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Ascendance of a Bookworm S3E5 Review — Adopted Daughter of an Archduke

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Ascendance of a Bookworm Part 3: Adopted Daughter of an Archduke returns from its brief interruption with an episode that balances gentle worldbuilding, low-stakes engineering rivalries, and the warm domestic moments that make this series such a comfort watch. Episode 5 doesn’t rocket the plot forward, but it smartly deepens character dynamics around Rosemyne, Ferdinand, and the growing cast while setting up tangible stakes for the upcoming concert and the printing innovations that could reshape the book trade in-universe. ©Miya Kazuki,TO Books./Ascendance of a Bookworm Project 2026 Episode recap: steady beats, small wins This entry bookends two parallel threads. On one side we have the technical sequence about improving wax-stencil paper printing; on the other is the more emotional arc focused on Ferdinand’s concert preparations and the social ripple effects they create. Rather than delivering explosive plot movement, the episode emphasizes incremental progress: experime...

Moonlight Mile Manga Resumes Serialization, New Print Edition Revealed

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Big news for longtime readers of Yasuo Ohtagaki’s Moonlight Mile: the manga is resuming with individual chapters made available digitally, and a new full-color edition of volume 24 will be re-released. Below we break down the announcement, the history of the series, where to read the returning chapters, and what this revival means for fans of Ohtagaki’s adventurous, space-bound storytelling. Ohtagaki’s announcement: Moonlight Mile returns Yasuo Ohtagaki confirmed on X (formerly Twitter) that Moonlight Mile is resuming serialization with new chapters being sold in e-book stores beginning on April 24. The announcement also revealed that the company No9 (Number Nine) will re-release volume 24 digitally in a new full-color edition, giving collectors and new readers a refreshed way to experience the series. Yasuo Ohtagaki's announcement on X confirming new chapters and a digital full-color re-release. Moonlight Mile: a concise history Manga origins and early publication...

Daemons of the Shadow Realm Ep. 6 Review

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Episode 6 of Daemons of the Shadow Realm deepens the series’ emotional core while reminding viewers that its quieter moments can hide brutal histories. This installment peels back a few layers of Asa’s past and highlights the contrasting coping mechanisms of our two leads, Asa and Yuru, all while expanding on how different factions in this world treat the mysterious Daemons. The episode balances mood, mystery, and action to create both tension and empathy — and it raises the stakes for what’s coming next. © Hiromu Arakawa/SQUARE ENIX, Project TSUGAI Episode Highlights: What Stood Out At first glance, Episode 6 reads like a character-driven detour, but it’s anything but filler. The narrative returns repeatedly to the tension between light and darkness — literal and metaphorical — as it reveals more about Asa’s trauma, Yuru’s trained stoicism, and how others treat creatures like Right and Left. The episode uses a mix of flashbacks, intimate close-ups, and stark vi...

Kuroha (Chronicles of the Going Home Club) Launches New Manga

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Shueisha's Shonen Jump+ premiered Kuroha's new manga SATANICA on May 9, and the series already feels like a cozy, supernatural twist on the classic school club comedy. SATANICA follows Machino and her circle of friends as they juggle snacks, gossip, and the occasional demon summoning while trying to keep their occult research club from being dissolved. With Kuroha's history of upbeat club comedies and recent darker works, SATANICA looks poised to blend slice-of-life warmth with playful occult hijinks. Image via Shonen Jump+ ©Kuroha, Shueisha What SATANICA Is About SATANICA centers on Machino and her friends, members of an occult research club whose easygoing club life is threatened when the student council moves to disband them. Rather than surrender, the group decides to revive the club through everyday misadventures—sharing snacks, chatting, and, when time allows, summoning demons. The premise promises a relaxed, heartwarming comedy that pairs typical hig...

Dead Account Episode 7 Review

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Dead Account’s episode 7 arrives feeling like a missed opportunity: a setup built around a potentially explosive confrontation that dissolves into grindingly flat execution. Between static animation choices, uneven pacing, and a worldbuilding mechanic that keeps stretching believability, this installment struggles to generate momentum or excitement. Below I break down what works, what doesn’t, and why this episode left me more frustrated than entertained. © Shizumu Watanabe, KODANSHA/“Dead Account” Production Committee Episode 7 — Quick Overview Episode 7 teases a classic shonen showdown between Soji’s group and the rival class led by Dei Surugi, but the clash never reaches its potential. Instead of a dynamic, high-stakes fight, viewers get a sequence of introductory profiles, some posturing, and a lot of underwhelming visual presentation. If you tuned in expecting spark, what you get is a slow burn of missed cues and wasted setup. Animation and Production Qua...

Rooster Fighter Episode 9 Review

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The ninth episode of Rooster Fighter walks a tightrope between satire and sincerity, delivering equal parts bizarre humor and surprisingly affecting character work. This installment leans hard into the show's oddball premise—chickens as heart-on-sleeve heroes—while escalating the stakes with a disturbing new Devil gambit that forces small, emotional choices into gruesome, high-risk action. It’s an episode that will make you laugh, cringe, and care about feathered protagonists in roughly that order. © SS/KH,V Episode recap: reunion, revelations, and risky rescues Episode nine opens on an unexpectedly tender reunion between Elizabeth and her human companion Morio. The exchange is more than a gag; it reaffirms the emotional center of Rooster Fighter—these animals aren't just comic relief, they form bonds strong enough to drive the plot. After Morio is compromised by a new strain of Devil control, the team rushes to repay his prior sacrifice. A polite octopu...

My Friend's Little Sister Has It in for Me Manga Ends This Fall

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The latest update for Tomodachi no Imōto ga Ore ni Dake Uzai (My Friend's Little Sister Has It In for Me!) has fans bracing for one last chapter: Hira Hiraoka's manga adaptation, drawn from Ghost Mikawa's light novel series, will conclude with its 12th volume slated for early fall. The announcement, revealed alongside the 11th volume, marks the approaching end of a romcom that blended teasing heroics, workplace aspirations, and the classic “fake boyfriend” setup into a steadily popular series across print and anime formats. Image via Amazon Japan © Square Enix, Hira Hiraoka, Ghost Mikawa What the announcement says — and what it means The manga adaptation by Hira Hiraoka, serialized on Square Enix’s Manga UP! platform, confirmed that the story will wrap up with volume 12, expected in early fall. The 11th volume was published in March 2025, and the series’ first light novel volume, illustrated by tomari, debuted in April 2019. For readers following the Englis...