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RuriDragon Chapter Delayed to June

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The official X/Twitter account for Masaoki Shindō's RuriDragon recently confirmed that the series' ongoing hiatus has been extended, pushing back the release of chapter 46 until early June. Fans of the mellow, charming dragon-girl slice-of-life have followed a rocky publication schedule since the series began, and this latest delay continues a pattern of breaks that have shaped reader expectations. Below we recap the announcement, revisit the manga's publication history, explain what this means for the upcoming anime adaptation, and show how you can follow official updates. © Masaoki Shindō, Shueisha What the Announcement Says: Chapter 46 Delayed Until Early June The creator's official social post made clear that the current hiatus will continue and that chapter 46 will be delayed until early June. While the update did not go into exhaustive detail about the cause, the announcement follows a history of short and extended breaks for the series. Given the pa...

Journal with Witch Episode 7 Review

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Journal with Witch episode 7 leans into shadow—in both literal and emotional ways—unspooling scenes of quiet dread, tender confessions, and slow-burning revelations. Where previous installments toyed with the tactile electricity of infatuation, this episode makes darkness its central motif: voids that swallow characters whole, longings that are unspoken, and expectations that corrode relationships. The adaptation flexes its strengths here, pairing intimate character work with visual language that underscores the isolation each figure feels. ©ヤマシタトモコ・祥伝社/アニメ「違国日記」製作委員会 Episode overview: tone, structure, and striking imagery Episode 7 plays like a study in contrasts — restaurant conversations edited together to suggest thematic echoes, bright moments of human connection undercut by sudden, pitch-black visual choices. Several key scenes transpose internal darkness into the frame itself: characters stand inside literal black voids, rooms are rendered almost entire...

World Trigger Manga on 1‑Month Hiatus for Creator's Health

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World Trigger fans received an important update today: creator Daisuke Ashihara's manga will pause for one month due to the author's poor health. A new chapter will not appear in Shueisha's Jump SQ. issue scheduled for May 2, and the series is slated to return in the magazine's July 2026 issue, which ships on June 4. This temporary break is a reminder to fans to prioritize the mangaka's recovery while looking forward to the story's continuation and the ongoing anime "Reboot Project." Image via Amazon ©Daisuke Ashihara, Shueisha What the Break Means — Timeline and Context This one-month hiatus follows a history of health-related pauses for Ashihara. The mangaka previously put World Trigger on hiatus in November 2016 for similar reasons, returning to publication in October 2018 before the series moved from Weekly Shonen Jump to Jump SQ. in December 2018. While any interruption to a beloved series is disappointing, these breaks are some...

Food for the Soul Manga News

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Delicate, warm, and genuinely appetizing, Food for the Soul is a cozy slice-of-life anime that serves a comforting plate of friendship, food, and gentle character work. If you tune into anime for soft atmospheres, mouthwatering cooking sequences, and quietly wholesome relationships, this series is a seasonal treat worth carving out time for. Below I break down why Food for the Soul stands out among other comforting titles and how its direction, score, and character chemistry combine to create a satisfying viewing experience. Synopsis: shy cook meets carefree food club Food for the Soul — a gentle tale about cooking, community, and quiet growth. Mako Kawai adores cooking and eating, but her social anxiety makes dining alone in public an ordeal. When her path crosses again with a childhood friend, she is drawn into a campus Food Culture Club where relaxed afternoons are spent making and tasting simple, memorable dishes. The series follows Mako and the club members as they r...

Go For It, Nakamura-kun!! Episode 5 Review

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Episode 5 of Go For It, Nakamura-kun!! leans hard into both its comedic strengths and its more uncomfortable tonal choices, delivering one of the series’ sharpest punchlines while stumbling over a subplot that raises questions about intent and responsibility. This entry splits cleanly into two halves: a delightfully petty, escalating gag about friendship and flirting, and a clumsily handled teacher-student storyline that undercuts whatever comment it seems to want to make. Below is a closer look at what works, what doesn’t, and why this episode left me both laughing and uneasy. Episode 5 Recap: Flirting, Friction, and Frayed Boundaries The episode opens with a slow burn of escalating awkwardness centered on Takeuchi’s overly tactile approach to male friendship. Nakamura’s internal monologue — equal parts envy and mortification — fuels much of the comedy as Takeuchi flirts with his male friends in a way that seems calculated to provoke jealousy and fantasy alike. The payoff to th...

Manga Up! Global Releases It's Not Easy Being Cute, Slasher Maidens & Inuta in English

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Square Enix's Manga UP! Global continues to expand its English catalog with three fresh additions that showcase a range of tones — from sharp social commentary to rom-com whimsy and genre-bending action. For readers hunting for new series to binge or creators looking for trends in contemporary manga, these releases demonstrate how modern slice-of-life, horror-comedy, and romantic comedy can all find English-language homes on digital platforms. Below we break down each title, its premise, publication notes, who it’s for, and why it’s worth checking out. New on Manga UP! Global: What Was Added It's Not Easy Being Cute (Kawaii wa, Tokidoki Kurushii.) — Shō Asahina Image courtesy of Manga UP! Global Premise: College student Himesaki Nozomi has relied on plastic surgery to craft her beauty, while Tennōji Ruka represents natural attractiveness — yet both characters wrestle with the pressures of modern lookism. What begins as a "teach me how to be cute" set...

You and I Are Polar Opposites Episode 6 Review

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Episode 6 of You and I Are Polar Opposites leans into the series’ strengths: low-key comedy, character-driven moments, and a school festival backdrop that stirs up both laughs and surprisingly earnest relationship work. This installment gives Miyu and Tani their first meaningful emotional test while still finding time for the show’s quieter, awkward charm — especially in the form of Nishi’s painfully relatable social anxiety. Below I break down the episode’s key beats, what works about the character dynamics, and why this festival-focused outing might be one of the series’ most satisfying so far. © Kocha Agasawa/SHUEISHA, You and I Are Polar Opposites Committee Episode Recap: Festival Fun Meets Relationship Reality The episode situates its major scenes during a lively school festival — a familiar rom-com set piece that the show uses effectively to both entertain and complicate its central romance. The main thread sees Miyu and Tani confronted with an uncomfortab...