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Jun Mayuzuki's Kowloon Generic Romance Ends in April

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Kowloon Generic Romance Ending: What Fans Need to Know About Jun Mayuzuki’s Final Chapters Jun Mayuzuki’s evocative Kowloon Generic Romance is drawing to a close, and the announcement has set the fan community abuzz. The story—anchored in the cramped, nostalgic streets of Kowloon Walled City and brought to life across manga, anime, and film—will reach its conclusion in the next serialized installment. Below we break down the official details, release schedule, adaptations, and what this ending means for readers and viewers who followed Reiko Kujirai’s bittersweet journey. Image via Amazon © Jun Mayuzuki, Shueisha, Yen Press Overview: The Announcement and Final Chapter Information Weekly Young Jump revealed that Kowloon Generic Romance will end with its next chapter (chapter 108), scheduled to appear in the magazine’s 20th issue on April 16. The manga’s 12th compiled volume—the final volume—will ship the following day on April 17, giving reader...

MAO Episode 8 Review

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Episode 8 of MAO pushes the series further into the murky border between folklore, history, and personal memory. Rumiko Takahashi continues to weave supernatural mystery into a historical tapestry—this time using the fallout from the Great Kanto Earthquake and the long shadow of a thousand years to complicate the plot. The episode offers intriguing revelations about MAO’s past and introduces other surviving disciples of his former master, but it also exposes how difficult it can be to handle genuinely vast spans of time in a satisfying, believable way. © 高橋留美子/小学館/「MAO」製作委員会 Episode 8 — Quick recap This installment ties together present events with buried history. We learn more about the Asakusa Tower’s fate after the Great Kanto Earthquake—not exactly “destroyed” in one instant, but so damaged it had to be demolished afterward. The episode also reveals that MAO isn’t the only survivor connected to his old master: other human disciples from his earlier life are ...

Gundam NT's Kōzō Ōmori Launches New Gundam Manga

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Kōzō Ōmori — best known for his detailed Mobile Suit artwork and long-running Gundam adaptations — is returning to serialized manga with a new title that places the Minovsky particle at the center of its premise. Announced in Gundam Ace magazine, the new series Shien wa Minovsky no Eikyō o Ukenai brings Ōmori back into the Universal Century (or at least Gundam-flavored) orbit with a prologue scheduled for publication on June 26 and full serialization set to begin in the magazine’s September issue, which will be published on July 26. For longtime Gundam readers and newcomers curious about where this entry could fit, here’s everything we know and what it might mean for the franchise. Announcement Overview Gundam Ace revealed that Kōzō Ōmori will launch a new manga titled Shien wa Minovsky no Eikyō o Ukenai. The plan calls for a prologue to appear in the magazine issue dated June 26, followed by the start of regular serialization in the magazine’s September issue, released July 26. T...

Tamon's B-Side Episode 9 Review

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Episode 9 of Tamon’s B-Side deepens the quiet, character-driven comedy into surprisingly tender territory. Between glimpses of high school life, jealousy-fueled misunderstandings, and small but meaningful growth for the F/ACE members, this installment balances lighthearted fan-service with honest emotional beats. If you’ve been following Tamon, Utage, Keito, and Ouri, this episode pushes several relationships forward while teasing where the series might head next. © 師走ゆき・白泉社/多聞くん今どっち!?製作委員会 Episode 9 recap: school, study sessions, and small confessions The episode opens with a reminder that, despite their idol lives and the summer-setting of recent episodes, Utage and most of the F/ACE boys are still high school students. That simple fact reframes several interactions: Utage’s endless homework, Tamon’s secret exhaustion from maintaining his public persona, and the way their summer together functions as both a respite and a pressure cooker for emotions. The core...

Nippon Sangoku: Three Nations of the Crimson Sun — Episode 8 Review

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Episode 8 of Nippon Sangoku: The Three Nations of the Crimson Sun proves that great animation doesn't always need non-stop spectacle to land an emotional punch. This installment leans into restraint — long, deliberate conversations, careful blocking, and a handful of quiet but devastating beats — and turns them into one of the season's most memorable chapters. If you love cinematic storytelling in animated form, this episode is a masterclass in how to make stillness feel monumental. ©松木いっか/小学館/日本三國製作委員会 Why Nippon Sangoku Feels Cinematic The first thing that jumps out in this episode is how the show borrows techniques more commonly associated with prestige live-action cinema — long takes, carefully composed frames, and an emphasis on performance over flashy animation tricks. It recalls the way some wuxia films squeeze tension out of a tea ceremony or a slow exchange of words, rather than relying entirely on elaborate fight choreography. That pressure of ...

SD Gundam G Generation Eternal Gets New 4-Panel Comedy Manga

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SD Gundam G Generation Eternal Gets a New 4‑Koma by Kazuya Tani Gundam fans and mobile-strategy players have reason to smile: Gundam Ace magazine has announced that Kazuya Tani will launch a four-panel (4‑koma) comedy manga based on the mobile strategy title SD Gundam G Generation Eternal. The short-strip manga—titled SD Gundam G Generation Eternal 4‑koma —is set to appear in the magazine's issue dated June 26. This lighthearted adaptation promises a fresh, chibi-style take on the game's cast and systems, delivered in Tani's comedic format. Image via SD Gundam G Generation Eternal game's website — © Bandai Namco Entertainment Inc. New 4‑Koma Manga Announcement: What We Know The announcement is concise but clear: the new 4‑koma will be written and illustrated by Kazuya Tani and will adapt the world and characters of SD Gundam G Generation Eternal into short, comedic strips. As a format, 4‑koma strips are ideal for poking affectionate fun at character trop...

Daemons of the Shadow Realm Ep. 8 Review

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Episode 8 of Daemons of the Shadow Realm switches gears from action to exposition, unpacking the complicated web of loyalties that surround Asa and Yuru while delivering one of the season’s most affecting character moments. This installment reorients the conflict: what appeared to be a three-way struggle expands into multiple overlapping factions with competing agendas, and Yuru finally confronts the emotional fallout of his past. Below I break down the key revelations, character beats, and why this episode matters for the series moving forward. © Hiromu Arakawa/SQUARE ENIX, Project TSUGAI Episode 8 recap: factions, motives, and the widening battlefield Episode 8 pulls back the curtain on the political chessboard at the heart of the series. What seemed like two opposing sides—Higashi Village and the Kagemori—are fractured internally, revealing extremist factions that pursue radically different ends. Rather than a tidy three-way standoff, there are at least four ...