Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – April 30, 2022

April 30th, 2022

Yuri Literature

Mark Your Calendars! By Your Side: The First 100 Years of Yuri Anime and Manga pre-orders officially open up on May 2! I’ll launch a page on the Yuricon Store with links for it in print and digitally on Bookshop.org, Barnes & Noble, Amazon and digitally directly from the publisher. 

Okazu patrons and Pixiv fans will be eligible for a signed custom bookplates, with original art by Rica Takashima, with proof of pre-order. These have to be limited, my hands aren’t very functional, sorry.)

20 years in the making, By Your Side is the first of it’s kind  – a look at Yuri history, key series, trends, events and changes of the newest genre of anime and manga. Because of the way the book industry works – pre-orders make a huge difference, especially direct from book stores. My publisher Journey Press has connections with independent bookstores around the world, take a look and see if there is one near you!

 

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Rica Takashima will be celebrating the release of this book with an art exhibit with Beyond New Borders 2020-2022 in Fukuoka, Japan in May. She will be exhibiting her art for Phryne and Anise magazines and will be including her cover art for By Your Side, which she has titled 100 Years of Yuri and 200 Years of Yuri. Okazu Patrons and Pixiv Fans can purchase limited edition signed and numbered prints of this art!

 

Sailor Moon News

We finally have news of the final arc of Sailor Moon! Sailor Moon Cosmos will be a two-part movie release, for the 30th anniversary of the series! Check out Kim Morrisy’s article on ANN for details.

Don’t miss the (Japanese only) stream of the Sailor Moon 30th anniversary event, while you’re at it! Once again Kim Morrisy has the scoop on ANN.

In addition, Takeuchi Naoko’s landmark work is getting a museum exhibit at Tokyo’s Roppongi Museum. The Sailor Moon Museum exhibit will have three “phases” and runs from July 1-December 30, 2022. Kim Morrisy is our go-to for all our Sailor Moon news. ^_^

Support Okazu on Pixiv Fanbox!

 

Yuri Manga

Ballroom dancing Yuri manga Odoriba ni Skirt ga Naru, Volume 2 (踊り場にスカートが鳴る) is now out! I love this series.

June 2022 issue of Comic Yuri Hime (コミック百合姫2022年6月号) will be the final chapter of Kaketa Tsuki to Donuts. Sigh.

Sasayakuyouni Koi wo Utau, Volume 6 (ささやくように恋を唄う) is available for some brain-cleansingly sweet Yuri. ^_^

Lilyka is releasing a Yuri artbook called Kiss & Hug, by Hoshizoranshita.

 

 

Games and Visual Novels

Via Twitter, ebihime announce Salome’s Kiss, a Yuri VN set in the Victorian era, featuring “cute girls, suffering, and cute girls who suffer.” Available now on Steam and Itch.io. The art looks fantastic.

Super vaguely Yuri adjacent, but what the hell, Queens’ Blade Limit Break battle game is now available on G123.

Studio Élan invites you to their first Élan Festival, celebrating LGBT+ visual novels! Join them on their Studio Élan YouTube Channel, May 14th at 4PM Pacific US time for Yuri VN announcements!

Via YNN Correspondent Youko on Twitter, SukeraSomero’s OshiRabu Yuri VN has launched on Nintendo Switch in four languages! Click the link for SiliconEra’s article.

One last item, via Japanese crowdfunding site Campfire, Yuri VN Summer Love Begins With a Lie (嘘から始まる恋の夏) will be released fully voiced with a Japanese cast. I’m hoping we’ll see this released in English, it looks pretty good.

 

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Other News

Via Comic Natalie, Maria-sama ga Miteru is getting a new collaboration cafe, the Yamayurikai Cafe, at Stella Map Cafe in Akihabara, from May 17 – May 31. Reserve your spots today (and take pictures if you’re going. I need to live vicariously.)

 

Thanks to our Okazu Patrons and Fans who make the YNN weekly report possible! Support us on Patreon to help us give Guest Reviewers a raise and to help us support Yuri creators!

Become a YNN Correspondent: Contact Us with any Yuri-related news you want to share and be part of the Yuri Network. ^_^



The Executioner and Her Way of Life Anime

April 29th, 2022

We’ve been following the Executioner and Her Way of Life Light Novels here on Okazu. (Volume 1 | Volume 2 | Volume 3) They are not bad, with a few features that make them worth continuing to read, despite the grotesquery that is sprinkled liberally throughout. Among these are the world-building, especially the magic, and a few of the characters.

And now we have an anime for the series. How does The Executioner and Her Way of Life anime hold up to the LNs?  I think they improve upon them. But let’s start from the beginning.

Menou is an “executioner,” a priestess tasked with eliminating “Lost Ones,” people who enter her world from Japan. She is assigned to kill Lost One Akari, who appears to wield the Pure Concept of Time, and thus cannot be killed. Menou is bringing her to the capital for the leader of the Faust, her religious order. Menou is assisted by her junior, Momo, who is passionately and possessively in love with Menou.

So let’s dig into the anime – what is working and what isn’t?

The animation is very decent. More so that I felt the story deserved, frankly. The art in the LNS is well beyond weak and the world itself is described so poorly that I imagined it all a washed shade of sepia, as I read. The bright colors and thriving town was a pleasant surprise. The train design in the anime was a nice fantasy Deco that lifted the whole of the world quite considerably. I was imagining medieval construction in dull one-note tones, not fantasy steampunk. I’m glad to be wrong. The art in the LNs is really bad, Part 2:  Bodies are strangely proportioned flesh bags in clothes that are sacks with no structural integrity. Here the animators seem to have grokked the concept of bras, which do not exist in the LNS.

Menou herself is intriguing, rather than likable; her relationship to Akari has been hinted at in a half dozen ways, including the spoileriest possible way in the opening sequence. Momo, while still annoying in the anime is surprisingly more tolerable and when she ends up fighting the Knight Mage Princess Asuna, become wholly tolerable. I like Asuna, and frankly, think she’s good for Momo. I approve of Asuna x Momo shipping. ^_^

I miss the expositions about the magic, but the lack of lectures makes the whole thing feel more natural, less tacked on. And I do like that Priestesses connect with their magic through the scriptures.

The plot is zippy, as it has to be, with somewhat greater focus on the action scenes than the guro, which is, IMO, a win for watchers.

What isn’t working? Sadly, with the faster pacing and decent animation, the plot has become less able to hold up it’s side of the bargain. By Episode 4 if you can’t guess what is going on in the main plot, you’re not paying attention. And the cool subplot that revealed itself in Volume 4 of the LNs is shoved pretty far up our nose here. The end result is that I don’t *want* to take time to develop the initial plot. I’d kind of like it out of the way, so we can get on with things. I’m a little skeptical of jaded executioners who can’t see the giant obvious thing right in front of them.

Ratings:

Art – 8, with flashes of 9
Story – 6 A tad weak, but not bad
Characters – 7
Service – Yes, of course, because women’s bodies are a mystery
Yuri – Hrm, Momo’s obsession with Menou isn’t as interesting as the rest of the possibilities

Overall – 7

Is this worth watching? I think so. The guro is toned way the heck down (at least by Ep. 4, that may be subject to change, I have yet to watch Ep. 5), the plot zips along, the scenery is pleasant,.  If you don’t want to read the first volume (or two, not sure how far the anime will go) this is not a bad place to begin and decide if the LNs are for you. If you think you like it, then you can pick up after the anime and let the plot run ahead.

The Executioner and Her Way of Life is streaming on HIDIVE.



Comic Yuri Hime May 2022 (コミック百合姫2022年5月号)

April 28th, 2022

Comic Yuri Hime May 2022 (コミック百合姫2022年5月号) had a few great zOMG moments, so let’s dig right in!

“Sasayakuyouni Koi wo Utau” by Takeshima Eku relaxes into festival mode, with yukata, and fireworks and kisses.  This series is just so darn sweet, it hurts my teeth, but I’m hooked. ^_^

“Watashi no Oshi h Akuyaku Reijou.” is hard this (and next) month, as we face Lene’s banishment. The next chapter is gonna be really rough. At last, we meet Salas Lilium….and, okay, he’s pretty. We’re going to see a lot more of him as the story progresses. da-da-dummmmmm~~~

OMFG, Miman’s “Watashi no Yuri ha Oshigoto desu!” has done something I could never have expected. Holy shizzballs. The whole cafe is currently dancing to Youko’s tune and has no idea. I can’t see the climax here, but I’m on the edge of my seat for it. Poor Sumika. Poor Nene. Poor Kanako. I hope they gang up and defeat the evil that threatens to tear them apart.

Both of Usui Shio’s stories take leaps forward…

As “Kaketa Tsuki to Donuts” heads towards it’s climax, Hinako has the first real conversation with her mother that she’s probably ever had. It’s a key moment, and they both come through it just fine. It’s the “look Mom, I like someone and that someone is a woman…” talk, which isn’t quite coming out, but is darn close. Now all we need is Asahi to be honest with herself…and the two of them to share some realtalk.

In “Onna Tomodachi to Kekkonshitemita” Kurumi and Ruriko spend the day together deepening their bonds and you know what? It was really nice. I could use more of this…a lot more of this.

Ratings:

Overall – 8

As always there are stories I don’t read and stories I read that I haven’t mentioned, but all of the ones mentioned are doing some pretty interesting things and had a couple of yowza moments!

The June issue is already available and I am so looking forward to it. ^_^



Sex Ed 120%, Volume 3

April 27th, 2022

Sex Ed 120% has been a heck of a ride. Informative and highly whimsical, it’s provided a lot of solid information and fair amount of utterly useless information side by side, with a wacky sense of timing and humor that is not actually inappropriate for teenagers, but also would never happen in the real world. I’ve reviewed Volume 1 and Volume 2 previously on Okazu.

Clearly writer Kikiki Tataki knew this series was coming to an end here in Sex Ed 120%, Volume 3, because in this volume, two major school year milestones are squeezed in order to make room for the plot we all had hoped we’d get…Tsuji-sensei’s confession to Nakazawa-sensei.

I’m going to be honest, while it seemed pretty obvious that this relationship was being set up, I was still quite surprised when the narrative decided to center it. And while it was a bit on the nose, it gave the characters the chance to delve into bisexuality in a way that might have otherwise felt shoved into the school festival storyline.

Overall, I actually loved the festival story and the bulletin board of supportive messages. I had the feeling of “this is the world I want to be in” that I wish more manga would reach for. I’m tired of watching characters swim against the tide of sexism, homophobia, transphobia and the like, and am ready for stories that imagine a world in which students worldwide can talk openly about their lives. For that, Sex Education 120% is a pretty fun story that does some important things in an impossibly goofy way.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 9
Characters – 10
Service –  1 A very teeny bit of Tsuji-sensei’s imagination running away with her, but in a mostly harmless way.
Queer – 10

Overall – 9

Sex Ed 120%, Volume 3, written by Kikiki Tataki, with art by Hotomura, is out from Yen Press, available on Amazon, RightStuf and Bookwalker (which is having a sitewide sale right now, just *after* I bought this. My timing is impeccable. ^_^;)



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

April 25th, 2022

Anisphia is a very unusual princess. Awakened to knowledge from a life in our world, she has a unique relationship to the magic of her current world. While she has magical potential, she cannot manifest it at all. Instead she turns her energy to making technological uses for magic. And now, she has an idea, but she needs someone to test it out for her. In The Magical Revolution of the Reincarnated Princess and the Genius Young Lady, Anisphia gets her wish.

Euphyllia is a young woman who has spent her entire life training to be Queen. Poised, educated and a genius with magic, she is the perfect vision of royalty…until her engagement is dissolved by her fiance in a rather abrupt and public manner. Shunned and unwelcome, Euphyllia has no idea what to do…when Anisphia comes sailing into the hall on her magic broom, sizes up the situation and carries Euphyllia off to be her assistant.

Last autumn I ran out and grabbed the first Japanese manga volume of Tensei Oujo to Tensai Reijou no Mahou Kakumei (転生王女と天才令嬢の魔法革命) to get a jump on the English language edition of the Light Novel. Sadly, I was left feeling uninspired by that first volume. It was…all right. But, having now read the Light Novel, I’m willing to reconsider.

Anisphia is a delight. Forthright, intelligent, positive, she fills the pages of the Light Novel in a way that the manga didn’t quite give her space for. Her interest in Euphyllia is charming and, while not innocent, per se, isn’t creepy at all. It’s very much as if she’s trying to not fall in love with Euphyllia too hard or too fast, specifically to give the other girl room to have time to deal with her own emotions.

Because the LN takes the story past Volume 1 of the manga, we get to leave behind the too-much-shouting that filled up the manga and made it hard for me to engage with the story. Instead we spend more time with Anisphia and learn about her history, her skills, her desires and her achievements,  that makes her a very appealing person. Euphyllia, having literally been carried off by her, is overwhelmed…understandably so. As a princess, Anisphia has proclivities in dress and demeanor more suited to a woman of our world. A woman-loving woman, in fact. Anisphia is so daring and brave that it’s really quite impossible to not like her, as Euphyllia finds out, as she is swept up in the princess’ plans.

And that, in a nutshell, is what makes this book fun to read. You want to know what the grand experiment is and how Euphyllia can help Anisphia and you cheer for them both as they launch themselves into a grand adventure. As I said, now I’m kind of interested in reading more of the manga to see what happens.

If there is one sour note, however, it has to be the art. Anisphia is described well – she’s strong (we know because she literally throws Euphyllia over her shoulder to carry her off) , favors dress that is adapted from what a knight wears, she does not like dresses, although she wears a short skirt over her pants. And yet, what we are given in the art is an infantile imp…in a magical girl costume. My teeth ground every time I had to look at this moe infantilization of what should and could have been a great girl prince. Grrrr.  Thankfully, as this is a Light Novel, we’re not forced to look at that too often, so I was free to imagine Anisphia with arms like Gideon Nav.  ^_^ To be petty, the scene in which Anisphia shows off her Mana Sword, I said to the art “Tell me you have never seen a sword without telling me you have never seen a sword.”

The originating scenario is not at all resolved and we end the book having no idea why Euphyllia was canceled, (although I have created a scenario to explain it and I wonder how close I am,) so we’ll have to wait for future volumes.

Ratings:

Art – 5 It’s okay, but wtf is it illustrating? Not this story
Story – 8 Threatens to be heavy, but veers hard away from doing so
Characters – 8 Anisphia carries more than just Euphyllia away. The whole story rests on her
Service – 2 Less than the manga
Yuri – 6 More than the manga. This sets up Euphyllia and Anisphia as a pair that could become a great couple

Overall – 7 with a lot of room to grow.

For a cute, low-tension book, with a couple you want to live happily ever after  – perhaps in another world, where women wear pants – this is a nice read with some decent visuals and a dash of grand adventure.

Fine work by the team at Yen Press!

Note: One day later, I am listening to The Lesbian Historical Motif Podcast on the idea of cross-dressing narrative as a “portal fantasy” and I thought, art aside, that this is exactly what we have here. Anisphia’s transgressive nature allows Euphylia access to another world. ^_^