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A Wild Last Boss Appeared! Anime Review

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A Wild Last Boss Appeared! takes a familiar isekai premise—a top-tier MMO player suddenly transported into the body of their in-game character—and spins it into an engaging study of identity, legacy, and a world left fractured two centuries after its greatest conqueror fell. The series balances sweeping worldbuilding with bold visuals, even as its character work occasionally leaves the show wanting more depth. Below, we break down what makes the anime worth watching and where it could improve. Lufas Maphaahl: a legendary conqueror, now the vessel for an MMO player’s consciousness. Premise and narrative hook The story opens with a striking premise: an elite Exgate Online player awakens inside the body of Lufas Maphaahl, a ruthless ruler famed across the game’s history. However, it isn’t the same game session he remembers—two hundred years have passed since Lufas’ final defeat, and the world is a shadow of its former self. Rather than a straightforward power-fantasy romp, t...

Kuma Licenses Ogeretsu Tanaka's BL Manga Mermaid Prince

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Big news from Anime Expo: publisher KUMA has officially licensed Ogeretsu Tanaka’s boys-love (BL) manga Mermaid Prince. Announced during the "Manga Licensing with DENPA and KUMA Books" panel, the manga’s premise — a cash-strapped young man asked to father a child with an endangered male mermaid for a huge payout — immediately grabbed attention for its unique sci-fi/romance twist on BL storytelling. Below we break down what Mermaid Prince is, why this license matters, where you can look for the release, and what fans should expect moving forward. Image via Amazon © Ogeretsu Tanaka, Shinchokan What is Mermaid Prince? — Story & Premise Mermaid Prince centers on a financially struggling young man whose life is turned upside down when a mysterious organization offers him 100 million yen in exchange for his rare genetics. The catch: to claim the money, he must successfully father a child with an endangered male mermaid, helping to save that species ...

Mahiro Satou’s Alkali Rettōsei Manga Ends with Volume 3

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Big news for fans of Vocaloid-inspired storytelling: the third compiled volume of Mahiro Satou’s Alkali Rettōsei manga — the manga adaptation of Kairiki Bear’s popular “Alkali Rettōsei” (Alkali Underachiever) song — has been announced as the series’ final compiled volume. The book is slated for release on April 27, 2026, bringing Satou’s adaptation to a close and wrapping up the manga’s take on a story that began life as a single, viral Vocaloid track. Image via Amazon © Kairiki Bear, Shirozaki, Mahiro Satou What this final volume means for Alkali Rettōsei The announcement that the third compiled book will serve as the final volume closes the curtain on Mahiro Satou’s manga adaptation of the Alkali Rettōsei storyline. Satou’s manga is based on a novelization of the song’s narrative, and the adaptation has been praised for translating the song’s compressed emotional beats into a wider, character-driven format. This final volume will likely resolve remaining story thread...

Seven Seas Licenses 15 Manga, Including My Sword Saint Master Is Too Cute to Live With! and Hate Me, But Let Me Stay

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Seven Seas Entertainment shook up its licensing lineup during its recent Anime Expo industry panel, announcing an expansive slate of manga, light novels, webtoons, and genre-specific titles that span romance, fantasy, BL, GL, danmei, and more. Whether you follow light novels, manhwa, or digital-first manga releases, this new roster promises something for readers across tastes — from cozy romantic comedies to darker supernatural mysteries. Below we break down the most notable licenses, release windows, and why fans should be excited. New Licenses Overview: What Was Announced Seven Seas revealed a variety of titles across multiple imprints and categories, scheduling releases mostly throughout 2027 and a couple in 2026. The announcement covers light novels, translated webtoons, manhwa spinoffs, and both boys' and girls' love titles — reflecting the publisher’s continued strategy to diversify their catalog and bring niche favorites to English-speaking audiences. Imprint High...

Rooster Fighter Episode 1 Review — First Impressions

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Rooster Fighter bursts onto the screen with the sort of glorious absurdity that makes you laugh before you can even register the stakes. Episode 1 wastes no time establishing its premise: a musclebound rooster named Keiji hunts towering, sorrow-fueled demons with a signature battle cry and a tragic past. The show is equal parts parody and homage, channeling classic macho shonen energy while leaning into the sheer ridiculousness of its feathered protagonist. Below is a deep dive into what makes the premiere a must-watch for fans of action, satire, and offbeat comedy. © SS/KH,V Episode 1 — Quick Overview Rooster Fighter’s opener introduces Keiji, a beefy rooster-turned-hero whose life mission is to track down the tattooed titan who kidnapped his sister, Sara. The episode balances visceral monster fights with outright comedy, often pivoting from awe-inspiring one-liners to lowbrow gags in a heartbeat. Visually, it channels a gritty, retro action aesthetic while th...

Inklore Licenses "Ikoku Nikki" Manga by Tomoko Yamashita

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Inklore has officially picked up Tomoko Yamashita's tender, quietly moving manga Ikoku Nikki for English print release — with the first volume scheduled to arrive in summer 2027. The series, known internationally under the anime title Journal with Witch, has already expanded beyond the printed page into live-action and animated adaptations, and Yamashita's gentle exploration of family, grief, and unexpected cohabitation continues to win new readers. Below we break down what makes Ikoku Nikki special, where the adaptations stand, and what English-language readers can expect from Inklore's upcoming release. Image via Comic Natalie © Tomoko Yamashita, Shodensha Background & announcement: Inklore brings Ikoku Nikki to print At Anime Expo 2026, Inklore confirmed that it has licensed Ikoku Nikki for an English-language print edition, announcing the first volume will be released in summer 2027. This marks a significant step for readers outside Japa...

Fate/strange Fake Episode 11 Review

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Fate/strange Fake episode 11 leans hard into atmosphere and character work, trading large-scale confrontations for quiet, unnerving shifts in reality. The episode spends most of its runtime untangling where each faction has ended up and what their priorities are within an increasingly unstable landscape. With the usual antagonists absent or stranded, the focus turns inward—revealing personal motivations, moral cracks, and relationships that quietly reshape the stakes. © 成田良悟・TYPE-MOON/FSFPC Episode overview: displacement, confusion, and fractured alliances Episode 11 opens with a sense of dislocation—one moment characters are amid the snowy ruin of a battlefield, the next they find themselves in a calm but empty replica of the city. That jarring alternation establishes the episode’s main device: a fake world whose seams are beginning to show. Rather than delivering the expected action beats, the episode reshuffles who is with whom. Jester is absent, Alcides and ...