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Marriage Toxin Ep. 1-2 Review

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MARRIAGETOXIN is one of the season’s most audacious genre mash-ups: a romantic comedy built around an assassin-specialist clan and a world of poison, wrapped in high-energy shonen action and visual comedy. The anime adaptation jumps off the page with its premise—an awkward poison specialist who decides to find a bride not for love, but to save his sister from an arranged marriage—and then leans fully into its bizarre, darkly funny tone. This review covers the first two episodes, analyzing the characters, animation, and the show's unique blend of romance and violence. Premise and Main Characters At the center of MARRIAGETOXIN is Hikaru Gero, an assassin from a prestigious family of poison specialists who has resigned himself to ending his bloodline. His life takes an unexpected turn when he discovers his sister is being forced out of a relationship and into an arranged marriage to produce an heir. Determined to spare her that fate, Gero resolves to find a bride—but there’s a ca...

Go For It, Nakamura-kun!! Episodes 1-4 Review

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Go For It, Nakamura-kun!! arrives as a refreshing, earnest romantic comedy that foregrounds a gay high schooler’s longing for connection rather than treating queerness as a punchline. The first four episodes are a mix of warm cartoony gags, strong voice work, and slow-burn relationship building — a show that may not sprint toward romance but carefully builds empathy and quirky charm around its anxious protagonist. ©Nakamura-kun!! Animation Project Overview: A Gentle, Queer-Forward Romantic Comedy At its core, Go For It, Nakamura-kun!! centers on Nakamura, a painfully shy high-schooler who openly yearns for a gay romance — a premise that already sets it apart in anime rom-coms that often skirt explicit queer desire. The series chooses to foreground Nakamura’s internal anxieties and awkward attempts at friendship over dramatic shoujo-style declarations, leaning on slice-of-life beats and small character moments instead of big plot turns. If you're searching fo...

Duel Masters RX Manga Moves to Weekly CoroCoro Comic Online

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The Duel Masters franchise continues to reshape its manga lineup: Shigenobu Matsumoto's Duel Masters RX is moving from Monthly CoroCoro Comics to the Weekly CoroCoro Comic online magazine on May 1. This transfer is the latest shuffle in a busy run of Duel Masters manga and short anime adaptations that have expanded the franchise across multiple serialized entries and streaming projects. Below we break down what the move means, recap recent Duel Masters releases, and explain why collectors and new readers should pay attention. Image via Weekly CoroCoro Comic © Shogakukan, Shigenobu Matsumoto Quick news summary: Duel Masters RX moves to Weekly CoroCoro Comic (online) Shigenobu Matsumoto's Duel Masters RX (pronounced "reverse cross") launched in Monthly CoroCoro Comics on March 13, and will officially move to Shogakukan's Weekly CoroCoro Comic online magazine on May 1. For readers following Matsumoto's work and the broader Duel Masters publishing...

Trigun Stargaze Ep. 6 Review

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Halfway through Trigun Stargaze and episode 6 slams the accelerator: Knives is awake, satellites go dark, and the anime finally leans fully into its apocalyptic ambitions. This installment stages two brutal, emotionally charged confrontations that push the season’s pacing and stakes forward — and it does so while reshaping familiar character beats from earlier adaptations. If you’re coming from the 1998 Trigun or the manga Trigun Maximum, expect a different tone: Stargaze favors sci‑fi spectacle and kinetic action over the deliberate Western mood of the original series. © 2026 Yasuhiro Nightow, SHONENGAHOSHA / TRIGUN STARGAZE Project Episode Summary: Chaos on Multiple Fronts Episode 6 bifurcates its focus between two major matchups. On one front, Nicholas D. Wolfwood squares off with Gray the Ninelives, a hulking biological threat that refuses to go down easily. On the other, Vash the Stampede faces Legato Bluesummers and the unpredictable Elendira the Crimsonna...

The Warrior Princess & Barbaric King — Episodes 1-2 Review

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The Warrior Princess and the Barbaric King opens with a clash of expectations: a proud young knight-in-training suddenly finds herself at the mercy of a hulking “barbarian” warlord, only to discover that his world may be kinder than the one she left behind. Episodes 1–2 set up a fish-out-of-water story that leans on gender politics, cultural contrast, and tonal awkwardness—and while the series shows promise, it trips on some uncomfortable beats early on. Episodes 1–2 — Quick Recap Serafina (Sera) has been raised to believe that a woman’s place is limited and that her ambitions for knighthood are out of bounds. After being captured and chained by Veorg’s forces, she assumes the worst: that she will be dishonored, enslaved, or forced into pregnancy. Instead, Veorg treats her with respect and restraint, repeatedly asking for consent and treating her as a valued person rather than property. The friction between Sera’s trauma-informed assumptions and the actual behavior she experienc...

Splatoon 3: Splatlands Manga Goes on Hiatus

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Splatoon’s vibrant, ink-soaked world has leapt off the Nintendo Switch and into the pages of manga with irresistible energy. Sankichi Hinodeya’s long-running Splatoon manga — now continuing under the title Splatoon Bankara! and expanding with the Splatoon 3: Splatlands volumes — blends action, quirky characters, and the game’s trademark style into a must-read for fans. This post explores the manga’s history, key developments, and what makes the Splatlands era a fresh, fun extension of the Splatoon universe. Image via Amazon ©Sankichi Hinodeya, Shogakukan Splatoon Manga Overview: Goggles, Bankara, and the Splatlands Sankichi Hinodeya’s Splatoon manga first appeared as a one-shot in Shogakukan’s CoroCoro magazine before expanding into a serialized series. At the heart of the story is the energetic protagonist Goggles, and his adventures through the colorful, competitive world of inklings. The series has evolved alongside the games, with recent chapters shifting focus to ...

Thunderbolt Fantasy: Tōriken Yūki Vol. 4 — Manga News

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Thunderbolt Fantasy Season 4 Review: A Visually Dazzling, Emotionally Uneven Farewell After four seasons and several feature entries, Thunderbolt Fantasy arrives at its penultimate television outing with a season that shines brilliantly in spectacle but stumbles in narrative focus. Season 4 splits its attention between multiple converging factions—the spirit-beset trio of Shāng Bù Huàn, Juǎn Cán Yún, and Dān Fěi journeying through the Wasteland of Spirits; the demonic awakening surrounding Làng Wū Yáo orchestrated by Azibělpher and allies; and the inscrutable machinations of the Order of the Divine Swarm and the Enigmatic Gale, Lǐn Xuě Yā. The result is a season of sumptuous puppetry and theatrical excess that sometimes sacrifices coherent payoff for frenetic scope. Thunderbolt Fantasy: Tōriken Yūki — Season 4 key art Season Overview: Three Threads, One Crowded Tapestry Season 4 attempts to juggle three major narrative strands, and while they eventually collide in meani...