Tensei Oujo to Tensai Reijou no Mahou Kakumei (転生王女と天才令嬢の魔法革命)

October 14th, 2021

Here’s a phrase I’m using more and more these days: “Ahead of the English language edition.” Yesterday, Mariko gave her impression of a book that will be heading our way from Seven Seas and today, I’m looking at the manga for a Light Novel that has recently been licensed by Yen Press as The Magical Revolution of the Reincarnated Princess and the Genius Young Lady with a projected March 2022 release date.

Volume 1 of Tensei Oujo to Tensai Reijou no Mahou Kakumei (転生王女と天才令嬢の魔法革命) is the manga for a light novel of the same name. (The FTC has reminded Amazon to remind me to remind you that links to booksellers here are affiliate links and I therefore make a pittance when you click them and purchase items. I will have to figure out a simple way to do this that doesn’t drive us all crazy.)

Princess Annisphia has a lot of unique ideas about magic, most of which don’t fit with the common learnings about magic in Parettia. There’s a reason for that. Annisphia isn’t from Parettia – she’s been reborn into this world from ours and she’s dedicated to creating magic that heats her bath and tea and gives her a flying broom.

Euphilia is a high-ranking noble girl whose life has been thrown into chaos, as her betrothal has been canceled and her reputation destroyed. When Annisphia literally crash lands on the scene of Euphilia‘s shaming, the princess loses no time – she bodily throws Euphilia over her shoulder and takes her home, where she asks the King if she can keep her. Annisphia needs Euphilia – a genius at magic – to help her create better magical tools.

Volume  1 is a rough start to this story, to be very honest. The first chapter is mostly Euphilia’s former fiancee’ screeching at her, endlessly. Annisphia showing up is literally the only reason I kept reading. Traumatized, Euphilia is unable to help her own case throughout the volume, getting few coherent words in. I was in serious doubt about this “genius” until the final pages of the book. Had I been the editor, the story would have begun the morning after the crisis, with flashbacks to everything, then moved on from there.Instead we are treated to page after page of Euphilia being reviled publicly for…I’m still not sure, but I got tired of the screaming and skipped.

When Annisphia has brought Euphilia to the castle, the princess is at pains to reassure the genius noble that she is wanted and welcome. But then the book takes some time to leer salaciously at Euphilia as she dresses and it just feels absolutely disgusting of us, honestly. Poor Euphilia has had a horrible few days and we are literally centimeters away from her crotch in the most absolutely creepiest possible gaze. By this point, I had already decided to stop reading the story…more than once. For some reason, I persevered. And the book did get better.

Annisphia takes Euphilia into her workshop. We get a primer on magic and how Annisphia is not (for reasons we understand) tied to the elements. But she can and does create magic stones, which stand in for her ability. Euphilia, however, is genuinely a magical genius (ahah!), with the ability to use all the elements. Annisphia wants to create magical tools for and with Euphilia. And so she does.

Euphilia wakes the next morning depressed and lonely in the King’s castle, sure she’ll be abandoned again. Annisphia finds her and in a moment dispels her fears….the Princess has made her a magical sword which can change, depending on which attribute she wants to use! Annisphia and Euphlia are clearly going to make a powerful team.

Ratings:

Art – 6 Good enough, but the service was foul
Story – 6 There are hazards on these roads
Characters – 8 Annisphia carries the lot of them in this volume
Service – 7 Yes, but why?!? Ugggh.
Yuri – 0 Not so far, but clearly we are going to head there

Overall – It was hard to like intitially, but the end pulled it up to a 6.

Can Euphilia clear her name with Annisphia’s help? Will that matter when the Princess is clearly on the side of the Genius? Will I get volume 2 or just read chapters over at Comic Walker? I guess we’ll have to wait and see.

8 Responses

  1. Patricia B. says:

    Yikes, this does not sound appealing to me. I’m tempted to ask if the light novel does a better job with the pacing in comparison to the manga, or if this is merely a bad adaptation of decent source material, but on the other hand the idea that one of the main characters spends the majority of the book being verbally abused by other characters or leered at by the artist is not something I really want to dive into. :-/

    • I have no idea. I randomly chose this manga some months ago and Yen only recently announced the LN, which I have not read.

      I don’t know if I’m motivated to read more, I’ll be honest.

  2. Al says:

    The novels are pretty decent and they have zero fanservice. There are some issues with the pacing and the world building but I enjoyed them. Manga just threw away important plot points and replaced them with service.

    On the other note pretty much all popular syosetu.com yuri novels got horribly servicey manga adaptations (well, apart from “私の推しは悪役令嬢”).

    E.g. there was no service in “湯沸かし勇者の復讐譚” but manga is just…
    Or 処刑少女の生きる道 and お前ごときが魔王に勝てると思うな – the novels do have a bit of service but manga upped it 100 times.

    • Oh, interesting. That’s a shame for the manga, but gives me some hope for the novels. Thanks!

      And yeah, they all seem to have just been service-upped, but I think that’s a function of the publisher of the manga.

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