Posts

Season 2 Review: Puniru the Cute Slime

Image
Puniru is a Kawaii Slime returns for a second season that leans harder into emotion while keeping the series’ signature zaniness and visual flair. What begins as a continuation of sitcom-style antics gradually shifts into surprisingly thoughtful territory — exploring identity, validation, and what “being cute” really means for the characters involved. The result is a season that will catch many viewers off-guard: it’s still bright and silly, but it’s also unexpectedly melancholic and introspective. Puniru struggles with her identity after achieving the cuteness she always wanted. Season 2 Overview: More Than Just Gags Season one established Puniru and Kotaro’s oddball dynamic: a magical toy turned living slime pitted against the cranky teenager who made her. Season two starts by resolving the previous cliffhanger quickly, returning the cast to their familiar middle school setting, but it doesn’t simply coast. Rather than regressing into pure status-quo come...

Jujutsu Kaisen S3 Episode 55 Review — The Culling Game Pt. 1

Image
Jujutsu Kaisen Season 3 continues to impress, and episode 55 stands out as a turning point that blends psychological depth, social critique, and top-tier animation. This installment moves beyond spectacle to explore what happens when a character's faith in institutions shatters — and how that collapse can become a terrifying source of power. Below I break down the episode’s strengths, from thematic coherence to the subtle audio and visual touches that elevate the storytelling. © Gege Akutami/Shueisha, JUJUTSU KAISEN Project Episode Overview: A Shift from Pure Action to Psychological Drama Episode 55 dials back from nonstop combat to deliver an episode rooted in atmosphere and character study. Instead of focusing solely on flashy fight choreography, the story centers on Hiromi Higuruma — a lawyer whose moral and professional collapse becomes the catalyst for frightening displays of cursed energy. This approach reframes Jujutsu Kaisen’s power system as not jus...

Agents of the Four Seasons Episode 8 Review: Dance of Spring

Image
Episode 8 of Agents of the Four Seasons: Dance of Spring is one of those chapters that forces you to choose between admiration for craft and frustration with execution. On paper, a single, black-and-white flashback dedicated to the trauma of Hinagiku’s kidnapping could be a powerful, clarifying piece that deepens character stakes. In practice, this installment mostly rehashes information the series has already hammered home and interrupts the forward thrust the show had built up after last week’s violent escalation. The result is an elegant-looking but narratively stalled hour that asks the audience to keep crying on demand rather than giving them reasons to care anew. © Kana Akatsuki, Suoh / Straight Edge — Agents of the Four Seasons Episode Recap: What Happens in This Flashback This episode abandons the present-day arc to deliver an extended, monochrome flashback focused on Hinagiku’s abduction and its immediate fallout. We finally see fuller scenes of Hinagik...

Wicked Spot Manga by Sal Jiang Ends in Two Chapters

Image
Sal Jiang's Wicked Spot has quietly become one of the most talked-about short-form manga hits of recent seasons — and now the series is entering its closing stretch. In a recent post on X (formerly Twitter), Jiang confirmed that Wicked Spot will conclude with chapter 16. For readers following the unfolding story of internet fame, witchcraft, and an unlikely rivalry-turned-adventure, the ending is fast approaching. Image via Amazon © Vertical Comics, Sai Jiang What’s happening: The series is ending at chapter 16 Creator Sal Jiang announced on X that Wicked Spot will end in chapter 16. According to publication updates, chapter 14 was released on May 22, and chapter 15 is scheduled for June 26. With the 16th chapter confirmed as the finale, fans can expect the remaining run to tie up the series’ central mysteries and character arcs over the next installments. Quick synopsis: social media meets supernatural At its heart, Wicked Spot blends modern interne...

Risqué Fukami BL Manga Gets Live-Action Series in April

Image
Unexpectedly Naughty Fukami Live-Action Adaptation: Cast, Release Details, and What Fans Should Expect The BL romantic comedy Unexpectedly Naughty Fukami (やたらやらしい深見くん), created by Ayaka Matsumoto, is making the jump from manga and anime to live-action. Tokyo MX and streaming service DMM TV confirmed a live-action television adaptation that will premiere in April — bringing Kaji and Fukami's awkward, combustible chemistry to life. Below we break down the announcement, cast and crew, release details, and what the adaptation could mean for fans of the series and BL drama in general. Official Announcement and Premiere Date Producers announced that Unexpectedly Naughty Fukami will debut on Tokyo MX on April 6, with the broadcast scheduled for 25:20 (which is effectively April 7 at 1:20 a.m. JST). The series will also be available to stream on DMM TV and TVer, making it accessible to viewers who prefer on-demand platforms. For the announcement directly from the production side, s...

Kan Takahama Debuts New Manga

Image
Kan Takahama, the acclaimed mangaka behind the Nagasaki Trilogy, has quietly returned with a new project: Anchoring Dutchman — a manga created in collaboration with Nagasaki’s Huis Ten Bosch and serialized on LEED Publishing’s Torch web platform. The first chapter is already available online, and the collaboration promises another evocative, historically-tinged work from an author known for quiet, atmospheric storytelling and meticulous period detail. Image via Torch Web © Kan Takahama, Huis Ten Bosch, LEED Publishing What We Know About Anchoring Dutchman LEED Publishing's Torch web announced the new manga via its official X account, confirming that Kan Takahama teams up with Huis Ten Bosch for Anchoring Dutchman and that the first chapter is already available to read online. While the full plot details have not been widely publicized, the partnership with Huis Ten Bosch — a Dutch-themed park in Nagasaki — hints at themes connected to Nagasaki’s interna...

Jigoku Sensei Nube Ep. 21 Review

Image
Episode 21 of Hell Teacher: Jigoku Sensei Nube shifts the focus away from Yukime’s frosty charm and into the more relatable, human corner of the cast: Miss Ritsuko. This installment blends classroom drama, creeping yokai horror, and a modest but meaningful character beat for one of Domori Elementary’s more exasperated teachers. While the monster-of-the-week, Shokera, delivers some effective atmosphere, the episode’s real payoff is Ritsuko coming to terms with the supernatural reality surrounding her students — and what it means to finally act like a teacher. © Shou Makura・Takeshi Okano/SHUEISHA・Domori Elementary School Alumni Episode recap: skepticism, sickness, and the rooftop danse macabre The episode opens with Ritsuko in familiar territory: denial and melodrama. She reacts to any supernatural hint with an over-the-top panic that has become part of her character’s comic relief. That denial is tested when her student Kazama is stricken with a mysterious illnes...