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Ryuta Amazume’s Sefure Manga Ends – News

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Series debuted in March 2019



Sefure volume 11 cover
Image via Amazon Japan

This year’s 15th issue of Shōnengahōsha‘s Young King magazine announced on Wednesday that Ryuta Amazume‘s Sefure manga series will end in the next issue on July 27.

The “sex and romance” story centers on two “sex friends.” Although their relationship initially focuses on their bodies, they gradually start to feel something more for each other.

Amazume launched the series in Shōnengahōsha‘s Young King magazine in March 2019. Shōnengahōsha shipped the 11th compiled book volume on May 2. 

Amazume ended the Omae no Kao wo Tashikametai (Let Me See That Look on Your Face) manga on April 23. Amazume launched the series on Kodansha‘s YanMaga Web website on September 11. Kodansha shipped the second and final volume on June 19.

Amazume’s Jofū manga ended in March 2025. Amazume published a one-shot version of the manga in Hakusensha‘s Young Animal magazine in March 2021, and launched the full serialization in December 2021. Hakusensha published the manga’s seventh and final compiled book volume on May 29.

Amazume launched the Nana & Kaoru (Nana to Kaoru) manga in Hakusensha‘s Young Animal Arashi magazine in 2008, and the series switched to the main Young Animal magazine in 2009. The series ended in August 2016. FAKKU has licensed the manga. Denpa began distributing the manga starting in October 2022 in a 3-in-1 omnibus edition.

Nana to Kaoru inspired an original video anime (OVA) project and two live-action films. Amazume wrote the spinoff manga series Nana to Kaoru: Black Label that ended in 2014.

Amazume launched the Nana to Kaoru: Kōkōsei no SM Gokko (High Schoolers’ S&M Play) spinoff manga in the inaugural issue of Hakusensha‘s Harem magazine in November 2018, and ended the series in October 2021. The manga’s fifth and final volume shipped in December 2021. The manga is set during Nana and Kaoru’s third year of high school.

Source Young King issue 15


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‘There, Beneath the Water’ Author Kaiko Fuyumushi Launches New Manga – News

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Fuyumushi launched Kagami yo Kagami yo manga on July 3



GOTcorporation’s Comic MeDu manga website launched on July 3 a new manga by Kaiko Fuyumushi titled Kagami yo Kagami yo (mirror, mirror on the wall.

mirror
Image via Comic MeDu’s X/Twitter account

The manga centers on Hina, a girl raised by her mother like a “princess.” Hina goes to the same university as her mother. She gradually notices how differently she was raised and how the people there also think differently from her. Then, she meets Asuka, a classmate who is rumored to have undergone full-body plastic surgery – a meeting that will change Hina’s future.

Fuyumushi’s There, Beneath the Water (Mina Soko nite) manga ran from September 2021 to May 2023 on Futabasha‘s Web Action website. Futabasha published the manga’s third and final compiled book volume in August 2023. Tokyopop licensed the manga and will publish the manga’s first volume in English on October 27.

Source: Comic MeDu (link 2)


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Episodes 1-3 – The World Is Dancing

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world-is-dancing-1-3.png

When I covered the first two episodes of The World Is Dancing for this summer’s Preview Guide, I was absolutely blown away by the show’s unity of character, theme, and visual execution. Here we have the fictionalized biography of one of Japan’s most famous and influential playwrights, Zeami Motokiyo (aka “Oniyasha”), realized in stunning detail through a production that emphasizes vibrant colors, expressive animation, and sequences of emotional power. It is difficult to imagine a better way to tell a story about the transformative power of art and how the most impactful performances are intrinsically rooted in the resonances born of the human experience.

Oniyasha has been on a journey of discovery. His desperate attempt to understand how to truly feel the emotions and experiences necessary to create compelling art first led him to the shack of the recluse Shirabyōshi, whose private dances exploded with all of the pent up fury and sadness that comes from a lifetime of disappointment and neglect by the society she once dedicated herself to serving. As a naïve child, Oniyasha took from the Shirabyōshi’s story the lesson that great art requires the artist to suffer and reject material gains. Her art was good because she had nothing. When the woman dies alone in the dark shadows of her tiny shack, it is easy to begrudge Oniyasha this shortsighted and selfish view of her life, but I think The World Is Dancing wants us to linger in that tension on purpose. Oniyasha is a boy who has not had enough time to endure the ups and downs of life to grasp what someone like the Shirabyōshi imbues into her art. He gets a taste of it when he is forced to confront the death of this woman that he barely knew, but that won’t be enough to shape him into an artist who can genuinely express the complexities of the human experience in his work.

This third episode begins on a decidedly odd note, wherein a traveling nobleman sees Oniyasha performing on the street and responds with what can only be described as an orgiastic breakdown. The World Is Dancing has made a habit of blending over-the-top cartoon gags with its more naturalistic storytelling, and while I’m not entirely sure this moment lands, at least the creepy old man’s interest in Oniyasha lands the troupe a new job. It is, in fact, an incredibly prestigious opportunity to perform the classic Okina for the shogun himself. What’s more, Oniyasha has been chosen by his father to perform the Senzai dance. Talk about cranking up the pressure.

Naturally, Oniyasha starts to crack and runs off, which leads him to that mysterious white-haired man who originally pointed him in the direction of the Shirabyōshi. This time, he leads Oniyasha to a local village where another stranger, Yoshimitsu, explains that the townsfolk are putting on a theatrical display of pantomimed sex meant to serve as a rice harvesting ritual. The episode’s showcase of lush, fluid animation comes when Oniyasha draws a connection between human procreation and the sustenance of that holy grain, a lovely sequence, though not as immediately inspiring as the Shirabyōshi’s performances.

While it is compelling to have Oniyasha find the spark of inspiration by learning a little about the birds and the bees, there’s only so much that the kid can (or should) learn from watching two actors pretending to go at it from a hundred yards away. Even Yoshimitsu acknowledges that, while the boy is nothing if not enthusiastic, Oniuasha is not what he was looking for. Not yet, at least. If that name sounds familiar, by the way, well, it means you’re either a fan of Muromachi-era Japanese history or you just know who the best Tekken character is (aside from King, of course).

The more interesting drama comes at the end of the episode when Junigoro, the troupe’s kotsuzumi player, takes out his frustrations on Oniyasha’s lackadaisical attitude by pounding the snot out of the boy until Samanosuke comes to calm him down and prevent any further damage from being done. Junigori makes for an interesting foil to Oniyasha, since the war orphan seems to know (and be affected by) more of life’s troubles than the young son of Kan’nami. The recurring theme of understanding the self, even when it comes to the painful parts, comes back around when Samanosuke reminds Junigoro that “Those who know their own shame become strong.” Even if “You Have Your Own Sense of ‘Good’” didn’t reach the same emotional peaks as those first two episodes, the show is clearly still using its keen characterization and expression to tell some fascinating stories.

Episode 1 Rating:



Episode 2 Rating:



Episode 3 Rating:




James is a writer with many thoughts and feelings about anime and other pop-culture, which can also be found on BlueSky, his blog, and his podcast.


The World Is Dancing is currently streaming on
HIDIVE.


The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the views of Anime News Network, its employees, owners, or sponsors.


The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the views of Anime News Network, its employees, owners, or sponsors.

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FLIPFLOPs’ Darwin’s Game ~Flag Game~ Spinoff Novel Gets Manga Adaptation – News

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Guuno draws manga launching in October


The August issue of Akita Shoten‘s Bessatsu Shōnen Champion magazine announced on Wednesday that FLIPFLOPsDarwin’s Game ~Flag Game~ spinoff novel is getting a manga adaptation. The manga will launch in the magazine’s November issue, which will ship in October. Guuno is drawing the manga.

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Darwin’s Game ~Flag Game~ novel’s cover illustration
Image via FLIPFLOPs’ blog site

The novel’s story centers on the past of Shuka and Rein that was not depicted in the main Darwin’s Game manga. Akita Shoten published the novel in December 2020. 

darwinsgame

Titan Manga licensed the Darwin’s Game manga and will release the series in omnibus volumes. The first omnibus volume will ship on November 10. Titan Manga describes the story:

Kaname Sudo’s life changes forever when he accepts an invitation to Darwin’s Game, a mysterious mobile app that thrusts its players into real-life battles using supernatural “Sigils” with terrifying effects. Suddenly hunted by deadly foes, Kaname must outthink and outfight seasoned players as he uncovers the truth behind the game… and the shadowy organization controlling it. 

The manga launched in
Bessatsu Shōnen Champion magazine in December 2012. Shū Miyama (formerly known under the pen name Ginko) provides the story for the manga, while Yuki Takahata provides the art. The manga ended in October 2023, with an epilogue chapter published the next month.

The manga inspired a television anime that premiered with a one-hour episode in January 2020. FunimationNow streamed the series as it aired. The anime debuted on Crunchyroll and HIDIVE in February 2020.

The manga is getting a live-action film adaptation, which will open in Japan on March 12, 2027.

Source: Bessatsu Shōnen Champion August issue


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