Digimon

Digimon (デジモン Dejimon), or Digital Monsters (デジタルモンスター Dejitaru Monsut) in long, began as a series of Virtual Pets, that expanded into a franchise centered around the creatures living inside them that quickly eclipsed the popularity of the Virtual Pets themselves.

Based partially on the sister franchise, Tamagotchi, the idea was to raise a creature called a Digimon that would evolve and change form depending on how it was cared for. Digimon could be pitted against each other in battle - the chief difference between Digimon and Tamagotchi. Digimon was designed to appeal to boys in the same way Tamagotchi were geared towards girls.

The term Digimon may refer to the video game franchise, an individual Digimon, or a species of Digimon.

=Franchise= See Digimon Chronology

While the most popular part of the Digimon franchise has always been the anime, other aspects include video games, Virtual Pets, a Trading Card Game, and manga, and much merchandise.

=Anime=
 * Digimon Adventure
 * Digimon Adventure 02
 * Digimon Tamers
 * Digimon Frontier
 * Digimon Savers
 * Digimon Xros Wars
 * Digimon Xros Wars
 * Digimon Xros Wars: The Evil Death Generals and the Seven Kingdoms
 * Digimon Xros Wars: The Boy Hunters Who Leapt Through Time

=Manga / Comics=
 * C'mon Digimon
 * Digimon Adventure V-Tamer 01
 * Digimon Chronicle
 * D-Cyber
 * Digimon Next
 * Battle Terminal 02 Web comic
 * Digimon Tokyopop
 * Digimon Xros Wars
 * Digimon World Re:Digitize
 * Digimon World Re:Digitize Encode

=Video Games= See List of Video Games

=Virtual Pets= See List of Virtual Pets
 * Digital Monster
 * Digimon Pendulum
 * Digimon Pendulum Progress
 * Digimon Pendulum X
 * Digimon Accelerator
 * Digimon Mini
 * Digivice iC / Burst
 * Digimon Twin
 * Digimon Mini (Xros Wars)

=List of Digimon= See List of Digimon

=Taxonomy= See Digimon Taxonomy

=Evolution= See Evolution

Digimon evolve with age, collecting data, winning battles, or drawing energy off a human. Digimon have six "natural" stages of evolution as well as others obtained through artificial help.

While the anime generally presents Digimon as having conceptually "matching" evolution lines, in other aspects of the franchise, Digimon evolve depending on how they're raised - including what time they're awake, how much they've fought, how much they've trained, how much they've eaten, and other factors. An Agumon who has been raised properly will evolve into the powerful Greymon, while one who has been starved to death will evolve into the weak and disgusting Numemon. Evolution can be temporary or permanent depending on the circumstances. Generally in the anime, Digimon evolve for a short period of time before reverting to smaller, cuter forms. In the games, Digimon usually retain their larger forms after evolving.