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Ichi-F Manga Returns with Special One-Shot After 10 Years

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Kazuto Tatsuta's Ichi-F: A Worker's Graphic Memoir of the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant is returning in a meaningful way — ten years after the original run concluded. Kodansha's Morning magazine has announced a special one-shot chapter that will appear in its next issue on February 12, portraying the current state of Fukushima and continuing the frank, human-scale account that made Ichi-F an essential nonfiction manga. For readers interested in documentary comics, post-disaster recovery, or contemporary Japanese history, this one-shot is a rare follow-up from a creator who lived and drew the cleanup first-hand. Image via Amazon © Kazuto Tatsuta, Kodansha, Kodansha USA Publishing What Is Ichi-F and Why It Stands Out Ichi-F (also stylized as ICHIEFU) is a nonfiction manga created by Kazuto Tatsuta, who worked at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant during the cleanup after the 2011 tsunami and nuclear accident. Unlike fictionalized takes on disaster, Tat...

Manga Plus Releases Maki Kanemaki's The Hero's Bereaved Family in English

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The Hero's Bereaved Family (Yūsha Izoku), a darkly comic post-adventure isekai manga by Maki Kanemaki, has just become more accessible to English readers — MANGA Plus is now hosting the series' opening chapters in English. Blending twisted family drama, brutal inheritance battles, and a sharp take on the “life after the hero” trope, this title is quickly becoming a must-read for fans of subversive fantasy and black comedy in manga form. Image via MANGA Plus' X/Twitter account © Maki Kanemaki, Shueisha Quick overview: What is The Hero's Bereaved Family? The Hero's Bereaved Family (Yūsha Izoku) follows Gil, a half-elf who sets off to attend the funeral of the legendary hero who defeated the Demon King — a man Gil never met but shares blood with. Expecting an inheritance and perhaps some answers, Gil instead finds himself swept into a savage, laugh-out-loud inheritance conflict among the hero’s many, love-starved children. What begins as an...

Reincarnated as the 7th Prince: Manga News

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Prince Lloyd de Saloum returns in the second season of I Was Reincarnated as the 7th Prince So I Can Take My Time Perfecting My Magical Ability (briefly, 7th Prince), and this season takes a narrower, more focused approach than its predecessor. Where season one spread its attention across short, episodic beats, season two commits to a single church-centered arc that investigates divine sorcery and a mysterious underground laboratory. The result is a mixed bag: tighter narrative cohesion and some impressive battle animation, but also persistent character-blind spots and a few baffling storytelling choices. Prince Lloyd's curiosity about divine sorcery drives the season's central mystery. Season 2 Overview: A Single Arc, Higher Stakes Unlike season one’s short arcs, season two follows one main storyline: Lloyd’s fascination with the church’s divine sorcery and the discovery of an underground laboratory that hints at darker machinations. The unified arc strengthens t...

Shiboyugi Episode 11 Review — Death Games for Survival

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© 鵜飼有志・ねこめたる How do you conclude a series like SHIBOYUGI: Playing Death Games to Put Food on the Table? Episode 11 doesn't look for an easy, tidy resolution. Instead it doubles down on the series' commitment to mood, memory, and moral ambiguity—delivering a finale that feels more like an elegy than a victory lap. If you've followed Yuki's battered trail through the show's fractured timeline, this episode asks you to sit with the bruise rather than slap on a bandage. Episode 11 — Recap and structure The finale pivots around the looming confrontation with Kyara and the emotional fallout of Hakushi's apparent death. But SHIBOYUGI has never been primarily interested in linear storytelling. Instead of a straight boss fight, the episode intercuts present action with ghostly, cyclical flashbacks and death-dream sequences that collapse Yuki's past and present into one aching montage. The big reveal—that Hakushi may have faked her death—refram...

Hana-Kimi Episode 6 Review

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Hana-Kimi episode 6 shifts gears from flirtatious school hijinks into a tighter, more emotionally charged arc — one that centers on Sano’s recovery and the pressure placed on him by adults and rivals alike. This installment mixes genuine heart with uncomfortable character beats, raising questions about who’s driving the story and whether the anime’s production can do justice to the source material. © Hisaya Nakajo, Hakusensha / “Hana-Kimi” Production Committee Episode 6 recap: A high jump, a harsh visit, and shifting priorities Episode 6 opens with a tense, adult interruption to the otherwise school-focused plot: Mizuki’s brother Shizuki arrives and creates friction. The encounter quickly exposes possessiveness and control that sit uneasily next to the show’s lighter moments. While Mizuki navigates family pressure, Sano prepares for a comeback at the track meet — a return that forces his emotional state into the spotlight. Between confrontations and training, ...

Yen Press Licenses I'm Just in a Faux BL, Servant Beast & Spy Classroom 4

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Yen Press just unveiled a sizable September slate: 13 new manga releases and two light novels ready to hit shelves. From pulse-pounding psychological death games to cozy supernatural slice-of-life and rom-com hijinks, this batch offers something for every manga reader. Below we break down each licensed title, spotlight what makes it worth your attention, and point you toward where to preorder or learn more. At a glance: 13 manga and 2 light novels coming in September This lineup includes omnibus editions, single-volume adaptations, fresh serialized debuts, and light novels from rising creators. Whether you love dark thrillers, heart-tugging drama, or quirky fantasy, these September releases are packed with variety. Featured manga releases JUDGE (Omnibus Edition) — Yoshiki Tonogai Image courtesy of Yen Press © Yoshiki Tonogai A tense psychological death game, JUDGE gathers sinners bound to the seven deadly sins into a courthouse and forces them to choose a sacrifice...

Champignon Witch Ep. 12 Review

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Champignon Witch episode 12 closes the season with a thoughtful meditation on love, power, and identity. Rather than ending on a conventional romantic climax, the finale leans into character and theme: Luna’s compassion, Lize’s quiet growth, and the series’ rejection of rigid categories for what makes someone “good” or “worthy.” This episode reframes the show’s magic system as a moral landscape, where the most powerful acts are driven not by selfish ambition but by care for others. ©樋口橘・白泉社/「シャンピニオンの魔女」製作委員会 Black vs. White Witches: Love as Power or Liability? Episode 12 foregrounds a contradiction at the heart of Champignon Witch’s lore: black witches are said to be harmed by love, yet Luna—arguably the most influential black witch in the story—exhibits deep love in many forms. She cares for Henri, treats Lize and the familiars like family, and holds steadfast friendship with Dorothy. Despite this, Luna remains the world’s foremost healer against poison. That t...