Archive for the Comic Yuri Hime Category


Yuri Manga: Comic Yuri Hime July 2018 (コミック百合姫2018年7月号)

June 21st, 2018

The July issue of Comic Yuri Hime was so good, I read it twice. I’m following more stories and liking them more than I have in some time.

Hisona’s “Goodbye Dystopia” remains the standout series for me, although it turns away sharply from the apparently abandoned, overgrown (post-apocalyptic) world it had inhabited to a thriving town, a mall, shopping for shoes and an Internet Cafe. It was so stark a change that it took me aback quite a bit and I had to reread it to make sure I was not imagining it. ^_^ So, they are doing walkabout in our world, then?

“ROID” by Shiroshi was poignant, as Anna encounters a used and abused robot and helps him, only to have him rebel against the First Law of Robotics and force her to save his abusive master from certain death. Anna has to confront the needs of self-willed AI beings and the limitations of being built, rather than born. I fucking love this story.

“Yurikkon” by Hisakawa Haru follows the two little girls from the end of the last chapter through their mother’s divorces, reunion and eventually marriage, and the not-sisterly love that they feel for one another. The next story will follow someone returning home from abroad hoping to pick up where they left off.

I still have no idea at all what “Prison Town e Youkoso” by neji is actually about, but I’m happy wansdeing the strets with Akari, who seems as puzzled to be there as I am.

“Kimi ha Shoujo” ended suddenly, strangely and incongruously, with a shift into the future and the city, dragging the entire story with it. I’m sorry that that Nanatsufuji didn’t have time or means to give it a better ending.

Hamuro Kei’s “Tsurezure Biyori” was a nice episode in a young couple’s life, rather than a dramatic moment.

And, among the one-shot,s was a story by Tanaka Rin, whose work I haven’t see since 2012! I was unsurprised to see it was a creepy Yuricest story. That’s what she does. ^_^; While Usui Shio’s “Jewel of You” tells a story of unrequited love that becomes requited. Classic stuff. ^_^;

Ratings:

Overall – 9

The August issue of Comic Yuri Hime has hit shelves and I am heading right to the next chapter of “2DK Pen, Mezamashitokei!” ^_^





Yuri Manga: Comic Yuri Hime, June 2018 (コミック百合姫2018年6月号)

June 4th, 2018

I cannot explain to you the feeling of wonder I got, when I picked up Comic Yuri Hime, June 2018 (コミック百合姫2018年6月号), knowing that, for the first time since it has begun publication in 2003, I will read and enjoy more stories than I don’t. That’s rare for me with any magazine. I’ve always maintained that if I really like 2 stories and mostly like a few others, a magazine is worth continuing. To have a magazine with so many enjoyable stories is rare, and for that magazine to be a Yuri magazine is a miracle.

I absolutely adore the nothing that is “Goodbye Dystopia” by Hisona. We know nothing of the characters, nothing of their world. We can guess very little about them, as well. And yet we travel along with them through a ruined, but beautiful, landscape. I could read this for volumes.

I feel bad that I no longer trust Kodama Naoko-sense, but after the extended horror of NTR, the reality is, that I don’t. Nonetheless, “Oya ga Urusai no de Sempai (♀) to Gizoukekkonshitemita.” may be worthy of my trust. A woman who is clearly in love with her roommate and sempai, wants to help her stop the demands for marriage meetups from sempai’s parents. She proposes that they visit sempai’s parents and tell then that they are in a partnership. Yes, the plot is awful and eyerolly and yes, it’s ridiculously clear that the sempai will eventually have to fall for her kouhai, blah blah blah, but I kind of liked the idea that the Shibuya Partnership certificate was presented as a marriage certificate…like it’s meant to be seen as. The parents’ reaction was bad, the story is a comedy and I’ll never trust the author again, so I’m still on the fence. We’ll see.

“Shiori no Sagasu page-tachi” by Kumosususme has had it’s big reveal, thus resolving any confusion or tension in the plot. I have no idea where it might go now.

Still like Shiroshi’s “Roid” and looking forward to more.

This chapter of “2DK, GPen, Mezamashitokei” will clearly be the end of of Volume 7…and what a chapter it was! Aois’ wedding at last. Nanami asks Kaede if she recognizes any of the folks at their table from school, Kaede says she has no idea who the other people are. Nanami glowers, thinking that Aoi has put them at a table of her ex-girlfriends…and gets even darker when she realizes the other women are current girlfriends.(-_-);

I have no fucking clue what or why Prison Town exists or how anyone, (most especially Akari) got there, but I’m still happy to read “Prisontown e Youkoso!” by neji.

Nanatsufuji’s “Kimi ha Shoujo” actually makes me quite uncomfortable. But I’m still reading this story about a passionate affair between a young woman and an older woman in a sheltered town.

And Ameno’s “Takane no Hana ha Usotuski desu” also about a relationship between a a younger woman and an older one is equally as uncomfortable, but for different reasons. And yet, I am still reading.

The bouquet has been tossed and caught in “Yurikkon” by Hisakawa Haru, and Hinako comes home to her lover Mizuki, asking “Why haven’t we thought about getting married?” Mizuki exclaims, “Get married?” and Hinako is forced to rethink their entire relationship. But we can see that Mizuki’s reaction to basically everything is to question it and eventually she and Hinako choose a traditional Shinto service for their own celebration. Watching this are two women, holding the hands of two children, who ask the children if they’d rather see their mothers marry in a western or Japanese ceremony. The torch has been passed.

There were other stories both read and unread in this volume, but I’m going to have to say I am really like the current crop. So many grown up women, some same-sex marriage, some kissing, living together (or as Pearl might say, “a little death and birth thrown in!”).

Ratings:

Overall – I’m going with 9. It was that good. Different feels, styles, tones. I like it.

The July issue is sitting on my to-read pile. I look forward to it!





Yuri Manga: Comic Yuri Hime, May 2018 (ミック百合姫2018年5月号)

May 6th, 2018

The May 2018 issue of Comic Yuri Hime (ミック百合姫2018年5月号) begins with a new story by Hisona that I quite like. “Goodbye Dystopia” follows a girl leaving her life behind – although why, we don’t yet know. She meets another woman traveling through the ruined, wild landscape and they begin to travel together. How the world came to be this way, who they are and what they are looking for is all as yet unilluminated. Nonetheless, I like the idea. ^_^

Miman’s “Watashi no Yuri ha Oshigoto desu!” delves into the backstory of Kanako’s obsession with Hime. Broken people are broken.

I’m not sure where “Koushin Koinu ni Koibumi wo” by Tamasaki Tama is going (or, indeed, if it is going anywhere,) but I’m still reading. A feral girl is accepted into a military-ish academy-ish where she’s being alternately encouraged and scolded by an older girl who obviously sees something in her. This month Indou makes a new friend, but find her grades subpar, so she isn’t getting town leave. This whole series feels inspired by the Vocaloid Senbonzakura visualsand not-real, slightly nostalgic militaristic image.

Hisakawa haru presents the opening sortie in the “Girls Wedding Omnibus, Yuri-kkon,” in which two women marry. The bouquet is passed along to, presumably, the next girl to find wedded bliss.

On the even of her wedding, Aoi completes her confession of her complicated feelings about Kaede to Nanami in Ohsawa Yayoi’s “2DK, GPen, Mezamashitokei.” And Nanami wonders what Kaede is in her own life.

I’m still really liking Shiroshi’s “ROID,” but I am apparently a sucker for Yuri androids. Android designer Yui uses a wheelchair, and is in the process of making an android that looks more than a little like herself. She’s helped out in her experiments by AI designer Reina, who is amazed and concerned at the humanity of the new android. But she can’t help wondering what the android is to Yui. She names the android Anna to give it a separate existence from her creator. Anna assure Reina that she is separate from Yui. So far I quit like this series.

Nagashiro Rouge’s “Eve to Eve” is another sci-fi story, but so completely at odds with the previous one, it’s worth mentioning. Two women who are wholly, massively in love have volunteered to have the brains become the center of a global network of protection. Their brains are removed from their bodies, but in their private space they remain in love with each other and with the whole earth. This may be the most purely science fiction-y story we’ve had in Yuri Hime, I think. 

Another new series has begin that’s immensely appealing, “Prison Town e Youkoso” by Neji, in which demi-beings, yokai, and half-humans of all kinds mingle. We meet human Akari and her roommate, a frankensteinish (or Black Jack, if you prefer) composite person named Mary. Both Akari and Mary receive job notices every morning. Akari is busy but when she gets together with friend for drinks after work, they tease her that she treats Mary like a little sister. Her feelings are probably more complicated than that. I’m looking forward to reading more of this.

Kiriyama Haruka gives us “Shiawase Wakenasai” which follows two adult women being happy together.

I want to digress here. Clearly I am not the only Yuri fan or creator who is looking for more adult Yuri. The vast amounts that have – apparently suddenly – appeared tells me that this was a long time in coming. Stay tuned, there’ll be more.

Usui Shio’s “Select Closet” is a cute little story about a cool, boyish girl being given room to be feminine and cute by a classmate.

I hadn’t realized how *good* this issue was until I had to type it all out! There’s a change in the tides here, one that I am really liking. Less schoolgirls, more speculative fiction. Maybe we can even get a mystery or a sports story one day. ^_^

Ratings:

Overall- 9

The June issue is already out and it’s just as excellent, with something new and far less exploitative from Kodama Naoko!





Yuri Manga: Comic Yuri Hime, April 2018 (ミック百合姫2018年4月号)

April 4th, 2018

Comic Yuri Hime, April 2018 (ミック百合姫2018年4月号) was a little light on the continuing series, but spent most of its pages building on a bunch of newer ones that were pretty good. 

No surprise, I liked the AI-focused “Roid,” by Shirushi. I apparently like android x human relationships. ^_^

Tamasaki Tama’s military-ish school drama “Koushin Koinu KoibumI wo” continues to flail for a plot, but is fun to read anyway. 

As I suspected (because it was kind of obvious) the story in “Watashi no Yuri ha Oshigtoto desu” by Miman, is now fulling focused on Tachibana’s concern for and being disconcerted by Kanako’s obsessive feelings about Hime. I don’t want them to be a couple, but I think Tachibana could be good for Kanako, because right now, she is not a stable person. I would like to see them help each other out.

“Tsuretsure Hibi” by Omurais was a nicely drawn, pleasant slice of two women’s life together without drama. That was awfully nice.

Moke has a lovely little girl meets and falls for a cafe owner in “Yuuhi to, Aroma to, Koi Moyou,” while Nacht’s “Dandelion Tearoom” was a  straight-up paranomal fantasy and Nantsufuji’s “Kimi ha shoujo” took a bit of a darker turn, as Shinou comes to grips with the fact that she’s had sex with a virtual stranger.

Lots of other stories, including the series they choose to make anime of, (by which I have so far remained unmoved.)  Yuri Hime@Pixiv is also clearly allowing them to try out some new material and see how it plays before moving it to the magazine or to publication.

Ratings: 

Overall – Holding steady at 8 

Monthly Comic Yuri Hime still is holding the line with something for everyone. The May issue is already on shelves!





Yuri Manga: Comic Yuri Hime March 2018 (コミック百合姫2018年3月号)

February 8th, 2018

The March 2018 issue of Comic Yuri Hime (コミック百合姫2018年3月号) was pretty darn good. Some of the longer serializations are settling in for the ride, others are flailing a bit and some are pivoting from a one-shot to a longer serial, which can be either good or bad, as you like. 

I’m quite enjoying the stories from the Yuri Hime@Pixiv that have been filling the back pages of the volumes. A few have been good enough to make me bookmark the page and start checking regularly. It’s a good idea for them to have a web comic page to gauge the popularity and potential of new artists and stories. They’ve never had a sample page of titles on their website like so many other companies have, but this page provides any number of first chapters for free. I recommend taking a look!

After a tiresome photoshoot, showing two women touching, zOMG and interview with the voice actresses for citrus, the first manga is one that I was both intrigued and appalled by, by Tamasaki Tama. A waif wanders in to a military school in some kind of fantasy Japan and ends up being accepted. She will now get three meals a day and a bed to sleep in, but who know what will happen to her if she’s sent to fight. Also one of the girls is already hitting on her. And stuff.

“Watashi no Yuri ha Oshigoto desu!” by miman is going exactly where I expected, but through an interesting pair of eyes. Sumika has accidentally learned of Kanoko’s unhealthy obsession with Hime, and finds herself concerned for the girl. She’s watching her with a new perspective and starting to reach out, surprisingly delicately, given that in her real life, she’s a brash Gal and not the gentle Tachibana-sempai she is at work. 

But the winner this month was Fujimatsu Mei’s “Miageta Kimi ha Kyou mo Hohoemu” which I finished up  with a quiet. “Well, that was adorable.” A small, strange and kind career woman falls for a woman at a shop. They go out, crisis occurs, they live happily (ever after, implied.) It was absolutely squee.

“One Night Friend” by Kayako was a sadly typical “drunken one night stand means one thing to you, but another to me” story. Until it wasn’t and they also are presumably in for some happily, if not ever after.

And now, we have to talk about Aoi in  Ohsawa Yayoi’s “2DK, GPen, Mezamashitokei.” She’s a jerk. I mean, we get it, sh’s not living her life honestly. When we thought she was, her teasing was just that but, knowing that she’s a hypocrite made this chapter very hard to take. Yes, it was predictable that she, too, had fallen for Kaede, but still. On the technical side, writing a harem manga in which both the leads are at the center of a Venn diagram of wannabee lovers has got to be an interesting challenge. 

And “Kimi ha Shoujo” which was kind of lovely went straight to WTF territory in this second chapter. I kind of hope she’s a vampire just so I can dislike it honestly. ^_^

“Shiori wo Sagasu Page-tachi” took yet another turn. I’m not sure if I keep just expecting it to be something other than it is, or it doesn’t know what it’s trying to be.

In contrast, “Watashi ni Karada Urutteminai?” started well over the shark and I’m just going along for the ride. Tsukasa’s father died leaving her mired in debt to a lot of unsavory characters, among them a tall, beautiful woman who offers Tsukasa a deal – let me buy you and I’ll pay off all the debts. Well, gosh human trafficking sure is a wholesome premise for a romance isn’t it? ^_^;

There were many other stories, most of which I read, and just a handful I didn’t (and most of those are the usual suspects…) so there’s a good bet that you’d find something to appeal to you in this volume.

Ratings:

Overall – 8

A good strong volume this month and I look forward to more. Conveniently, the April issue will be out shortly.