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Needy Girl Overdose Episodes 1-3 Review

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Content Warning: Drug Use, Self-Harm Imagery, Discussions of Suicidal Ideation, Implied Physical Abuse, Nonconsensual Intercourse © WSS playground / NEEDY GIRL PROJECT Needy Girl Overdose arrives not just as an eye-catching, hyper-stylized anime but as a sharp sociocultural critique of streaming culture, influencer burnout, and the ways fame reshapes identity. On the surface it dazzles with pastel aesthetics and over-the-top idol tropes, but underneath the show is a brutal dissection of how the quest for followers and validation can erode someone’s mind, body, and relationships. For viewers coming in blind, the series is accessible and potent; for those who know the source material, the adaptation deepens the conversation about digital-era exploitation and performative femininity. Premise and Context: Fame as a Pressure Cooker At the center of the story is Ame, a young woman who streams under the persona OMGkawaiiAngel. The visual-novel origins of the franchi...

Chainsaw Man Tops BookScan's March U.S. Adult Graphic Novel List

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The latest Circana BookScan rankings for March 2026 put Tatsuki Fujimoto’s Chainsaw Man volume 20 at the top of the U.S. adult graphic novels chart — a clear sign that the series continues to dominate readers’ attention. This month’s list also highlights the continuing strength of hit shonen franchises like Jujutsu Kaisen and One Piece, plus notable entries from manhwa and classic long-running series. Below we break down the rankings, analyze why Chainsaw Man reached #1, and explore what these sales trends mean for collectors and casual readers alike. Image via Amazon © Tatsuki Fujimoto, Shueisha, Viz Media March 2026: Circana BookScan Top 20 (Adult Graphic Novels) The complete Top 20 list for March — based on piece sales reported by Circana BookScan — demonstrates both the power of established franchises and growing interest in collected side stories and omnibus editions. Here are the ranked titles: #1 — Tatsuki Fujimoto's Chainsaw Man volume 20 ...

Dead Account Episode 6 Review

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After six weeks of tuning into Dead Account, episode 6 finally manages to deliver a handful of redeeming moments that lift it out of the borderline-mediocre rut it’s been occupying. The series still struggles with uneven characterization and a visual style that rarely surprises, but this installment leans on its strongest asset—an energetic soundtrack—while sprinkling in a few genuinely funny and oddly charming beats. Here’s a closer look at what worked, what didn’t, and why this particular episode matters for the season moving forward. © Shizumu Watanabe, KODANSHA/“Dead Account” Production Committee Episode 6 Overview: A Series Finding Small Wins Dead Account episode 6 doesn’t reinvent the franchise, but it manages to produce several moments of actual entertainment where prior episodes largely fell flat. The plot progression is modest—Soji learns more about his peers, Hajima’s situation gets expanded, and the deadline-against-time plotline accelerates as Sad Bo...

Ascendance of a Bookworm Part 3 (Episodes 1–3) Review

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Ascendance of a Bookworm returns with Part 3: Adopted Daughter of an Archduke, and while the series largely retains the comforting routine that longtime viewers expect, this season introduces new emotional undercurrents and production changes that are impossible to ignore. Between Rosemyne’s shifting status, the careful unpacking of noble etiquette, and a fresh visual gloss from a new studio, the show balances procedural charm with growing narrative ambitions — though not without a few jarring choices along the way. Quick Overview: The New Season’s Tone This installment keeps the everyday-focus that characterizes the franchise: Rosemyne quietly pursuing small, meaningful goals while advancing several projects at once. Where previous seasons leaned heavily into the protagonist’s bookish inventions and inventive problem-solving, Part 3 shifts some of the emphasis toward Rosemyne’s place within noble society — specifically her role as the “adopted daughter of an archduke.” That title...

19th Japan International Manga Award: 29 Entries from South Asia

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The Japan International Manga Award — an influential global platform recognizing outstanding non-Japanese manga creators — has opened submissions for its 20th competition. The award, established by Japan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 2007, continues to celebrate works that expand international exchange and understanding through manga culture. After a record-setting 19th competition that drew entries from around the world, the 20th contest welcomes both published and unpublished submissions that meet the eligibility rules. Below is a practical guide to the award, entry requirements, AI usage rules, and tips to improve your chances. Image via Japan International Manga Award's website What the Japan International Manga Award Is and Why It Matters The Japan International Manga Award was founded to honor manga artists outside Japan who contribute to the spread and development of manga culture worldwide. Winning or being recognized in this competition raises an...

Manga Plus Adds Karuho Shiina's Gusts and Beats

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Karuho Shiina — best known for the beloved shojo hit Kimi ni Todoke — is back with a fresh series, Gusts and Beats (Toppū to Beat), now available in English on MANGA Plus. Blending Shiina’s gentle character work with a slightly eerie, slice-of-life mystery setup, this new manga marks her first original serialized project in 18 years and a shift to an entirely digital production workflow. Below we break down everything fans need to know about the series, where to read it, and why it’s an essential pick-up for readers who loved Shiina’s previous work. About Gusts and Beats (Toppū to Beat) Gusts and Beats follows Niike, a forgetful and helpful first-year high school student, who is asked to check in on a classmate named Nemoto who’s been absent from school. What begins as a simple house call quickly reveals an unsettling atmosphere: although Nemoto appears to be living alone, “something” seems to linger in the home. The story promises a slow-burn blend of character-driven drama and s...

Dorohedoro S2 Episodes 1–5 Review

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Dorohedoro returns with a second season that digs its claws deeper into the grime, gore, and goofy charms that made the original adaptation a cult favorite. After a six-year wait, Hole is back on screen—messier, louder, and full of the same weird heart that defines Q Hayashida’s manga. If you want to jump straight back in, a quick rewatch of season one (or a read of the manga) will make the new episodes land that much harder. ©2026 Q-HAYASHIDA・Shogakukan/Dorohedoro Season2 Project Re-entering Hole: Season 2 Overview The second season wastes no time plunging viewers back into the narrative thicket. Rather than hand-holding with recaps, the adaptation throws multiple threads into the ring at once—factions collide, flashbacks surface, and familiar faces operate under new pressures. If that sounds chaotic, that’s by design: Dorohedoro thrives on piling on mysteries until the answers become more disturbing than the questions. Visuals & Production: ...