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Hundred Scenes of Awajima — Episode 7 Review

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Takako Shimura’s A Hundred Scenes of AWAJIMA returns with an intimate, emotionally precise episode that pares the cast down to just three women and two time periods, and uses that tightened focus to excavate complicated feelings about illness, opportunity, and shame. By simplifying the narrative scaffolding, the episode gives space for quieter, more revealing moments that recontextualize what we thought we knew about these characters and the institution they inhabit. ©志村貴子・太田出版/淡島百景製作委員会 Saori’s Point of View: The Weight of Opportunity and Self-Reproach The episode opens with Saori’s perspective, and it immediately foregrounds the psychology of comparative worth. When illness sidelines Saori and Mikako steps in, Saori’s thoughts pivot to how Mikako handled sickness in the past—pushing through performances, absorbing hardship with a stoic, almost heroic resolve. Saori’s internalized standard becomes clear: suffering in silence is admirable; weakness i...

Adult Doujin Manga "The Shy Snow Woman & the Cursed Ring" Gets TV Anime

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The Shy Snow Woman and the Cursed Ring (人付き合いが苦手な未亡人の雪女さんと呪いの指輪), the adult dōjin manga by artist Puuzaki Puuna, is officially inspiring a television anime adaptation. Announced on May 29, 2026, the news sent ripples through fandom for both its cozy-yet-controversial premise and the creator’s claim that this will be a rare case of an adult dōjin work being adapted directly into a TV anime rather than through a prior commercial edition. Below we break down everything known so far, what makes the project notable, and what fans should expect as this property moves from all-color manga volumes toward broadcast animation. ⛄💍⛄💍⛄💍⛄💍⛄💍⛄💍 『人付き合いが苦手な   未亡人の雪女さんと呪いの指輪』   TVアニメ化記念イラスト大公開‼️ ⛄💍⛄💍⛄💍⛄💍⛄💍⛄💍 原作 #ぷぅ崎ぷぅ奈 先生によるアニメ化記念イラストを公開! アニメ放送をお楽しみに⛄💍 #アニメ未亡人の雪女 pic.twitter.com/yBLSWu4wvY — TVアニメ『人付き合いが苦手な未亡人の雪女さんと呪いの指輪』公式 (@anime_yukionna) May 29, 2026 What is "The Shy Snow Woman and the Cursed Ring"? The Shy Snow Woman and the Cursed Ring is an all-color adult dōji...

New Prince of Tennis Manga to End in 6 Chapters

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The New Prince of Tennis (Shin Tennis no Ōji-sama) is entering its final stretch: manga creator Takeshi Konomi confirmed the series will conclude in six more chapters. For long-time fans of Ryōma Echizen and the broader Prince of Tennis universe, this announcement marks the end of a major serialized chapter that has run for well over a decade. Below we break down the timeline, what this ending likely means for the franchise, and where the anime adaptation stands as the manga approaches its finale. Takeshi Konomi’s The New Prince of Tennis will end in six chapters. (Image: promotional still) What Konomi’s Announcement Means for The New Prince of Tennis The confirmation that Shin Tennis no Ōji-sama will finish in six chapters gives fans a clear—if brief—timeline to prepare for the manga’s conclusion. Konomi’s sequel series has been serialized in Shueisha’s Jump Square since 2009 and has expanded the Prince of Tennis universe with new tournaments, characters, and i...

Ascendance of a Bookworm S3E7 Review: Adopted Daughter of an Archduke

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Autumn ushers in a new arc for Ascendance of a Bookworm Part 3: Adopted Daughter of an Archduke, and episode 7 leans into the workshop-turned-monastery setting in ways that bring new emotional and moral weight to Rosemyne’s publishing ambitions. This installment balances quiet family moments with a sharper look at the practical—and sometimes uncomfortable—realities of running a small-scale production in a world where survival often hinges on labor. The result is an episode that feels both intimate and consequential, sharpening themes that have threaded through the season while setting up the conflict ahead. ©Miya Kazuki,TO Books./Ascendance of a Bookworm Project 2026 Episode overview: A gentle surface, sharper undertow On first pass, episode 7 offers the familiar Bookworm formula: small gestures, quiet domesticity, and an emphasis on how little human contact can mean so much. But this week the show carries a sharper edge by foregrounding the workshop’s role as a...

Yū Shimizu's Howling Blaze Gets Manga Adaptation

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Fans of light novels and fantasy manga have cause to celebrate: Yū Shimizu’s dark-fantasy light novel Howling Blaze: Sōen no Kenshi to Fushi no Majo (Howling Blaze: The Funeral Flame Blade & The Immortal Witch) is getting a manga adaptation. The new manga will be drawn by koko and is set to launch in Comic Alive’s next issue on June 26. Below we break down everything we know about the adaptation, its creative team, how it connects to Shimizu’s previous works, and where you can follow the series as it unfolds. Image via official volume art © Yū Shimizu, Asagi Tōsaka What the Howling Blaze manga adaptation announcement means The move from light novel to manga is a major step for any property—especially one with a dark-fantasy tone like Howling Blaze. Manga adaptations broaden a title’s audience by translating prose-driven worldbuilding into visual storytelling, and the selection of koko as the manga artist suggests a focus on strong visuals and atmosphere. The announ...

Wistoria: Wand & Sword S2E7 Review

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Wistoria: Wand and Sword’s episode 7, “He Said He Would No Longer Hang His Head,” delivers a solid mix of action and character beats while doubling down on the series’ most divisive narrative choice: making progress feel painfully incremental. The installment gives Will a showcase duel against gooey summoned foes and leans into the franchise’s ongoing institutional obstacles, but it also highlights how the show’s deliberate stalling can frustrate viewers craving more decisive growth and meaningful interaction with key characters like Elfaria. Episode recap: Magic, tests, and another uphill climb for Will ©Fujino Omori, Toshi Aoi, Kodansha/Wistoria: Wand and Sword Production Committee The core of episode 7 is straightforward: after clearing the summoned-monster trial in the previous installment, Will finds himself under renewed scrutiny and must tackle a new set of enemies—oosy, amorphous creatures that can only be destroyed via direct magic application. Because...

Samurai Troopers: Yoroi-Shinden Episode 8 Review

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Yoroi-Shinden Samurai Troopers’ episode 8 swings between scattershot comedy and earnest character beats, leaving the viewer with whiplash more than clarity. The installment tries to deepen backstory, juggle tonal shifts, and push forward Kaito’s arc — but the result is an odd blend of inspired oddness and messy pacing. Below I break down what worked, what didn’t, and where this episode might be headed. ©SUNRISE Episode 8 — Quick Recap This episode dives into Jun’s strange history with White Blaze — the magic tiger from the original series — and ties that thread into a broader interrogation of family and adoption that affects Kaito. Jun’s backstory is presented in a rapid-fire montage that swings between comic and shocking, then immediately pivots into zoo hijinks as the Troopers attempt to track down the tiger. Along the way the show sprinkles in new worldbuilding (a “Divine World” faction and a villain subgroup dubbed the “Last Name Group”) and teases major int...