Maou to Yuri, Volume 1 (魔王と百合)

November 22nd, 2022

In my years of randomly picking up manga to read, and discovering an entire world of entertaining weirdness, I would like to shout out to MFC comics, which, while frequently very full of tits and ass, also has been the purveyor of delightfully strange manga. Today’s book, Maou to Yuri, Volume 1 (魔王と百合) is one of those.

The Demon King (Maou is a title, not a name, but I will use it going forward as her name for convenience) is a young woman. Her grandfather was known across the land as a formidable and terrifying demon lord who was at war with the humans. Her father, however, brokered a peace. Now she has become the demon ruler and, frankly has zero interest in war. Asking her staff what she can do to cement peace between the demons and the humans, one idea is that she marry a human wife. Maou is not really the marrying type, but for peace and prosperity, she’ll do it. After her staff vets the applicants, Maou is left with five choices: A busty Princess Knight, a righteous and energetic (and always hungry) Hero, a Wizard, who is still behind on the peace thing and is trying to marry and/or kill Maou, a sexy Witch, and a Maid in the castle who is kind to Maou and whom she obviously likes. 

What follows is a stupid sitcom of fantasy elements, dorks trying to date and random silliness. Maou’s advisor suggests a day on the town during which Maou would choose a gift that suits each one, that devolves into chaos when the food the Hero picks fights back.

As a comedy, this was goofy from beginning to end. The maid is the only one with a serious backstory and you’re gonna root for her and Maou to get together for obvious reasons. But my favorite character was a wolf-headed demon soldier, whose role is come in shouting things like “Demon Lord, a Wizard is at the gate to marry you and demanding your death in revenge for her grandfather!” I loved that guy.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 7
Characters – 6 They serve a function and it isn’t to further the plot
Service – 4
Yuri – 3

Overall – 7



The Yuri View From Anime NYC

November 21st, 2022

Typically, I would be writing an event report for today, telling you about all the great stuff I did, but this year, for the first time in almost a decade, I was behind a table the whole time and saw almost nothing of the actual event. But there’s a fair chunk of Yuri news out of AnimeNYC, so I thought I’d run those down for you in short order.

First of all, thanks very much to AnimeNYC for inviting me and all of you who came by and bought copies of By Your Side: The First 100 Years of Yuri Anime And Manga! And thanks to those who brought your copy to be signed. That was fun. ^_^

Zack Davisson commented that it was ballsy that I had a pre-printed sold-out sign…but I knew you folks could do it. ^_^ It was a blast hanging with him and paneling with Zack and Abby Denson.

Secondly, thanks to my next door neighbors in the artist alley, the world-class Patabot. I totally picked up a “In the name of the Moon, I will fuck you up!” t-shirt, but they also have awesome pins and stickers. Do check them out. Trust me, you’ll love them!

So let’s get on to the good stuff.

First thing I saw was Global Bookwalker’s TATESC  vertical scrolling service is launching with, among other titles, Lilies, by Yuto Komiya. The first chapter can be downloaded for free.

HIDIVE had this banner for The Executioner And Her Way Of Life, which was nice to see. Sorry for the unedited images but I have some Thai Yuri to watch and no patience with formatting today. ^_^

The Gundam installation included a lovely display of the mobile suits and Suletta from The Witch From Mercury…and a giant Aerial model!

Which, by the way is why I have decided that, while I may buy Miorine and Suletta figuarts, I won’t be getting Aerial. After looking at so many Gundam models I realize they all look exactly the same to me. Don’t @ me. ^_^

News at Anime NYC was fantastic!

Crunchyroll is going to be streaming Yuri Is My Job! anime in spring 2023. Looking forward to seeing how this does. It’ll be funny, but will it work?

Kodansha licensed one of my favorite series right now, Kuzushiro’s Amayo no Tsuki as The Moon on a Rainy Night. (image from OASG on Twitter.) I have been waiting on this announcement for a while. You can read my reviews of Volume 1, Volume 2 and Volume 3 here on Okazu. I think this is an outstanding series and I’m thrilled we will get it in English.

I thought I’d wrap this up with a reminder that By Your Side: The First 100 Years of Yuri Anime And Manga is lesbian approved and you should totally get it. ^_^

I’ve spent the last week reading my head off, so more reviews to come this week!



Sailor Moon Sparkling Water Review – Inner Senshi Edition

November 20th, 2022

I’m sure I was not alone in my enthusiasm/skepticism when Taiwanese brand Ocean Bomb launched a collaboration of flavored sparkling water with the Sailor Moon franchise. Because I am an otaku, of course it was my duty to both acquire and consume these. I found the first several at my local Mitsuwa marketplace, but the remainder were obtained online from Yami. I found them to be a perfectly fine provider of random items from Japan. The prices were fine and everything came in good time and safely packaged. I am not an affiliate, but links will lead there.

In chatting about them on the Okazu Discord, it was decided that it was likewise my obligation to review them. And here we are. As I am spending my last day at Anime NYC doing panels and selling books,  here for your enjoyment is my review of the first 6 Sailor Moon sparkling water flavors from Ocean Bomb from worst to best.  This is – obviously – in my opinion. Your tastebuds may vary.

 

#6 Sailor Chibi-Moon / Lychee Flavor

Of course, you’re saying. You loathe Chibi-Usa, Erica. But no!  That’s not it! I like lychee.

This was not lychee. There was maybe a lychee flavoring used, but the overwhelming flavor and scent was rose. This was straight-up like trying to drink your great-aunt’s perfume in soda form. Rose water soda. Honestly, this was the only one that was wholly undrinkable.

I guess using a rose floral scent was, like, “look how clever we are,” as a concept, but bleeeaaaarrrgh as a flavor.  It didn’t even smell that nice.

0/10

 

 

#5 Sailor Venus / Mango Flavor

What a disappointment. We are huge Minako fans in this house. She’s a got great chaotic bisexual energy that we adore. And mango! How can you ruin mango?

Friends, they ruined mango. This one tasted like laundry detergent.

When I popped it open, it instantly smelled like a new age store…you know, that sweet incensey-perfumey thing that wafts into all the books and stuff you buy there, so months later, your new Tarot bag still smells like sandalwood and…something? Mango soda should not taste like a New Age store, is all I am saying.

This was my biggest disappointment. I had hopes for mango. But you’ll see that almost all of these were ruined by a floral overtone that choked the life out of the fruit.

When we were discussing the sodas, my wife joked that Minako should be cheese flavored. By the time I finished this can, I thought it probably would have been better cheese flavored.

4/10

 

#4 Sailor Mars / Strawberry Flavor

So…strawberry soda. Well kind of know where that’s going. It’s a “kiddie” flavor.

And, indeed, this tasted like the kind of Captain Crunch Crunch Berries I ate as a kid, which were all pink and stained the milk pink and tasted – as I know now – of “strawberry flavor.” By the end of the can, the taste was something between Crunch Berry and strawberry syrup that goes over a Japanese strawberry parfait, with a floral scent that lost out to the strawberry.

It wasn’t terrible, but I wouldn’t want more and it was terrible with a cheeseburger. ^_^

 

5/10

 

 

#3 Sailor Mercury / Pear Flavor

This was the second one I tried and while I would have liked it to be less floral and more fruity, I thought this one wasn’t bad.

Because it was pear, there was that weird flatness to the the flavor that pear flavoring has that real pears do not, unless they are a cider, and then you get that flatness, as well.

Again, this would have been better but for the floral overtone that made it hard to enjoy and the abundance of HCFS which made it too sweet, as well, something that they all shared.

This and the strawberry are pretty much tied in the middle. They could have been better, but they weren’t terrible. Except they were all kind of terrible. ^_^;

5/10

 

#2 Sailor Jupiter / Cucumber Flavor

Yep, you read that right. Cucumber. So, this is totally YMMV. I like cucumber water. I find it refreshing. I…well, I just really like cucumbers pretty much any way they are served to me. So I was game for this and…it might have been really good, only it wasn’t.

The floral scent and the high-fructose corn syrup were at odds with the cucumber flavor. It made for a weird, but not intolerable combo, like cream soda with a cucumber aftertaste. My wife described it as tasting like a “face mask.”

Overall, I’d say do this one again, not sweet and it might actually be pretty good.

Which brings us to the winner…

 

6/10

 

#1 Sailor Moon / Pomelo Flavor

All the things that worked against the others…the floral scent, the too-sweetness…actually worked okay for this. Pomelo is a ridiculous fruit, that is 45% pith and never worth the effort of eating it.

As a flavor, it’s a sharp, soury citrus that worked well for a sweetened sparkling water. Of all of them, I’d drink this one again…if I was required to. On the whole, I’d rather have something else.

7/10

 

 

 

Thank you for joining me for today’s review. There are, apparently, Sailor Uranus (pineapple) and Neptune (kiwi) sparkling waters that are available in Taiwan, so as soon as I get a hold of them, I’ll be glad to share my impressions. ^_^



Join me at Anime NYC!

November 17th, 2022

This weekend, I will be a guest at Anime NYC at Javits Convention Center, NYC from Friday, November 18-Sunday, November 20.

I’ll be signing copies of By Your Side, the First 100 Years of Yuri Anime and Manga – the first 20 people to buy a copy at Anime NYC will get one of two mini-badges designs featuring our cover couples. ^_^ Find me at Table D04 in the Artist Alley.

Look for me in the Artist’s Alley at Table D04, next to my pal Zack Davission who is also going to be selling his fantastic books. On Sunday, I’ll be participating in two panels:

Defending Manga, 11:00 am11:45 on the Community Stage (River Pavilion) with the Manga in Libraries gang

Writing About Japan, 1:30 pm2:30 in Panel Room 3 (1E16) with Zack and Abby Denson

 

It’s going to be loads of fun. Drop by and say hello!



The Summer You Were There, Volume 1, Guest Review by Eleanor W

November 16th, 2022

It’s Guest Review Wednesday here on Okazu and I am so delighted to welcome back Eleanor once again. Today she’s going to take a look at Yuama’s dramatic school life series. Take it away, Eleanor, and I’ll be back at the end. 
It’s nice to be back again. This is my 3rd review for Okazu, and I’m finally reviewing a manga volume this time. I’ve reviewed the British Museum’s manga exhibition and a yuri visual novel called Perfect Gold. You can find me on Twitter (for now) @st_owly and the same on Instagram.

Having loved the author’s previous work The Girl I Want Is So Handsome, I was excited to check out their new series, The Summer You Were There, Volume 1. First thing to note is that Seven Seas have done a lovely job on the cover of the English release. I really like the water bubbles and the falling paper in the background of the illustration, and the title itself is embossed which is a nice touch. Unfortunately, the contents don’t really hold up so well in comparison. I’m not the biggest fan of “let’s pretend to date each other, teehee” stories at the best of times, and this one hasn’t exactly converted me.

The story starts like this: your typical bookworm (Shizuku) encounters a popular girl (Kaori) who for some unknown reason, wants to date her. Kaori finds Shizuku’s super secret discarded novel manuscript which no one is ever supposed to read (why would you throw it in the bin at school then??) so of course the two of them start “dating” because Kaori strong arms Shizuku into it, and the excuse is “I want to help you research material for your next story.”

“If you want to make your ‘dying of high school manga disease’ plotline land emotionally, maybe don’t telegraph it with the subtlety of a boot to the head.” I couldn’t have put this better myself, thank you Toukochan on the Okazu Discord server for letting me use this magnificent line. I didn’t find either of them particularly endearing individually, and by the end of the book I still didn’t particularly care for them as a couple either.

Having said that, chapter 3 was by far my favourite of the book. The girls end up going to the library together and actually start genuinely bonding over favourite books and authors. I wish more of the book had been like this, and I hope there’s more of this going forward. The obligatory yuri aquarium date in the next 2 chapters just didn’t land the same way. 

I would like to know more about Kaori’s motivations and why she wants to date Shizuku. At the end of the book Shizuku confesses something big to her, and she says she already knows everything. I suspect I know exactly where this is heading, I’ll see if I’m right in the next volume. 

I hope the characters and their relationship will improve going forward, and the revelation at the end does mean I will pick up the next volume but based on this volume alone, if I wanted a popular x shy girl romance I’d just go and read Girl Friends again. 

Ratings:

Art – 7. Perfectly pleasant, and you can clearly see the improvement from The Girl I Want Is So Handsome, although I don’t like Shizuku’s hairstyle. Something about it just bothers me. The cover illustration is lovely. 

Story – 5. It’s been done better before. 

Characters – 6. Kaori has definite potential. Shizuku does too. I really hope they both fulfill it.  

Yuri – 2.  It’s 2 girls “dating”, but I wouldn’t call this a lesbian romance. 

Service – Non existent, thankfully.

Boot to the head – 10. All the emotional subtlety of. 

Overall – 6. Stick to writing comedy, sensei.

 

Erica here: Well…yes. I mean, ouch, but yes. I’ve been reading this chapter after chapter in Comic Yuri Hime, and it is…all right. I will say that when it stops being overdramatic about small things there are good moments, but tbh, this series is a generic live-action drama, with hysterics for no reason and the serious things glossed over. The relationship does get better, but the story will not get out of it’s own way, even volumes later.

If you are a sucker for tearful live-action “someone is dying but we can’t tell, because reasons” story, you’ll probably love this. If it is your thing, Volume 2 will be out in December, 2022! Thanks Eleanor for a great review. ^_^