-9
Miraculous Adventures of Ladybug and Cat Noir: Volume 2. Authored by Thomas Astruc, Melanie Duval, Fred Lenoir, Bryan Seaton, Sebastien Thibaudeau, Brian Hess, Darne Lang and Nicole D'Andria. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2019.
ISBN1-63229-358-7
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir: Season Two - No More Evil-Doing. Authored by Jeremy Zag, Thomas Astruc, Melanie Duval, Matthieu Choquet, Fred Lenoir, Sebastien Thibaudeau, Nicole D'Andria and Cheryl Black. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2019.
ISBN1-63229-440-0
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir: Season Two - A New Hero Emerges. Authored by Jeremy Zag, Thomas Astruc, Matthieu Choquet, Fred Lenoir, Sebastien Thibaudeau, Nicole D'Andria and Cheryl Black. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2019.
ISBN1-63229-446-X
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir: Season Two - Double Trouble. Authored by Jeremy Zag, Thomas Astruc, Matthieu Choquet, Fred Lenoir, Sebastien Thibaudeau, Nolwenn Pierre, Nicole D'Andria and Cheryl Black. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2019.
ISBN1-63229-492-3
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir: Season Two - Love Compass. Authored by Jeremy Zag, Thomas Astruc, Matthieu Choquet, Melanie Duval, Sebastien Thibaudeau, Fred Lenoir, Jean-Remi Perrin, Cheryl Black, Nicole D'Andria and Bryan Seaton. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2019.
ISBN1-63229-459-1
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir: Season Two - Tear of Joy. Authored by Jeremy Zag, Thomas Astruc, Wilfried Pain, Melanie Duval, Sebastien Thibaudeau, Fred Lenoir, Nicole D'Andria and Cheryl Black. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2019.
ISBN1-63229-480-X
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir: Season Two - Heroes' Day. Authored by Jeremy Zag, Thomas Astruc, Matthieu Choquet, Fred Lenoir, Sebastien Thibaudeau, Nicole D'Andria, Bryan Seaton, Cheryl Black and Brian Hess. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2020.
ISBN1-63229-521-0
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir: Season Two - Queen's Battle. Authored by Jeremy Zag, Thomas Astruc, Melanie Duval, Fred Lenoir, Sebastien Thibaudeau, Nicole D'Andria and Cheryl Black. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2020.
ISBN1-63229-520-2
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir: Season Two - Bugheads. Authored by Jeremy Zag, Thomas Astruc, Fred Lenoir, Sebastien Thibaudeau, Nicole D'Andria and Cheryl Black. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2020.
ISBN1-63229-516-4
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir: Season Two - Skating on Thin Ice. Authored by Jeremy Zag, Thomas Astruc, Fred Lenoir, Melanie Duval, Sebastien Thibaudeau, Nicole D'Andria and Cheryl Black. Published by Action Lab Entertainment, Inc., 2020.
ISBN1-63229-517-2
Miraculous Ladybug Coloring Book: Exciting Coloring Pages of the Most Extraordinary Miraculous Ladybug Characters. Authored by Joshua Poche. Published by Independently Published, 2020.
ISBN979-8-66875-223-2
Miraculous Coloring Book: Tales of ladybug & cat noir, Amazing Book For Coloring, Knowledge Development, Relaxation And More With Favorite Miraculous Characters. Authored by Odim Publisher. Published by Independently Published, 2021.
ISBN979-8-59295-380-4