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My Hero Academia: Vigilantes S2E21 Review

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My Hero Academia: Vigilantes Season 2 drops another character-focused detour with episode 21 — a three-episode flashback arc that centers on a younger Aizawa and his relationship with the buoyant Oboro. The episode delivers striking animation and strong voice work, but ultimately raises questions about narrative necessity and emotional payoff. Below I break down what succeeds, what falls flat, and why this side-story might have been better suited as a standalone OVA rather than part of the main season. © 古橋秀之・別天荒人・堀越耕平/集英社・ヴィジランテ製作委員会 Episode 21 Overview: An Atmospheric but Isolated Flashback Episode 21 leans heavily into metaphor and mood, using weather motifs to visualize Aizawa’s inner turmoil and growth during his high school years. The episode is essentially a self-contained flashback meant to explain a formative loss that informs Aizawa’s later choices. While the episode contains standout set pieces — notably a kaiju-styled battle — the surrounding context and charact...

Norainu to Tenshi-chan on Hiatus, Transfers to Yanmaga Web

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Kodansha's Monthly Young Magazine revealed in its June issue that Naru Narumi's Norainu to Tenshi-chan (Stray Dog and Angel) will go on hiatus in the print magazine and resume serialization on Kodansha's YanMaga Web service beginning with chapter 10. Chapter 9, featured in the same issue, serves as the manga's final installment in the print edition for now. The magazine's official X/Twitter account will announce the restart date on YanMaga Web when it's confirmed, so fans should keep an eye on that channel for the latest updates. Image via Amazon © Naru Narumi, Kodansha What the Hiatus Means: From Print to Web Serialization Moving from a monthly print magazine to an online platform like YanMaga Web is a common step for series that need a short break, a schedule shift, or a different pacing and editorial approach. For Norainu to Tenshi-chan, the announced hiatus only affects the print serialization — the series itself is not cancelled. Fans shoul...

Private Tutor to the Duke's Daughter: Anime Review

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Private Tutor to the Duke's Daughter — promotional cover Private Tutor to the Duke's Daughter (translated title) offers a textbook example of an isekai-adjacent school fantasy that leans heavily into character-driven vignettes. At its core the series follows Allen, a commoner-turned-tutor, as he tries to guide a trio of female magic students—most notably Tina, the duke’s daughter—through personal and magical hurdles. The anime’s strengths lie in sympathetic character moments and approachable moral beats, but its handling of romance, age dynamics, and pacing raise significant concerns that any prospective viewer should weigh before watching. Quick Synopsis and Setup Allen, a skilled yet middling magic user from a common background, once stood to rise through the ranks of the academy. After failing an important exam and finding himself sidelined, he accepts a tutoring position for Tina—an aristocratic student with immense mana but a crippling block that prevents her...

Always a Catch! Episode 8 Review

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Episode 8 of Always a Catch! leans into the series' strengths—warmth, humor, and the slow-burn sweetness between Mimi and Prince Renato—while also exposing some production hiccups that keep the episode from being perfect. This installment delivers a cozy date, character moments that deepen the central relationship, and hints of the looming social friction that will complicate their future. Below I break down the standout scenes, the character beats that mattered most, and the animation details that distracted more than they should. ©ももよ万葉・三登いつき・ながと牡蠣/SQUARE ENIX・逃げ釣り製作委員会 Prince Renato’s Gentle Charm: A Romantic Who Actually Cares One of the most winning aspects of this episode is how it underscores Renato’s earnestness. The prince isn’t written as a two-dimensional romantic lead; his affection is tangible and thoughtful. He shows up when there’s trouble, plans moments for quality time, and even learns Number 38 to honor something Mimi values. Those little g...

Hirohisa Satō's Mother Parasite Enters Final Arc in Volume 18

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Hirohisa Satō’s unsettling psychological drama Mother Parasite is gearing up for a major turning point: the series will enter its final arc in the volume following the recently released 17th compiled book, with the next volume scheduled to ship this September. For readers who’ve been captivated by the series’ blend of domestic unease and creeping suspense, this announcement signals a fast-approaching conclusion and the promise of answers to the manga’s coldest mysteries. Quick recap: what Mother Parasite is about On the surface, Ryota Miki appears to be an ordinary middle schooler with an adoptive mother who dotes on him—but the polished facade hides something far more disturbing. Ryota obsessively catalogues his mother’s mistakes, and his surveillance-driven fixation fuels a tense, claustrophobic atmosphere. When Ryota rescues his classmate Kaoru Kasai from bullying, an uneasy friendship forms between two boys whose relationships with their mothers are at the center of the story....

Haruko Kumota (Showa Genroku Rakugo Shinju) Launches New Manga

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Haruko Kumota — the acclaimed mangaka behind Descending Stories: Showa Genroku Rakugo Shinju — is back with a brand-new manga titled Ao no Hitomi no Ryū no Hime (The Blue‑Eyed Dragon Princess). The one‑shot/new series will debut in Libre Publishing's BE・BOY GOLD April issue, which ships on Friday, February 28, 2026. Fans of Kumota's detailed historical drama and emotive storytelling should mark their calendars: this appearance places her work squarely on the pages of one of BL's most established magazines. ([b-boy.jp](https://www.b-boy.jp/magazine/230417?utm_source=openai)) Image via Amazon © Libre Publishing What we know about Ao no Hitomi no Ryū no Hime Details about the story and length are being kept deliberately sparse ahead of the magazine's release, but the title suggests a fantasy‑tinged premise (a dragon princess with blue eyes) that could be a fresh tonal shift for Kumota while still leaning on the emotional depth readers expect from her work. Given...

Journal with Witch Episode 8 Review

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Episode 8 of Journal with Witch pivots from small, quiet moments into a deeply resonant exploration of grief and the limits of companionship. The installment uses restrained storytelling and a handful of intimate beats to trace Asa’s slow, painful approach to accepting loss — and to show how another person’s work can offer the fragile scaffolding we sometimes need to take the next step. This review breaks down the episode’s key moments, themes, and why the show’s subtlety pays off. ©ヤマシタトモコ・祥伝社/アニメ「違国日記」製作委員会 Episode recap: Facing the wolf inside The episode opens with Asa watching a nature documentary: a lone wolf stares back from the screen. That animal becomes a quiet emblem for two different kinds of solitude in this chapter — Makio’s calm, self-contained loneliness and Asa’s more volatile, terror-laced grief. From that image, the episode traces Asa’s resistance to processing her parents’ deaths and the ways she lashes out when confronted with tenderness she...