Archive for the Yuri Manga Category


The Magical Revolution of the Reincarnated Princess and the Genius Young Lady, Volume 1

June 10th, 2022

Last autumn I took a look at Tensei Oujo to Tensai Reijou no Mahou Kakumei (่ปข็”Ÿ็Ž‹ๅฅณใจๅคฉๆ‰ไปคๅฌขใฎ้ญ”ๆณ•้ฉๅ‘ฝ) manga. I found it to be fine, but much too shouty for my taste. Then I followed that up with the Light Novel, The Magical Revolution of the Reincarnated Princess and the Genius Young Lady, Volume 1 in April of this year. That was altogether better as the screaming took up much less space on the page, forewent the utterly pointless service and gave Euphyllia some personality. That said, what it added to the story, it took away from the art.

Now I am revisiting the manga in English. Out from Yen Press as The Magical Revolution of the Reincarnated Princess and the Genius Young Lady, Volume 1, I find I appreciate the art even more and both the service and the shouting even less. 

Princess Anisphia has memories of a life before her current one – memories of scientific wonders. But in this world, where magic is the defining power, Anisphia has none. Nonetheless, her obsession with using magic has lead her to be seen as an eccentric inventor. Euphyllia’s world has come crashing down upon her, when she is unjustly accused of bullying another girl, causing the Prince to end his engagement with her. Bereft of a purpose, now that she cannot be Queen, Euphyllia acquiesces when Anisphia asks for her to become her assistant.  She insists it’s professional, but Anis is pretty open about being into women, and thinking Euphie is cute, so the groundwork is laid out for a decent Yuri story.

Knowing the remainder of the story in the first LN, I am much more motivated to read the next volume of the manga. I honestly *want* to like Anisphia and Euphyllia and for them to be happy together. But boy is there a lot of shouting in this manga. And, Alcard’s break-up was so…vulgar, I can’t imagine that it’s not really addressed at all, except in asides. BUT, the art. Harutsugu Nadaka’s art is up to the task the story gives – this time I have no complaints about the sword Anisphia gives to Euphyllia…in fact, I’m looking forward to seeing her use it.

So, while, the story in the light novel made the LN worth reading, it’s the art here that makes this a perfectly fine read, if people shouting a lot doesn’t bother you and gobsmackingly gross service. ^_^

Ratings:

Art โ€“ 7 The art is better than the LN by a lot, the sword was an 8
Story โ€“ 6 A rocky start
Characters โ€“ 8 Annisphia carries the lot of them in this volume
Service โ€“ 7 Absolutely grotesque. What the fuck is wrong with people?
Yuri โ€“ 1 Clearly we are going to head there

Overall โ€“ It was hard to like initially, with all the screaming, but the end pulled it up to a 6.

Knowing what I know, I’m probably in for the long haul on this series, but the manga has a super creepy service problem. We’ll see if it or the good stuff wins.

Thanks to Yen Press for the review copy and to the entire Yen Press team for their fine work on this volume.

 





Sasayakuyouni Koi wo Utau, Volume 6 (ใ•ใ•ใ‚„ใใ‚ˆใ†ใซๆ‹ใ‚’ๅ”„ใ†)

June 3rd, 2022

It’s summer! It’s time for one last gasp of wholesome fun, hanging with your friends, eating ice cream, going on dates. Both Yori and Himari are very interested in going out on dates together. But, sadly, Shiho’s deal has pulled them apart. Himari is acting as manager for the SS Girl’s #1 rival band, Lorelei and it’s eating at Yori.

Sasayakuyouni Koi wo Utau, Volume 6 is filled to the brim with emotional conflict and tension, but done so cutely and with such sincerity, it doesn’t feel like…well, it doesn’t feel like conflict. It feels like a bunch of young people living their best lives and heading towards what they will one day think of the best battle of the bands of their lives. ^_^

Yori is torn. She’s thrilled to see Himari learning about band stuff and being a great manager, but the fact that she’s doing it for someone else’s band hurts. Himari is torn. She’s thrilled to be learning so much and hanging with talented musicians, but it’s killed her time to be with Yori and summer isn’t that long…

The week of the local summer festival arrives. Himari and Yori are determined to eke out time together and just enjoy each other’s company. A date to a karaoke booth ends up making things awkward between them, but as the fireworks at the festival go up, they finally have their first serious kiss. Were happy for them. This series is so completely lacking in anything prurient that we can just be the old ladies on the bench who are happy for them, while we hold hands and kiss, out of sight and not feel anything other than how lucky they are to be young and together. ^_^

My summer has yet to begin. I’m pounding the boards all month flogging my book. (Hey! Did you know I have a book about Yuri? I do! You should buy it!) Next month I am rewarding myself with fireworks and ice cream and all the kisses I can get. In the meantime, I’ll watch with elder joy at the young people kissing, parading and throwing bricks at cops this Pride Month. ^_^

Ratings:

Art โ€“ 8
Story โ€“ 8
Characters โ€“ 9
Service โ€“ 0 Still so adorable
Yuri โ€“ 8

Overall โ€“ 8

Volume 5 of Whisper Me a Love Song is out now in English from Kodansha!





ULTIMATE-MAMA

May 26th, 2022

A bunch of content warnings on today’s review, for blood, and violence, and “comedic” BDSM and nudity and some other stuff.

Fujimori Manatasu is a very cute high school student. At 18, she already has a modeling career and is well-liked by her friends. Walking home from school one day she sees what looks like a giant black crescent in the sky. She is rescued from some slavering creature by a woman with abs of steel, Ultimate Fang, and her apparently small child, Meteora. The next day at school, Manatsu finds the child to be 18, and a transfer student into her class…and both Juou Ruriru, the child and Juouo Hagane, the buff mother, are now her next-door neighbors. Hagane is there, because Manatsu has blood that will also give her super powers as well, if only Hagane can awaken them. Preferably by having sex, but whatever. When another equally buff woman arrives, Savage, (real name Jade Anderson) Manatsu’s mom falls, hard. Now it’s up to Hagane to awaken Manatsu’s powers and gain a partner. Eventually, she does, of course.

In the meantime, the monsters, the blood and the gags keep coming in ULTIMATE-MAMA by Hayashiya Shizuru-sensei.

If you have ever read Hayashiya-sensei’s Ultra Sword (or my review of it) the plot may sound vaguely familiar. A girl with blood that attracts monsters is guarded by people with powers. In this case, the blood would also give the girl powers. Unlike Ultra Sword, this series is not rapey at all, really. The superwomen are super cut and have washboard abs and sexy scars and are totally into having sex with women. Manatsu is, by Chapter 7, reasonably okay with it too. Mom and Savage were love at first sight, which was kind of cute.

There is also a clearly evil couple who have sex to call up the crescents which act as a door for the monsters. Who are they and what are the meaning of these attacks? Their acts creates both the crescent doors in the sky and items that fall from those which turn regular humans into the monsters…a bit like Sailor Moon.

Now here comes the real CW part. ULTIMATE-MAMA is currently available on Fanza Books, which is a pretty skanky adult manga and eronovel site.The first things you will see on the site are a whole lot of primary and secondary genitalia, realistic and decidedly not. It’s that kind of site. The manga is being released a chapter at a time for about 220๏ฟฅ/chapter. I sure hope it’ll be collected.

In the meantime, I’m very much enjoying this manga for exactly what it is. ^_^

Ratings:

Art – 8 24 volumes of Hayate x Blade really leveled up her skills in action scenes, for sure.
Story – 7 Lots of elements held together by humor at the moment.
Characters – 9 Charming and goofy and chaotic, exactly what she does best
Yuri – 9
Service – 8 Nudity, sex, underwear, silly BDSM, yes, there is service

Overall – 8

If, like me, you’ll basically read anything and everything Hayashiya-sensei does, the funny violence and funny blood and funny BDSM all are par for the course. Fang and Savage are very nice to look at, if you like that type, which I do. (Not to put a fine point on it, Hayashiya-sensei’s tastes are *clearly* my tastes, as well. ^_^)





semelparous, Volume 2, Guest Review by G-Man

May 24th, 2022

Welcome to another Guest Review Wednesday, Today we’re welcoming back G-Man, who has a lot to say about semelparous, Volume 2. ^_^  Take it away, G-Man!

Time for a much overdue look at the continuation of everyoneโ€™s โ€œfavoriteโ€ yuri action manga! More action, more gay, more twists and turns, and more controversial art! But is this new installment in the semelparous saga an improvement on the first? Letโ€™s take a lookโ€ฆ

Spoiler Warning! To discuss major plot points in this volume, I gotta talk about the big twist I mentioned in my Volume 1 review.

When we last left our protagonist Yorino, sheโ€™d discovered that the kaiju attacking the walls between their world and ours were in fact spiritually connected to a person in the human world. In other words, every time Yorino or another bouhekishi soldier kills a kaiju, someone dies. Despite knowing this, Yorino powers ahead in her goal of putting a stop to the attacks once and for all. Sheโ€™s willing to โ€œdescend into hell togetherโ€ with her partner, Captain Youko.

Right out of the gate, Volume 2โ€™s plot is much better than the first. Whereas Volume 1 felt like a kaiju-sized pile of setup, with exposition being dumped left and right and characters not being given much of a chance to shine, the opposite (for the most part) is true here. A lot happens in this volume. Like, a LOT. New characters are introduced, relationships are deepened, new plot elements are revealed, etc. We also finally get a glimpse at some human villains working behind the scenes. One could potentially argue that too much happens in this volume, resulting in breakneck pacing that doesnโ€™t give readers much time to digest everything. However, Iโ€™d argue that it makes sure the story is never boring. I finished the entire thing in one sitting, always eager to see what would happen on the next page.

Volume 2 also does a good job of raising the stakes. Ever since the Kaiju-Human connection was introduced, I knew it would result in more heartbreak for Yorino. Lo and behold, a routine kaiju takedown results in one of Yorinoโ€™s school friends dying. While it does relegate said friends to more plot devices than actual characters, they do their job rather well. Not only does their death, combined with Harukaโ€™s death from Volume 1, reveal that Yorino is being directly targeted by the villains, but it also gives the sense that no one is safe in this world. Seeing Yorino grow closer with Youko has me now fearing for Youkoโ€™s safety as well. And it was at this point that I realized somethingโ€ฆ I was actually starting to care.

Yes, this manga is still a guilty pleasure as many elements of it are problematic and completely ludicrous. As such, I canโ€™t say that everyone will grow invested as I have. But I can say that what started as a mindless yuri action romp with distracting male gaze has become something that feels like it has genuine effort and passion put into it.

Speaking of caring, the characters (at least the main duo) are given some decent development. Yorino continues to have more trauma piled onto her with the death of another person she was close to, instead of just more random citizens. The scene where she goes to school the day after the fight only to find her classmate in tears is a genuine gut-punch. As for Youko, the volume starts with an entire chapter dedicated to her backstory and how she killed her own sister through a kaiju. Sheโ€™s definitely the more interesting of the two leads as itโ€™s not always clear how sheโ€™s feeling. It almost seems as if sheโ€™s accepted her past demons and become completely numb to them, and now she simply goes with the flow and doesnโ€™t allow herself to feel anything beyond surface-level joy, anger, or other such emotions. Okay, maybe Iโ€™m reading a bit too much into it, but it could explain why sheโ€™s so desperate to protect Yorino. A scene where she has to persuade Yorino to mourn her friendโ€™s death, saying โ€œCrying is what keeps you from losing your heart,โ€ reads to me as her trying to prevent Yorino from becoming like her.

There are a few other characters of note this time around, but not nearly as much to say about them. Yorino and Youko get two new bouhekishi partners in the form of Rina Kitamura and Ryouka Manabe. Rina crushes hard on Yorino like a typical tsundere, which some may find endearing, but she can also be rather creepy and borderline stalker-ish, as she enjoys reviewing Yorinoโ€™s combat footage and getting off to it (did I mention this manga was made by a hentai artist?). Ryouka has very little going for her, aside from occasionally teasing Rina about her crush on Yorino.

The artstyle pretty much carries over from Volume 1 in every way. The girls all still suffer from absurd proportions, impractical combat outfits, and in-your-face camera angles. Of course, as mentioned above, weโ€™re stepping into hard NSFW territory now with Rina pleasuring herself to Yorino. This is not helped at all by character bios inserted between chapters that remind you these girls are in their teens. Bleh. However, what continues to impress me about the art unironically are the action scenes. I think I can safely say that semelparous has hands-down the best action Iโ€™ve seen in any yuri manga (which isnโ€™t saying much given the lack of action yuri, but still). Ogino Jun truly understands the power of โ€œwind-up and follow-throughโ€; every punch thrown and sword swung is preceded by a panel of the kaiju or bouheksihi rearing back for the strike, which makes the force of the resulting impact that much more felt. That, in tandem with the destruction that follows the combatantsโ€™ strikes, makes the fights truly feel like clashes between colossal monsters and superpowered humans.

Finally, we have the yuri content, and Iโ€™m pleased to report that itโ€™s yet another step forward. The leadsโ€™ relationship in Volume 1 was cute, but it was mostly just Youko teasing and Yorino getting either annoyed or flustered. Here, the two support each other not only in combat but emotionally. Youko wants Yorino to live a normal life and not be consumed by her mission to defeat the kaiju, and thus encourages her to spend time with friends. Sheโ€™s also the first person Yorino shows a vulnerable side to, such as in the aforementioned scene where she tells her itโ€™s okay to cry. It all culminates in their first kiss and declaration of love, and itโ€™s honestly very heartfelt and adorable. After that, they share plenty more cute and flirty moments, including another shower scene (still a hentai artist). Yorino questioning whether Youko truly loves her, only for the Bouhekishi Captain to proudly declare sheโ€™s totally her type and would love to have sex with her admittedly put a stupid grin on my face.

 

Ratings

Art – 7 (again, when discounting the ridiculous proportions. 5 when counting them)
Story – 6 (a lot more going on and thus never boring, but still very nonsensical and can feel rushed in places)
Characters – 6 (the leads get more development, but the new additions are fairly flat so far)
Service – 10 (still for all the wrong reasons, only now weโ€™re entering NSFW territory)
Yuri – 9 (seriously, what the heck is this sweet and healthy dynamic doing in my dumb ecchi action series???)

Overall – 6 (If this were my personal opinion Iโ€™d give it a 7, but I have to be fair. While several aspects are improved from Volume 1, there are still things that readers may find uncomfortable and impossible to look past)


One last noteโ€“ as of writing this, semelparous is still on hiatus due to Ogino Jun undergoing medical treatment. Opinions on the manga aside, please wish Jun-sensei good health and a swift recovery.

Erica here: Thank you so much for this review. semelparous Volume 2 by Ogino Jun is out now from out from Seven Seas, available on Amazon, Bookwalker, RightStuf or wherever you get your manga. Volume 3 will be on sale this summer (Amazon, RightStuf).





Sempai, Oishii desuka? Volume 1 (ๅ…ˆ่ผฉใ€็พŽๅ‘ณใ—ใ„ใงใ™ใ‹?)

May 19th, 2022

Miho loves food. She happily eats large bowls of rice with a big smile. But, back in high school, a schoolmate told her it wasn’t really feminine to eat so much or with so much gusto. That hasn’t stopped Miho, but she does prefer to eat alone these days.

A college friend wants to meet Miho’s boyfriend before a group date and Miho is in a bind. She usually brings her brother to these things to stave off both answering questions about not having a boyfriend from the girls and advances from the guys. But her brother can’t make it, so he’s sending a substitute…who turns out to be beautiful woman, Mori-sempai. Moris one of those people who is completely comfortable with herself and jumps right in as Miho’s “lover.” But Miho is much less comfortable with the kind of skinship Mori-sempai seems to favor. When Mori-sempai shares that she’s seen Miho eating and everything seems so delicious, Miho invites Mori to make some food together.

When I heard about Sempai, Oishii desuka? Volume 1 (ๅ…ˆ่ผฉใ€็พŽๅ‘ณใ—ใ„ใงใ™ใ‹?) which combines three things I really like –  Yuri, food and Mikanuji’s art and characters –  I was really excited to read this volume. Now that I have read it, I can definitely recommend it with some significant reservations.

Miho is a well-conceived character. She’s awkward in a very relatable way; hyper-focused on things she finds relaxing and fun, and unsure and often uncomfortable outside those situations. I think I and nearly everyone I know fits that pattern. She really can’t read Mori and Mori isn’t really being entirely upfront…a fact that she admits to Miho. Miho’s really cute. Her reason for not going out with a girl who confessed her feelings was totally in character…and Mori agrees. ^_^

Mori’s the deep waters here. On the surface she’s perfect. However, she regularly violates Miho’s boundaries, not with malice, but she still does it. This is the reservation in my recommendation. If you are made uncomfortable by a story in which boundaries are ignored, this may very well distress you, because it did begin to distress me. I found it a little much. Perhaps read as a monthly serial it would be more tolerable than in one sitting.  As the volume progresses, we see – and Mori mentions –  that she has some secrets.

One wonders if this story about food and Yuri doesn’t have a third layer about…something…beneath the surface. I could conjecture, but I don’t want to make the book about something it’s not about. I just have a gut feeling.

Lastly – the food parts aren’t quite recipes, but they’ll certainly stimulate the appetite and imagination, especially if you enjoy Japanese food. And of course Mikanuji-sensei’s art is quite cute.

Ratings: 

Art – 8
Characters – 8 
Story – 7
Service – Mori getting too close too often is problematic rather than salacious
Yuri – Beyond the premise, let’s give it a 4

Overall – 7  

I can see this story doing some good things and equally, I can see it cutting corners. I hope as it develops it goes the former route. I’m really hoping Miho and Mori grow a bit more in synch and work through their baggage together.