Archive for 2025


Rainbows After Storms, Volume 5

November 6th, 2025

Two girls in white school blouses with blue sailor style collars and blue shirts stand as if dancing, the tall blonde smiles at us, while the shorter dark haired girl looks at us startled. They are surrounded by sunflowers. In Rainbows After Storms, Volume 5, Chidori and Nanoha have kissed and nothing will ever be the same.

Having shared their first kiss as fireworks symbolically exploded above them, the kiss itself continues to reverberate inside them. They are reminded over and over that they have kissed and find themselves jumpy and unnerved when they have to return to normal quotidian activities and conversations.

Worse for them, after such a significant change in their relationship over the summer, they haven’t had a moment to talk about it and the school festival rushes in to take up the space they might have had to debrief.  So, 5 volumes in to this series, it is now moves from the realm of theoretical Yuri into romantic Yuri.

As much as they stress, of course they are going to be okay.They are nervous and more aware of one another, more in need of one another than previously. That’s to be expected. What isn’t expected is the appearance of one of Nanoha’s former basketball team kouhai, returning to school after a serious injury with a humongus crush on Nanoha, who happens up Nanoha and Chidori kissing. Mai is going to be a bit of a problem. But that’s for next volume. As I said in my review of this volume in Japanese, “We’ve dealt with Chidori’s past….now it’s time to set Nanoha’s past behind her, and move on to the future.”

I know this was and is a slow series, slow enough that it almost feels in real-time. We’re watching Nanoha and Chidori find each other and watching their relationship change. It can be a bit voyeuristic at times and will be mores so in upcoming volumes, but for now, we can be content watching these two just figuring it all out. I’m glad I gave this series a chance when I read it in Japanese and gladder to be able to read it in English now. But don’t think this is the end, we have a lot more volumes ahead of us!

Ratings:

Art – 7
Story – 7
Characters – 8
Yuri – 6
Service – 2 

Overall – 7

 





Love Bullet, Volume 1

November 4th, 2025

On a vivid blood-red background, a girl in pale blue and white, with white hair wings, and red eyes, runs holding a pistol, while shell casings and white petals scatter around her. White block letters down the left side read, "Love Bullet". A small heart near the top left has a red '1' and artist inee's name in white below.I have long stood by an axiom that human nature does not change, only technology does. inee’s Love Bullet, Volume 1, one of the most anticipated titles of the year, also follows this same principle.

Cupids are real. People who died before experiencing love are sometimes given the Goddess of Love’s gift and become cupids. As cupids, they can work their way back into life by pairing people up with their perfect partners. And, because technology indeed changes, cupids are now armed with guns, which really sort of puts an emphasis on how horrid the idea of a “cupid” is. We’re so used to Raphael and Caravaggio’s chubby cheeked mini-angels, that the idea of being SHOT THROUGH THE HEART with a hormonal imbalance that causes irrational behavior stopped being horrific. But, here it is, genuinely horrific once again, in the more modern form of being shot by a gun.

We join the story in the middle of a raging disagreement between a group of cupids, over which two member of three friends ought to be the perfect love for the third. Koharu, the newest of the group, feels that there ought to be a way to come to a compromise, but while one side might be willing, one of the cupids really wants a fight and so, a fight breaks out. There is collateral damage as unwitting humans get hit by love bullets, but Koharu’s team is able to manage to fend off the other until Koharu makes a risky shot to solve the dilemma. 

We then learn a bit about Koharu’s life and death and the girl who loved her. We, and Koharu, are appalled to find that her first mission is to pair her dear friend up with someone. It makes for a powerfully bittersweet story about love…and makes us question whther becoming a cupid is really a “gift.” inee’s art is cute, which makes scenes like Koharu shooting her first love through the head in order to set her up with someone both horrible and deeply  moving.  One can understand why Koharu is always looking for a happy compromise in her pairings. 

inee’s art is simple, often relying on no or limited backgrounds, and all but line art for the cupids, but the body language and movement in the gunfights is excellent, and her narrative tension is top notch.  I finished this very much hoping that the international campaign to save this series was fully successful and lo and behold!, Volume 2 is hitting JP bookstores this very month. I’m interested in the other cupids and would like to have my emotions flailed with their sad stories, but also hope to see some happy endings. 

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – Bittersweet, with the emphasis on the bitter  – 9
Characters – 8
Service – Guns and other weapons
Yuri – 8

Overall – 8

Yen is saying that they expect this volume to be one of their best selling titles of the year, even with a release date in December. Imagine that. It’s really good, honestly, so I am delighted we’re getting it in English. Thanks, Yen for a review copy for ANN, I used it for both reviews. 

 





Though I Am an Inept Villainess: Tale of the Butterfly-Rat Body Swap in the Maiden Court, Volume 9

November 2nd, 2025

Two young women in fantasy Chinese clothing stand back to back. A stern older man with Imperial crown behind them look off to the left. The air is filled with chunks of ice and bombs.This past summer I discussed Volumes 1-7 of this series. My thoughts were about chronic illness, emotional manipulation, systemic bias and some other overarching concepts, rather than about the story, per se. Also, I noted that the first volume had me sobbing in a plane bathroom, which was awkward. 

I delayed reading Volume 8 of Though I Am an Inept Villainess: Tale of the Butterfly-Rat Body Swap in the Maiden Court until Volume 9 was available, since the story structure thus far has been 2-volume arcs. Volume 9 turned out to be the climax of a number of arcs, including the immediate plotting of that current arc. It also is the climax of the second phase of the relationship between Kou Reirin, the Earth Maiden and Shu Keigetsu, the Fire Maiden, consorts of the Crown Prince of Ei.

Due to the toxic relationships between the Consorts of the preceding generation, the Maidens have all had to overcome significant abuse and manipulation, both emotional and physical. In part due to need and self-preservation, in part to Reirin’s steel-trap wit, all of the Maidens have moved beyond their hateful and antagonistic relationships. They work together now to greater ends, even if they still do bicker. The writing really shines here specifically, as the tension is wholly different. They sound like old friends trashing each other, not like implacable enemies. 

In Volume 8, a situation so complicated that I am hard pressed to explain it in a sentence or two is set up. Reirin and Keigetsu are switched and cannot be switched back, even though Reirin is tortured and Keigetsu made to push Reirin’s frail body beyond it’s ability. To save themselves, they must solve a mystery that has plagued the Emperor since his youth, or die. In doing so, the two women have a fight that seems insurmountable. In Volume 9, all of this comes to a head in what is a genuinely brilliant book. 

Keigetsu has been trying and succeeding for the most part, to pass as Reirin. Imagine if you were suddenly asked to pass a physics professor or an Olympic skater. For Keigetsu, the gap between her, a despised nobody treated like trash in order to serve as a punching bag and be universally loathed as an uncultured joke, to rise to be able to pass as the beloved angel of the Inner Court, delicate and gentle, is nearly impossible to imagine. Keigetsu does that, lifting herself out of the sewer once and for all. Reirin is gutted. We’re told, over and over that the Kou family loves nothing more than to be needed. Keigetsu no longer needs her. Reirin snaps. Her subsequent crisis had me  – for real – fucking sobbing on a plane again.

Keigetsu, in rising to be the person Reirin need her to be, makes Reirin feel as if she is no longer needed. Rushing in to that gap is all the emotion Reirin has never let herself feel about being ill. She spent her lifetime preparing for death. Making sure she had no unpaid debts, no thanks left unsaid. Now, apparently no longer needed and unable to pay off the debt she feel she owes Keigetsu, the weight of her own mortality rushes in and crushes Reirin. She has felt health now, in Keigetsu’s strong body and the horror of returning to her own weak one, as her health deteriorates makes her…angry.  I won’t belabor this, except to say the one thing I will not do to myself is imagine a life without illness, so when Reirin lost it at this point, so did I. 

Keigetsu, for her part is angry and confused. She has exceeded every expectation, risen above her upbringing, her training, the manipulations that she was subject to, only to be met with a Reirin, cool and unemotional. For Keigetsu, this was tantamount to rejection. 

The catalysts to their eventual reconciliation are the men in their lives, which was really a nice touch. One of the best bits of this series is how both men and women are portrayed here as fully-developed humans, with strengths, weaknesses and emotional depth. No non-verbal, unemotional blank slates that we have to mask emotional depth on to. The developing relationship between Reirin’s brother and Keigetsu feels natural and fun, while the Crown Prince frequently ends up being the most emotionally intelligent person in the story. It’s a genuine pleasure, knowing “the boys” aren’t a drain on the story or the character development. 

The climax comes with reconciliation of several kinds. Both Reirin and Keigetsu finally, honestly admit their needs to one another. Reirin is able to compliment Keigetsu with her whole chest, and finally Keigetsu can see herself as the comet Reirin always likens her to. It’s a magnificent moment, beautifully written. 

While this series is not Yuri, in the sense that there is no romantic love between Keigetsu and Reirin, and there is no likelihood of there ever being any, it does not lose out at all in the intense emotional connection. Reirin and Keigetsu have inhabited each other’s bodies and lives, they have had to pass for one another. They have had to save one another and they have conspired to do things that changed the kingdom around them. I cannot think of a friendship in literature more intimate than this. It is a genuinely fantastic series, which I wholeheartedly recommend to Okazu readers.

Ratings: 

Art – 7 
Characters – 9 
Service – Teenier bits in this arc, as there was a *lot* going on.
Intimacy – 10

Overall  – 10

As I said in my previous review, I probably will not be watching the anime, simply because the early parts are simply too hard.  And I’ll have to stop reading this series on a plane.  ^_^; But my sincerest thanks to Sean Gaffney for the recommendation.





Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – November 1, 2025

November 1st, 2025

In blue silhouette, two women face each other. One wears a fedora and male-styled attire, one is in a dress and heels. Their body language is obscure - they may be dancing, or laughing or fighting. Art by Mari Kurisato for Okazu

We are getting closer to end of year and I just wanted to take a moment to thank everyone that reads, shares and comments on Okazu! We’re less than  dozen supporters away from our annual goal for the year. If you love the news, reviews and Yuri journalism here on Okazu, I really hope that you’ll join us as a Ko-fi supporter or Patreon patron. and help keep Okazu writers’ wages competitive and our articles free for anyone to read! Thank you to our patrons and supporters for helping us keep Okazu thriving.

Yuri Manga

Love Bullet, Volume 1 is on the Yuricon Store. (Yen finalllllly got around to releasing the cover art.) Get your copy of this whimsical, bittersweet and action-filled manga today! I’ll be reviewing it soon. To celebrate, Yen Press is holding a 40% off Yuri sale! Thanks, Jae for the heads up on that.

The CandleA imprint at Kadokawa has shown itself to be very Yuri- and queer friendly. Morishima Akiko’s Hitorimi desu, (ひとりみです。) which she released in a self-published English edition as The Single Life ~ The single lives of 60- year old lesbians is up on Comic Walker.

Galette Special English Edition Vol. 4 finished the Kickstarter at 5 of the 6 stretch goals completed! There is an extended period right now where you can still pledge and be counted towards the final stretch goal. 80 more pledges and they make the final goal. You know what to do.

Via Sr. YNN Correspondent Sean Gaffney, we have news that Rakuen: Le Paradise magazine will be ending it’s run in February with what will probably be the 50th issue. According to ANN”s Crystalynn Hodgkins, Hakusensha will be announcing what will happen to the current series, including Nakamura Asumiko’s Mejirobana no Saku / A White Rose in Bloom.

 
Queer Manga

Fantagraphic’s Takumigraphics line announced a paperback reissue (and hopefully completion this time) of Takako Shimura’s Wandering Son series. 

Anime Feminist’s Chiaki Mitama talks to gay manga artist Gengoroh Tagame at the deYoung museum Manga exhibit.

 

Support the people who bring you Yuri Journalism 
Become an Okazu Patron today!

Yuri Light Novels

I reviewed Volume 1 for ANN’s LN Guide and found it to be stupid fun, and Nara Moore wants you to know that This Gyaru’s Got a Thing for…Vampire Hunters?! Vol. 2 is also a good escapist read! Read her review and then read the book from J-Novel Club.

Via the official X channel,  Tensei Oujo to Tensai Reijou no Mahou Kakumei (転生王女と天才令嬢の魔法革命) volume 12 is headed to Japanese bookstores in 2026. We have volumes 1-8 of The Magical Revolution of the Reincarnated Princess and the Genius Young Lady, out now in English from Yen Press.

Fantasia’s Girls Line imprint is holding a Japanese-language Yuri short story competition. Check out their official X account for details.

Via YNN Correspondents Frank and Katgrrrl, Rosmei announced several English-language Baihe novels for release in Singapore. There are some services that will help you get those. This article from Danmei News gives the details on the titles.

 

Yuri Live Action

Futari Escape is live now on JP streaming channel TVer. You’ll probably need a VPN, but it should be easy enough to watch. In celebration, Melonbooks is running a special campaign on the manga.

Reminder that Yuri movie Her kiss, my libido twinkles 彼女のくちづけ感染するリビドー will be streaming for a time on Youtube due to shipping issues for US backers. Again…a VPN might be useful for non-US folks this time. November 7th, it debuts in JP theaters in my own beloved Ikebukuro.

Via Sr. YNN Correspondent Frank Hecker, The Secret of Girls on GagaOOLala is a Chinese Hallmark movie about a big-city gal who find love in the countryside. The first two episodes are free.

Via YNN Correspondent Ashley, Ming Ong Chua is selling plushies from her manga-inspired ROADQUEEN: Eternal Road to Love.

Support Yuri News and Reviews on Ko-fi!

Other News

My review for the Drops of God television series, Season 1 is up on ANN for those of you who are interested in the Apple TV series. Also, more wine talk in Drops of God: Mariage, Volumes 2-3 in which I straight up brag about drinking wine from places mentioned in this manga.

BOOM! Studios will be launching a campaign to fund the Jem and the Holograms: Truly Outrageous Comic Collection this coming week on Kickstarter.

Via Sean Gaffney once again, the folks at Futsutsukana Akujo de wa Gozaimasuga ~ Hinamiya Chounezumi Torikae-den ~ (ふつつかな悪女ではございますが ~雛宮蝶鼠とりかえ伝~) official X account offered this cute Halloween image of our inept villainesses. I intend on reviewing Volume 9 of this extraordinary series tomorrow. This series…it fucking got me sobbing on a plane AGAIN. Sheesh.

 

Your support for Yuri journalism and research has never been more important. Patreon and Ko-Fi are where we currently accept subscriptions and tips.  Our goal now, into 2025, is to raise our guest writers’ wages to above industry standard, which are too low!

Your support goes straight to paying for Guest Reviews, folks helping with videos, site maintenance, managing the Yuricon Store and directly supporting other Yuri creators. Just $5/month makes a huge impact! Become part of the Okazu family!

Become a part of the Yuri Network, by being a YNN Correspondent: Contact Us with any Yuri-related news you want to share with us.





Yuri Visual Novel Demo Mini-reviews: Irene, The Window and Lock & Key

October 31st, 2025

The Fall In Love Fest on Steam concluded last month, but our team has two more demos for you to enjoy, by our crack Yuri VN team of Eleanor and Ashley.

Eleanor

Title card for Irene, The Window, Next to a blue wall,  blonde woman looks at us as she lays on a pillow.Irene, The Window is an interesting take on reconnecting with an old college friend. Irene suddenly contacts you after many years of absence and you become close again while she’s in the hospital for some unknown condition. The main thing I liked about this game is that in between each “day” the game encourages you to go offline for a couple of minutes and do something like make a cup of tea. There’s also plenty of dialogue options to choose from so there’s many ways the story can go. 

Given that this is only a demo, the scenery doesn’t change much but the art is perfectly pleasant to look at, the background music is fine and there’s enough of a mystery around Irene that I want to know what her full story is. The dialogue is good apart from a couple of small typos. 

 

Ashley

Title card for Lock & Key. A caped woman with short hair holds hands with a girl in a green dress, surrounded by other characters from the game.The demo for Lock & Key: A Magical Girl Mystery has been available since 2022 but on the thirtieth of September 2025 the full game is now out and part of the Fall in Love Fest so now is a great time to see if this magical girl mystery is interesting to you.

Lock & Key is narrated by Sherri Cohen, a former magical girl now a private eye. In this world magical girls lose their powers when they turn thirty and Sherri only has one more year to take advantage of her clairvoyance to help people in need as a detective.

Sherri is not helping people alone though she has her amazing wife Kealey helping her. Kealey has adapted to post magical girl life even better than Sherri. Kealey uses her shapeshifting ability to steal the valuables of the rich and terrible. As Sherri is the narrator for the entire demo it is fantastic to be in her head while Kealey is around and be treated to a constant barrage of a woman’s admiration for her wife. It’s easily what I want to read more of in the full game.

But that’s not everything that Sherri and Kealey are going to be dealing with. In a demo that takes under an hour we have about four separate plot threads dropped on us.

Sherri and Kealey are trying to make the best of their last year with magical abilities both for themselves and the world at large. For Sherri this includes hunting down a serial killer terrorising Chicago.

But our married duo also have their former teammate Nina arriving for a month looking to catch up and remember a lost mutual teammate.

But that’s not all! Sherri and Kealey stumble on brand new magical girl Ruby “Nightshade” Thompson. Ruby’s powerful but she clearly has a thing or two to learn about teamwork and community. Perhaps the two veteran magical girls can show her the benefit of learning from others?

The Lock & Key demo is an impressive example of an advertisement. A swift introduction to a novel that now, three years later, I am interested in reading the continuation of. Married, magical, PI. yuri is an underserved genre.