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Nanana's Buried Treasure Author Kazuma Ōtorino & Kagekaku Launch New Manga

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Hero's Inc.'s HERO'S Web has announced a sweet-looking new fantasy manga: Warui Majo no Hiroi Ko (A Girl Raised by the "Evil" Witch), written by Kazuma Ōtorino with art by Kagekaku. The series, confirmed on April 2 via the site's official X account, follows a young girl adopted by an "evil" witch who leaves the witch's home to travel the world and learn about people. For fans of found-family tales, gentle coming-of-age fantasy, and witchcraft with a heart, this one is already shaping up to be a quiet delight. Image via HERO'S Web's X/Twitter account ©Kazuma Ōtorino, Kagekaku, Hero's Inc. What we know so far about Warui Majo no Hiroi Ko HERO'S Web confirmed the launch on April 2, announcing that Warui Majo no Hiroi Ko will begin serialization on the site on Thursday. The premise is straightforward but full of potential: a young girl raised by an "evil" witch sets out to explore the world and l...

Monika Kaname's Hakoiri Ojou‑sama Manga Ends

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Square Enix's Manga UP! has closed the short but sweet chapter on Monika Kaname’s manga adaptation of Hikaru Taiyō’s light novel series Hakoiri Ojō-sama to Shominna Ore no Yaritai 100 no Koto (The 100 Things that I, a Commoner, and a Sheltered Rich Girl Want to Do). The manga reached its conclusion with the release of the final chapter on February 7, and readers can expect the second and final compiled tankōbon volume to arrive March 6. For fans of romantic comedy adaptations and tightly paced two-volume runs, this release wraps up a compact story that began serialization in March 2024. Image via Amazon © Hikaru Taiyō, Nun Yukimaru, Monika Kaname, Square Enix Quick Summary: Finale, Release Dates, and Formats The manga adaptation by Monika Kaname concluded its run on Manga UP! with the final chapter published on February 7. Square Enix has listed the second compiled volume for release on March 6. The original two-volume light novel series, written by Hikaru Taiyō wi...

Kanata Yoshino (Bloody Brat) Launches New Manga

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Kodansha's Comic Days platform recently launched Kanata Yoshino's intriguing new manga series, Yamai wa Ke kara - Shinri-shi Dōman no Sōdan-shitsu - (Illness Comes from the Supernatural - Psychologist Dōman's Counseling Room -) on March 22. Blending psychological mystery with supernatural elements, the series immediately stands out for its premise: a psychologist who specializes in the uncanny is called upon to help clients whose troubles may be caused by spiritual, paranormal, or otherworldly phenomena. Image via Monthly Shonen Sirius magazine's X/Twitter account ©Kodansha What Yamai wa Ke kara Is About At its core, Yamai wa Ke kara follows Dōman, a psychologist whose specialty is far from ordinary therapy: he counsels people afflicted by problems that appear to have supernatural origins. Each chapter frames a case — sometimes eerie, sometimes tragic — where psychological understanding and otherworldly realities intersect. Expect an episodic structure ...

You and I Are Polar Opposites Ep. 5 Review

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Episode 5 of You and I Are Polar Opposites leans into the romcom's greatest strength: pairing mismatched personalities for maximum awkward comedy and tender moments. While Miyu and Tani remain the show's emotional center, this installment smartly detours to introduce a new, delightfully awkward duo that brings fresh energy and plenty of laugh-out-loud facial expressions. Between the slow-burn potential of the newcomers and the continuing chemistry of the main couple, the episode balances character work, visual gags, and pacing in a way that keeps the series feeling lively. © Kocha Agasawa/SHUEISHA, You and I Are Polar Opposites Committee New Couple Spotlight: Nishi and Yamada Steal Scenes One of the smartest moves in this episode is shifting focus away from the comfortable main pairing to explore another set of opposites who can provide comedic contrast. Introducing Nishi and Yamada gives the series room to flex different kinds of humor and emotional be...

GlobalComix Adds 1,500 Kodansha Manga to Gold Library

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Digital comics hub GlobalComix has made a major expansion to its catalog, adding more than 1,500 Kodansha manga volumes to Gold members' libraries at no extra cost. This move follows an earlier wave of additions and signals a push to make high-profile Japanese manga more widely available through subscription-based access as well as à la carte purchases. For readers, creators, and publishers, the announcement represents both greater visibility for classic and contemporary series and an evolving business model for digital manga distribution. Image courtesy of GlobalComix What GlobalComix's Kodansha Addition Means for Manga Readers The addition of over 1,500 Kodansha volumes to GlobalComix Gold accounts significantly broadens the platform’s mainstream manga offerings. Kodansha — one of Japan’s largest publishers — brings both blockbuster franchises and critically acclaimed niche titles. For subscribers, this lowers the barrier to reading best-selling and aw...

Grand Blue Dreaming Manga News

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After seven years off the air, Grand Blue Dreaming returns for a sophomore season that doubles down on everything fans loved — and loved to mock — about the original. It’s loud, unapologetically puerile, and exquisitely animated when the gag calls for it. If you enjoyed the first season’s frat-house energy, absurdist visual flourishes, and booze-soaked punchlines, this follow-up mostly delivers more of the same while occasionally reminding viewers that this series can still flip into unexpectedly tender territory. Grand Blue Dreaming Season 2 — More shenanigans by the seaside. Quick Synopsis Iori Kitahari is still navigating the chaos of freshman college life while staying at his uncle’s seaside shop, Grand Blue. Having finally passed his diver’s license early in the season, Iori keeps getting dragged into barfueled hijinks, maid-cafe degradation, and absurd diving-club antics alongside his otaku friend Kōhei and a rotating roster of gorgeous — and often maddening — club ...

The Darwin Incident Ep. 13 Review

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The Darwin Incident’s episode 13 closes the season with a mix of terse thriller beats and unresolved sociological questions. Rather than delivering a tidy narrative payoff, the finale leans into escalation and setup: new revelations arrive, character dynamics shift, and the story teases future complications more than it satisfies existing ones. For viewers invested in Charlie’s arc and the series’ ethical curiosities, the end of this courser season is both promising and frustrating—promising because of the intriguing possibilities it opens, frustrating because many of the show’s sociological ambitions remain only partly articulated. ©うめざわしゅん・講談社/「ダーウィン事変」製作委員会 Episode recap: tension in small spaces Episode 13 keeps most of its action intimate and focused. Rather than staging a climactic showdown, the story opts for a tense, character-driven sequence: Charlie, Grace, and Lucy find themselves in a grocery store confrontation that reads like a microcosm of the larg...