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MAO Episode 9 Review

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MAO episode 9 delivers a mixed bag: a compelling first half that leans into the series' darker instincts, followed by a second half that pivots into a new mystery — leaving pacing issues and repeated exposition feeling more noticeable than usual. After several episodes of steady momentum, this installment occasionally falls back on flashbacks and recap narration in ways that undermine the episode's flow, but it also offers strong moments that reinforce why Rumiko Takahashi's supernatural storytelling still resonates. © 高橋留美子/小学館/「MAO」製作委員会 Episode 9 Recap: Two Halves, Two Tones The episode splits almost cleanly into two parts. The first resolves a lingering subplot from the previous episode involving an immortal apprentice from a millennium ago. It reveals the waitress as an ayakashi and delivers one of the series' darkest on-screen moments — a violent comeuppance that underlines MAO's willingness to explore grim territory. The se...

Hotel Inhumans Anime Review

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Hotel Inhumans takes a grim, stylish premise — a resort that caters exclusively to killers, hitmen, and the morally compromised — and turns it into an episodic crime anthology that alternately thrills, saddens, and frustrates. Anchored by a small but steady cast of hotel staff and a revolving door of unforgettable guests, the series mines human tragedy and dark humor from its premise. Below we unpack what makes the show worth visiting, where it stumbles, and why the soundtrack might be the series’ secret weapon. Hotel Inhumans — where killers check in and secrets check out What is Hotel Inhumans? At its core, Hotel Inhumans is an anthology series that centers on the staff of a morally ambiguous resort whose clientele are professional killers. Each episode (or arc) follows different guests — from dying gangsters and aging hitmen to conflicted young trainees and star-struck foreign assassins — whose lives intersect beneath the hotel’s roof. The hotel concierge team, led by the...

Mr. Vamp Manga Ends

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Mr. Vamp is a Vampire (Vamp‑sensei wa Kyūketsuki) — the offbeat, slice‑of‑life comedy manga by Dorothy Odoroo — has reached its conclusion on Kodansha’s Comic Days platform. Combining immortal whimsy with schoolroom absurdity, the series turned an overqualified vampire’s midlife boredom into a charming classroom comedy. Below we break down the final chapters, what made the series work, its publication history, and why readers should add this title to their must‑read list. Image via Amazon Japan © Dorothy Odoroo, Kodansha Quick synopsis: A vampire who teaches history (and chaos) At its heart, Mr. Vamp is a Vampire follows an immortal vampire who takes on the unlikely role of a high school history teacher in Japan. The premise leans into the comedic contrast between an ancient being’s lived experience and the mundane bureaucracy of modern education. Though the protagonist tries to maintain the façade of a normal human teacher, his indifference to blending in...

Chained Soldier S2E8 Review

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The eighth episode of Chained Soldier Season 2 finally starts to give the season some much-needed momentum. After several episodes that felt like a string of disconnected side-quests and fanservice detours, this installment reintroduces real stakes with a fresh antagonist, tighter team focus, and a handful of effective action beats. It doesn’t abandon the series’ signature ecchi tone, but it does begin to balance the titillation with plot-forward development—just enough to make the season feel less aimless. © Takahiro,Yohei Takemura /SHUEISHA, Chained Soldier Production Consortium Season pacing and narrative direction One of the most consistent criticisms of Chained Soldier’s second season has been its scattershot pacing. Season one benefited from a clear through-line—Yuuki’s search for his sister—which guided the narrative and lent purpose to many of the battles and set pieces. Season two initially traded that clarity for a looser string of vignettes: errands, erotic gags,...

Witch Hat Atelier Episode 10 Review

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Episode 10 of Witch Hat Atelier digs into identity, exclusion, and the unexpected power of belief. This installment centers on Tartah — an apprentice whose so-called "silverwash" (a form of colorblindness) has kept him on the margins of witch society — and how a sudden crisis forces both him and the people around him to confront long-held assumptions. With strong character beats, thematic subtlety, and a reminder that craft and conviction sometimes matter more than perceived limitations, this episode stands out as one of the series' more emotionally resonant chapters. Centered Image © Kamome Shirahama/KODANSHA/ Witch Hat Atelier Committee Tartah’s Isolation: Disability, Difference, and Representation Tartah's struggle is one of the episode’s most affecting threads. He’s been told repeatedly — implicitly and explicitly — that because of his silverwash he can’t fully belong. That exclusion isn't just personal humiliation; it’s str...

Apocalypse Hotel Anime & Spinoff Manga and Ikuto Yamashita Win 57th Seiun Awards

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The 57th Seiun Awards — Japan’s fan-voted honors for excellence in speculative fiction — delivered a quiet but notable victory to Apocalypse Hotel, the original television anime produced by CyberAgent and Cygames Pictures. The series claimed the Best Media award, while its spinoff manga Apocalypse Hotel Pusupusu (Apocalypse Hotel: Sputtering) by Izumi Takemoto took home Best Comic. Mechanical designer Ikuto Yamashita also won Best Artist for his long-running contributions to anime mecha design. Below we break down what these wins mean for the series, the creative team behind it, and the state of Japanese science fiction in 2026. What are the Seiun Awards? The Seiun Awards are Japan’s fan-voted speculative fiction honors, often compared to the Hugo Awards for their convention-attendee voting model. The 57th Seiun Awards covered works released between January 1 and December 31, 2025, with votes cast online by registrants of the 64th Japan Science Fiction Convention between March 16 ...

Sentenced to Be a Hero Episode 8 Review

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Episode 8 of Sentenced to Be a Hero leans fully into its cloak-and-dagger urban fantasy vibe, delivering disguise-driven hijinks, quiet character beats, and a punchy action set-piece that punctuates the episode's quieter tensions. This installment doubles down on intrigue—factions maneuvering in the shadows, characters forced into precarious roles, and hints of a deeper rot within the kingdom’s power structure. For viewers who enjoy tense, close-quarters encounters and the slow reveal of personal histories, this episode is a satisfying mid-season highlight. © Studio Kai Urban Fantasy and the Thrill of the Unknown One of the strongest elements of this episode is its commitment to the urban fantasy atmosphere. Narrow alleys, shadowed meeting points, and clandestine planning sessions create an environment where every corner could hide an ally—or an ambush. That sense of being hemmed in raises tension organically, letting even small exchanges feel consequential....