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Comics/Manga

Sometimes I have to remind myself, “These are still high schoolers,” whenever I read Neighborhood Story. With all the craziness that Happy Berry gets into — be it fashion, love, or life itself — you have to remember that these

After the extreme tension on display in the last volume of Spy × Family, you’d think that there’d be some down time for Forgers, right? Although the first half of Volume Twelve puts more emphasis on the comedy, it pivots

It’s often fun diving into the past of a shonen hero. Before he was the tubby grocery store-owning killing machine, Taro Sakamoto was a more fit assassin-in-training. But he almost never got to be an assassin, due to his and

There are many kinds of game genres Hiro Mashima’s Fairy Tail could enter. The last one I could’ve imagined was a sports game, especially volleyball. But here we are, in a world where Fairy Tail: Beach Volleyball Havoc exists before

Nasa would do anything for Tsukasa. The Fly Me to the Moon couple has a bond so strong, that it makes real people yearn for such a romance. However, while there are many things a person can do in real-life

It's wrestling, manga, music, and furry critters galore in this week's Duck Amuck in Japan! First, King Baby Duck, AFLM, and JonStar play a game of "I Told You So" when reflecting on My Deer Friend Nokotan. Kaiju Big Battel

A Marvel series from the team behind My Hero Academia: Vigilantes? Sign me the heck up! The duo of writer Hideyuki Furuhashi and artist Betten Court did a phenomenal job with adding a twist to Kohei Horikoshi’s My Hero Academia,

A good slice-of-life is just that. It’s a day-to-day look into the life of characters that could be reflections of our own selves. The best example of this comes from Harvey Pekar’s American Splendor, which places the author right in

A vampire’s life is a daunting one, especially if you’ve got a bad case of social anxiety. After all, how are you going to hypnotize your future meal if you can’t even have a simple conversation with them? Hina, our

It’s nice seeing a rom-com start with a blooming relationship, and not finish with one. Manga tends to wait until practically the last chapter to pair up the protagonists, but You and I Are Polar Opposites thankfully switched that around.