MURCIÉLAGO, Volume 17 (ムルシエラゴ)

November 17th, 2020

As a series, Yoshimuraka’s MURCIÉLAGO has had, shall we say, a plethora of service for fans who like their pleasures low. Obscenely well-endowed women occasionally engaged in unrealistic lesbian sex and extreme violence with an eye to the grotesque and horrible. This is not a series I ever “recommend.” I simply acknowledge that I find it entertaining, and everything else is left up to individual tastes.

We’ve sat through any number of totally not-at-all-okay versions of violence, most of which has been directed at totally not-okay victims with some mostly unnamed collateral damage. Children and adults in this world are all likely to be broken and mangled emotionally. And there is a lot of sexual implication, and sometimes actual sex, all of it between consenting partners…which is pretty much the only thing that is not creeptastic here.

Now here we are, at MURCIÉLAGO, Volume 17 (ムルシエラゴ) and we’ve been given a new way to be made wholly uncomfortable. Because now we have a killer who is visibly sexually excited when he commits acts of violence with a fencing saber. Whee. Just what I definitely really never needed. ^_^ To counter this new craven service, we have a new hero…a member of Chiyo’s family organization, Senpachi, who decides that its his goal to keep Chiyoko safe by getting rid of this dude.

While we’re focusing on Chiyo-chan, our bonus chapter this volume is some less-terrible lesbian sex, in which Chiyo gets to see heaven in between Kuroko’s legs. So there’s a thing I can leave you to think about. ^_^

Ratings:

Art – Because it’s gotten better, it’s actually messier than usual. More detail, means more gore.
Story – Yeah…no
Characters – Senpachi’s cool, emotionless old Yakyuza guys are boring.
Service – We are literally staring at this guy’s crotch constantly and it’s not serving me, I’ll tell you that.  (-_ -)
Yuri – Not-ugly lesbian sex, so that’s a win.

Overall – ?

I don’t even know how I could possibly score this. It is a thing I am reading. ^_^

2 Responses

  1. Super says:

    “And there is a lot of sexual implication, and sometimes actual sex, all of it between consenting partners…which is pretty much the only thing that is not creeptastic here.”

    I would even call it revolutionary for such a “genre”, since many of its authors, and it seems the audience, sincerely believe that sexual action between women is so frivolous that harassment or even rape is not particularly immoral and will have no physical or mental consequences for female characters.

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