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World's End Harem: Fantasia Manga Spinoff to End in 10 Chapters

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LINK and SAVAN's fantasy spinoff World’s End Harem: Fantasia (Shūmatsu no Harem: Fantasia) has entered its final stretch — chapter 90 revealed that the series will conclude in 10 chapters. After multiple hiatuses and a long-awaited return to its final arc, the news brings both closure and high expectations from readers who have followed Arc, Lati, and the dark, decadent world they inhabit. Image via Amazon Japan © LINK, SAVAN, Shueisha What the "10 chapters left" announcement means for readers Revealing a fixed chapter count for the ending gives fans a concrete timeline to anticipate the story’s finale. For a series with multiple pauses and side projects, this announcement signals that the creators are committed to a focused conclusion — wrapping up the final arc that resumed earlier after a preparation hiatus. Expect the pacing to tighten, key mysteries to be resolved, and major plotlines involving Arc and his circle to move toward definitive outcomes. ...

Akane-banashi Episodes 1–2 Review

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Episodes 1 and 2 of Akane-banashi arrive as a confident, faithful adaptation that understands the heart of the source material and elevates it through animation, sound, and performance staging. If you loved the manga, these early episodes capture the emotional pulse and theatrical rhythm with care; if you’re new, they’re an excellent introduction to rakugo and why this series has been quietly winning fans. What is Akane-banashi? Akane-banashi centers on rakugo, the traditional Japanese art of comedic and dramatic storytelling performed by a single storyteller. The series follows Akane, a young woman determined to become a standout performer in a field dominated by gendered traditions and steeped in historical context. At its core, the show is about performance and the human moments behind it: tension, timing, empathy, and the small physical tells that reveal a performer’s true state of mind. Episodes 1–2: Setting the Stage The opening episodes do more than simply adapt panels t...

One Piece Episodes 1156-1157 Review

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Episodes 1156 and 1157 of One Piece deliver a refreshing breather that leans hard into the series’ roots: reunion, revelry, and a sense of wide-eyed adventure. After heavier arcs like Wano and Egghead, these installments offer fans a chance to breathe, laugh, and prepare for the coming storms — while subtly reminding us that the hunt for the One Piece is far from over. © Eiichiro Oda/Shueisha, Toei Animation Episodes 1156–1157 Recap: Reunion, Revelry, and Roiling Threats These episodes open on a celebratory note: the Straw Hats reunited, sharing food, drink, and boisterous camaraderie. Simple character beats—Chopper getting tipsy and behaving far more carefree than usual—deliver genuine warmth and comedy. Moments like these work as emotional glue; after intense confrontations, fans appreciate down time that re-establishes the crew’s bonds. At the same time, a wider check-in across the world unfolds. Short vignettes spotlight supporting players and factions, gi...

Roll Over and Die Episode 6 Review

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After several tense and action-heavy installments, Roll Over and Die’s episode 6 offers a deliberate breather: a soft, character-driven slice-of-life interlude that centers on intimacy, healing, and the quiet power of everyday moments. The episode—titled “An Ordinary Life”—shifts focus away from immediate conflict and toward the growing relationship between Flum and Milkit, using food, conversation, and domestic gestures to deepen their bond while still reminding viewers of the darker world that looms outside their door. ©kiki, kinta, kodamazon/MICRO MAGAZINE/Omagoto Project Episode Overview Episode 6 abandons the “X and Y” naming convention and the usual title-card inversion, signaling to the audience that this installment will be tonally different. Rather than pressing forward into revenge or political intrigue, the episode leans into warmth: breakfast mishaps, cuddling scenes, and gentle domestic humor. It’s an intentional tonal pivot designed to let characters breathe ...

Super Mario Galaxy Movie: Manga News

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The Super Mario Galaxy movie poster. Illumination’s latest take on a beloved gaming franchise doubles down on spectacle, nostalgia, and frantic joyride energy. Super Mario Galaxy delivers some of the most dazzling animation the studio has produced, blending hyper-detailed environments, bold color design, and kinetic action set pieces that feel lifted straight from a platforming level. But while the film is an audiovisual feast, its narrative structure and character beats will divide audiences — thrilling fans hungry for references, while leaving viewers craving a more satisfying emotional throughline. Visuals & Animation: A Technical Triumph From the first frame, the movie announces itself as a technical showcase. The character models are expressive, textures are rich, and the use of squash-and-stretch animation gives even familiar faces fresh life. Set pieces are staged with game-like precision: creative camera angles, imaginative particle effects, and environments that ...

Dr. STONE: Science Future Eps. 25–27 Review

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Dr. Stone: Science Future rockets into its third cour with episodes 25–27, taking everything fans love about the series — frenetic scientific problem-solving, infectious enthusiasm for invention, and a delightfully eccentric cast — and amplifying it to orbit-ready levels. This stretch of episodes trades the slow-burn rebuilding of previous seasons for full-throttle aerospace ambition: Senku and newly allied rival Dr. Xeno set their sights on the Moon, and the Kingdom of Science wrestles with metallurgy, fuel synthesis, and human computation along the way. ©Kome Studio, Boichi/SHUEISHA, Dr.STONE Project Pacing and Plot: Moonshot Ambitions Episodes 25–27 accelerate quickly, introducing a cascade of scientific milestones under a tight runtime. The season opens with Senku resuming leadership after Suika's Amazon rescue arc, and — in a twist that refreshes the narrative — reviving Dr. Xeno and recruiting him to a shared objective: build a rocket capable of escapi...

A Pen, Handcuffs, and a Common-Law Marriage Manga TV Anime Confirmed

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King Amusement Creative has officially announced a television anime adaptation of Shinichi Sawaragi and Tanku Gasuyama's manga A Pen, Handcuffs, and a Common-Law Marriage (ペンと手錠と事実婚). The news has excited mystery and romance fans alike: the original manga blends detective work, quiet character drama, and an unusual silent-witness dynamic that promises an adaptation full of visual storytelling and emotional beats. Image via A Pen, Handcuffs, and a Common-Law Marriage anime's website © 椹木伸一・ガス山タンク/白泉社/「ペンと手錠と事実婚」製作委員会 What is A Pen, Handcuffs, and a Common-Law Marriage? A Pen, Handcuffs, and a Common-Law Marriage centers on forty-year-old detective Eiji Kirisame and a mysterious high school girl named Tsugumi Kuchinashi, who becomes an unlikely witness in one of his cases. Tsugumi is largely silent, communicating through doodles on a drawing pad rather than words. Her final page — which reads “Will you marry me?!” — introduces a narrative twist that mixes investi...