Nihon SF Taikai
Revision as of 09:43, 10 September 2021 by Leah Zeldes Smith (talk | contribs)
The Japan National SF Convention or Nihon SF Taikai (日本SF大会), Japan’s natcon, has been held annually since 1962. The Seiun Award for the best science fiction of the year, as voted by members of the convention, is presented there. It typically attracts between 1,000 and 1,500 attendees.
No. | Con | Dates | Location | GoHs, Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Meg-Con | 1962 | Tokyo | 180 attendees. |
2 | Tokon | 1963 | Tokyo | |
3 | Daicon | 1964 | Osaka | |
4 | Tokon 2 | 1965 | Tokyo | |
5 | Meicon | 1966 | Nagoya | |
6 | Tokon 3 | 1967 | Tokyo | |
7 | Tokon 4 | 1968 | Tokyo | |
8 | Kyukon | 1969 | Kumamoto-ken | |
9 | Tokon 5 | 1970 | Tokyo | |
10 | Daicon 2 | 1971 | Osaka | |
11 | Meicon 2 | 1972 | Nagoya | |
12 | Ezocon | 1973 | Hokkaidō | |
13 | Miyacon | 1974 | Kyoto | |
14 | Shincon | 1975 | Kobe | |
15 | Tokon 6 | 1976 | Tokyo | |
16 | Hincon | 1977 | Yokohama | |
17 | Ashinocon | 1978 | Kanagawa-ken | |
18 | Meicon 3 | 1979 | Nagoya | |
19 | Tokon 7 | 1980 | Tokyo | |
20 | Daicon 3 | 1981 | Osaka | |
21 | Tokon 8 | 1982 | Tokyo | |
22 | Daicon 4 | 1983 | Osaka | |
23 | Ezocon 2 | 1984 | Hokkaidō | |
24 | Gatacon Special Summer Fest | 1985 | Niigata-ken | |
25 | Daicon 5 | 1986 | Osaka | |
26 | Uracon '87 | 1987 | Ishikawa-ken | |
27 | Mig-con | 1988 | Gunma-ken | |
28 | Daina Con Ex | 1989 | Nagoya | |
29 | Tokon 9 | 1990 | Tokyo | |
30 | i-Con | 1991 | Kanazawa, Ishikawa | |
31 | HamaCon | 1992 | Yokohama | |
32 | Daicon 6 | 1993 | Osaka | |
33 | Ryucon | 1994 | Okinawa | |
34 | Hamanacon (はまなこん) | 1995 | Shizuoka (Hamamatsu) | |
35 | Kokuranomicon (コクラノミコン) | 1996 | Kitakyushu | |
36 | Akicon (あきこん) | 1997 | Hiroshima | |
37 | Capricon 1 | 1998 | Nagoya (Mars) | |
38 | Yanecon (やねこん) | 1999 | Nagano-ken | ~4,000 attendees. |
39 | Zero-con | 2000 | Yokohama | |
40 | SF2001 | 2001 | Makuhari Messe, Chiba | International Future Confererence 未来国際会議 Mirai Kokusai Kaigi. |
41 | Yūcon (ゆ~こん) | 2002 | Tamayu, Shimane | |
42 | T-con 2003 | 2003 | Shiobara, Tochigi | |
43 | G-con | 2004 | Gifu | |
44 | HamaCon 2 | 2005 | Yokohama | |
45 | Michinoku SF Matsuri Zuncon (みちのくSF祭ずんこん) | 2006 | Matsushima | |
46 | Nippon 2007 | August 30–September 3, 2007 | Yokohama | 65th Worldcon. |
47 | Daicon 7 | 2008 | Osaka | |
48 | T-con 2009 | 2009 | Shiobara, Tochigi | |
49 | Tokon 10 | 2010 | Tokyo | |
50 | Donburacon-L | 2011 | Shizuoka | |
51 | Varicon | 2012 | Yūbari, Hokkaidō | |
52 | Koicon | 2013 | Hiroshima | |
53 | Nuts-con | 2014 | Tsukuba, Ibaraki | |
54 | Comecon | 2015 | Yonago, Tottori | |
55 | Iseshimacon | 2016 | Toba, Mie | |
56 | Donburacon-LL | 2017 | Shizuoka | |
57 | Juracon | 2018 | Minakami, Gunma | |
58 | Sci-con | July 29–30, 2019 | Saitama | |
59 | Postponed to 2022 due to COVID-19. | |||
60 | SF60 | August 21–22, 2021 | Takamatsu, Kagawa | |
61 | F-Con | August 27–28, 2022 | Kōriyama, Fukushima |
Convention | |
1962— |
This is a convention page. Please extend it by adding information about the convention, including dates, GoHs, convention chairman, locale, sponsoring organization, external links to convention pages, awards given, the program, notable events, anecdotes, pictures, scans of publications, pictures of T-shirts, con reports, etc. |