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Fire Force Season 3 Episode 20 Review

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Fire Force season 3 episode 20 leans into the series’ most chaotic instincts and doubles down on a bold, divisive experiment: treating fanservice not just as comic relief but as a thematic fulcrum. Between uncanny live-action inserts, Studio David’s gleefully outrageous animation, and a theatrically staged showdown between Tamaki and a Doppelgänger of Assault, this installment pushes the show’s confident (and often juvenile) tone to full volume. The result is messy, frequently hilarious, and deliberately provocative — an episode that will thrill some viewers and frustrate others in equal measure. ©Atsushi Ohkubo, KODANSHA/'FIRE FORCE Season 3' Production Committee Opening: Live-Action and a Mixed-Media Flourish One of the episode’s most striking choices is its opening sequence — a few uninterrupted minutes of eerie live-action footage depicting Sister Sumire’s pre-Cataclysm “normal” life. This mixed-media detour feels intentionally silly and unsettling...

Daemons of the Shadow Realm Ep. 9 Review

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Episode 9 of Daemons of the Shadow Realm functions less like a standalone thrill ride and more like a connective tissue episode — the kind that tightens loose threads, clarifies motives, and sets the stage for a larger confrontation. While the installment lacks a show-stopping centerpiece, it accomplishes something just as important: it realigns the mystery and character dynamics heading into the next big battle. Fans looking for momentum will find it here in preparation and quiet revelations rather than in flashier set pieces. © Hiromu Arakawa/SQUARE ENIX, Project TSUGAI Episode 9 Recap: Tying Loose Ends and Laying Traps The episode splits its focus between two main strands. On one side, the Kagemori clan’s investigation into the previous night’s violent incursion advances: interrogations, forensic-style deductions, and a key revelation that the assault was almost certainly an inside job. On the other side, we follow Dera and Yuru in a lighter, more character-d...

Seven Knights of Marronnier Kingdom Manga Gets October TV Anime

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The long-running fantasy romance manga Marronnier Ōkoku no Shichinin no Kishi (The Seven Knights of the Marronnier Kingdom) by Nao Iwamoto is officially making the jump to television anime. Announced by NHK, the series will debut on NHK Educational this October — and with a high-profile staff and studio attached, this adaptation promises to be a highlight for fans of gentle fantasy and character-driven romance. Image via The Seven Knights of the Marronnier Kingdom anime's website ©岩本ナオ/小学館/NHK・NEP・Amazon Content Services LLC or its Affiliates Anime Announcement: What We Know So Far NHK announced on Monday that Nao Iwamoto's Marronnier Ōkoku no Shichinin no Kishi will receive an anime television adaptation slated for broadcast on NHK Educational in October. A teaser video has already been released on the anime's official site, although it contains no animation — a common early teaser strategy used to reveal the production a...

A Witch's Life in Mongol Manga Returns March 25

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Fans of Tomato Soup's historical manga A Witch's Life in Mongol (Tenmaku no Jādūgar) received welcome news on February 24, 2026: the series will return from hiatus and resume serialization on March 25, 2026. The hiatus began in October 2025 while Tomato Soup took maternity leave. Before the break the manga was running on a bimonthly schedule, and its return promises new chapters continuing the politically charged, character-driven tale set in the 13th-century Mongol court. Image courtesy of Yen Press What A Witch's Life in Mongol is about A Witch's Life in Mongol follows Fatima, a Persian woman whose advanced knowledge of medicine and science has driven her to seek a place where she can put that knowledge to use. She arrives at the Mongol palace and becomes entwined with Töregene, the influential sixth wife of Ögedei Khan. Together, Fatima and Töregene sit at the center of palace politics that ripple outward to affect the fate of the empire itself. The sto...

Fanfare/Ponent Mon Reprint Jiro Taniguchi Manga

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Publishers Fanfare/Ponent Mon have announced a wave of reprints that will bring several acclaimed, out-of-print manga back into English-language circulation — led by Jiro Taniguchi’s Summit of the Gods. These reprints will make pivotal works from distinct voices in manga history available to new readers and collectors, timed to coincide with meaningful anniversaries and renewed interest in literary and auteur-driven graphic storytelling. © Jiro Taniguchi, Shueisha What’s being reprinted and when At the center of the announcement is Jiro Taniguchi’s Summit of the Gods, set for an English-language reprint in July 2026 to mark the anniversary of the first recorded ascent of Mount Everest. Alongside Summit of the Gods, the reprint slate includes Hideo Azuma’s Disappearance Diary and Kiriko Nananan’s Blue, plus a selection listed in the announcement — Quest for the Missing Girl and The Ice Wanderer and Other Stories — which will follow later in the year. Summit of ...

Trigun Stargaze Episode 8 Review

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Trigun Stargaze’s eighth episode lands like a detonating surprise: equal parts adrenaline, melodrama, and deliberate misdirection. For viewers divided over how this reboot should relate to the 1998 classic or the manga, this installment crystallizes the show’s approach — it reshuffles familiar beats, leans into hyper-stylized action, and plays with audience expectations in ways that can be both infuriating and exhilarating. Here’s a closer look at why episode 8 stands out, and what it might mean for the final stretch of the season. © 2026 Yasuhiro Nightow, SHONENGAHOSHA / TRIGUN STARGAZE Project Episode Snapshot: A Gamble on Tone and Pacing This episode is, quite simply, one of the most entertaining chapters of Trigun Stargaze so far. Rather than tiptoeing through exposition or stalling for character beats, it throws the viewer into a no-holds-barred showdown that blends outrageous visual flair with unexpectedly tender character moments. The result feels like a ...

Warrior Princess & Barbaric King — Episode 8 Review

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The Warrior Princess and the Barbaric King continues to balance romantic comedy beats with medieval fantasy trappings in episode 8, but the installment highlights both the series' charms and its recurring weaknesses. Light-hearted hijinks collide with awkward gendered symbolism, while inconsistent animation and underdeveloped motivations keep the episode from fully landing. Below I break down what works, what doesn't, and why this episode feels like a missed opportunity despite some genuinely funny moments. ©KOTOBA NORIAKI, KODANSHA/'THE WARRIOR PRINCESS AND THE BARBARIC KING' Production Committee Episode 8 recap — a comedic chase with awkward undertones Episode 8 plays like a rom-com set-piece: Sera becomes obsessed with getting a collar back on her neck and spends most of the episode pursuing Veor in increasingly ridiculous ways. The sequence is meant to be playful, showcasing Sera’s single-mindedness and Veor’s bemused patience. Instead, the c...