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A Certain Scientific Railgun Manga Ends After 19 Years

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The beloved spinoff manga A Certain Scientific Railgun (To Aru Kagaku no Railgun), centering on Academy City's indomitable Electromaster Mikoto Misaka, is set to conclude with its next chapter on March 27. Long-running and influential within the larger To Aru (A Certain) franchise, the series has shaped fan expectations about Academy City’s scientific side and helped cement Mikoto as one of modern anime and light novel culture’s iconic heroines. Image via Amazon © Kazuma Kamachi, Kiyotaka Haimura, Motoi Fuyukawa, Seven Seas What the ending announcement means for Railgun fans The confirmation that the manga will finish in its next chapter is a bittersweet milestone. For nearly two decades the series has expanded the To Aru universe by exploring Academy City’s high-tech intrigues and the daily life of Mikoto Misaka and her allies. An ending signals a chance for narrative closure — tying up long-running plot threads, clarifying character arcs, and allowing creators to...

Iruma-kun Season 4 Episode 8 Review

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Welcome to Demon School, Iruma-kun (Season 4) Episode 8 delivers a character-driven installment that leans into memory, music, and the tension between generations. Where previous episodes leaned on slapstick and school-chaos comedy, this one lets quieter emotional beats shine — especially through Poro and the Purson family dynamic. The episode uses a music festival subplot to reveal how nostalgia, expectations, and the courage to be oneself clash and ultimately create growth. © Osamu Nishi (Akita Publishing)/NHK・NEP Episode recap: pride, music, and a generational divide Episode 8 centers on the Misfit Class's attempts at a music festival performance and the emotional fallout that follows. Two adult figures — Poro and Mr. Purson — are forced to confront how out-of-step their attitudes are with the current generation of demons. Poro is haunted by memories of Derkila and reacts harshly to the students’ musical attempts, while Mr. Purson tries (and ultimately ...

Ririko Tsujita’s "To What Lady Amane Says" Gets Serialization

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Ririko Tsujita, the mangaka best known for the long-running “Warau Kanoko-sama” universe, is returning to Hakusensha’s LaLa with a brand-new serialization titled Amane Ojōsama no Iu Koto ni wa (To What Lady Amane Says.). Announced in the magazine’s July issue, the new series will begin serialization in LaLa’s next issue on June 24. Tsujita first introduced the story as a one-shot in May 2025, and the decision to expand it into an ongoing manga has fans eagerly awaiting the full run. New Serialization Details: What We Know The upcoming serialization Amane Ojōsama no Iu Koto ni wa is set to debut in the June 24 issue of LaLa magazine. The announcement follows the one-shot that appeared in May 2025, which served as a teaser for the broader story world and characters. While LaLa will publish the chapters in magazine format first, readers can reasonably expect collected volumes (tankōbon) to follow once enough chapters have accumulated. Release timing and where to read LaLa magazine...

Sakuna: Episodes 14–15 Review

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Sakuna: Of Rice And Ruin surprised many fans by returning with a two-part special that shifts the spotlight off its titular goddess and onto her friend Kokorowa. Light on grand stakes but rich in atmosphere, the special leans into the laid-back, educational charm of the original game adaptation—especially when it comes to rice cultivation. This review explores how the Kokorowa-focused episodes expand the show's world, the strengths of its agricultural detail, and why the overall plot feels more like a pleasant detour than a necessary continuation. © えーでるわいす/「天穂のサクナヒメ」製作委員会 Overview: A Low-Stakes Return to Hinoe Island Rather than continuing the main storyline or deepening Sakuna's arc, these two episodes function as a compact character piece for Kokorowa. She arrives on Hinoe Island with a writer's dilemma: her novels have always been built from fantasy, and now she wants to ground her next work in lived experience. The solution she chooses—secretl...

The Warrior Princess and the Barbaric King: Episode 7 Review

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The Warrior Princess and the Barbaric King episode 7 digs deeper into the show's core conflict: the clash between a conquering, land-subjugating civilization and the indigenous peoples who live in harmony with the natural world. This installment expands worldbuilding around the blight, gives meaningful development to Sera’s perspective, and delivers a surprising character reveal that reframes past events. Below I break down the episode’s plot beats, major themes, character dynamics, and what it means for the series going forward. Episode synopsis: memory, blight, and revelation ©KOTOBA NORIAKI, KODANSHA/'THE WARRIOR PRINCESS AND THE BARBARIC KING' Production Committee Episode 7 reveals the origins and effects of the blight that is ravaging the land. The story alternates between exposition—where leaders of the forest and other races explain how the corruption spreads—and intimate character moments, where Malcius confronts the loss of her past. Sera co...

The Darwin Incident Episode 8 Review

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This episode of The Darwin Incident continues to lean into the series’ uneasy mixture of social drama and speculative thriller — turning the spotlight away from brute spectacle toward the politics and ethics that orbit Charlie, the talking humanzee. Episode 8 stages new confrontations, teases a “Lucy Kidnapping” arc, and keeps asking who gets to speak for marginalized beings when public sentiment demands a mascot more than honest representation. ©うめざわしゅん・講談社/「ダーウィン事変」製作委員会 Episode 8 recap: set pieces and simmering tension Episode 8 is less about plot twists than about positioning. Large public reactions — protests, angry mobs, and a media circus — frame the narrative; Charlie becomes the contested symbol at the center of those storms. We get public leaks, a more sympathetic handling of secondary characters, and a lot of prelude material setting up the Lucy-focused arc that promises higher stakes in the coming episodes. Rather than escalating the th...

Hana-Kimi Season 2 Reveals Theme Songs, Premieres July 1

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The streamed special for Hisaya Nakajo's beloved Hana-Kimi manga has just dropped a promotional video announcing the anime's second season — and with it comes a confirmed premiere date: July 1, 2026. The trailer teases the new season's theme songs and offers a first look at returning characters and fresh visuals, building excitement for what promises to be a faithful and emotionally charged continuation of the classic shōjo story. Official promotional video for Hana-Kimi season 2 (PV) When and where to watch: exact broadcast details The anime's second season is scheduled to premiere on July 1, 2026 on Japanese television. It will air on Tokyo MX, Tochigi TV, Gunma TV, and BS11 at 24:30 (JST) — effectively meaning the broadcast occurs early on July 2 at 12:30 a.m. JST. The season will also be available on Amazon Prime Video within Japan, while international streaming arrangements may vary by region. For international viewers: keep an ey...