I Want To Love You Till Your Dying Day, Volume 1

February 27th, 2025

In front of a ruined wall and a bright blue sky two girl in blue Japanese-style school uniforms hold hands and smile into the camera. The taller girl, with wavy blonde hair has a bandage on one cheek. The smaller girl, with long, lush punk hair flying in the breeze, holds a wildflower in her hand.Did you read The Promised Neverland and think “I wish this had more yuri?” If so, I Want To Love You Till Your Dying Day, Volume 1 might just be the series for you. Newly available in English from Kodansha USA; “Love blossoms amid bloodshed in a new enthralling dystopian yuri manga.” This series began in the printed Comic Yuri Hime magazine in 2018 but has subsequently switched to an online serialisation via the Yuri Hime Pixiv site. 8 volumes are currently available in Japan, Kodansha are aiming to release the first 5 volumes in English by October this year.

Content warnings: gore, child soldiers including deaths of.

Set in a mysterious orphanage where children born with magical talent are trained as weapons to be used by the military in a war against an unknown enemy, thoroughly average student Sheena wakes up to find her roommate has been killed in battle the previous day. Any short lived excitement about having a room to herself is almost immediately snuffed out when a strange new student arrives. “Mimi” is rumoured to be a secret weapon, immortal and under the supervision of the mysterious school nurse. Now however, she has been assigned to Sheena’s class and is her new roommate. Gone are the days of blending into the background as this curious new student has latched on to Sheena and captured the attention of most of the school as well.

This is very much a volume of exposition. Lots of threads are dangled, but I am interested enough to stick around and see where this is going. Unfortunately, Mimi does precisely nothing for me. I’m not a fan of the naive loli murder machine schoolgirl trope, and she is mentioned to be 10 years old at one point which is just a little on the ick side for me. Sheena is much more interesting to me, and at this point I’m more invested in her since she seems like she might actually die at some point. She clearly struggles with using magic and fighting, and to me that just makes her more real and human than the overpowered 10 year old who can just kill everything in her path with little resistance and a smile on her face. I’m also very interested to learn more about Ari and Seiran, 2 side characters who are implied to be a couple.

Overall, there’s more to like than dislike here. The magic adds a bit of a fantasy twist to the scifi story and hopefully all the threads in this volume will gradually come together as the series progresses. I will be reading the next volume to find out.

Ratings:

Art – 6.5 Perfectly adequate Yuri Hime house style.
Story – 6.5. At the moment, I’m more interested in the scifi than the yuri.
Characters – 5. Mimi is currently the least likeable character for me. I hope her backstory will make her more interesting when it’s revealed later on. And I wish she was older.
Yuri – 2. Some clandestine hand holding between side characters and kisses disguised as CPR/magical revival.
Service – 3. The mystery nurse with gravity defying breasts is as much as we get. Thankfully no Made in Abyss vibes here.

Overall – 6 but with potential.



Yuriten 2025 Osaka Event Report by Bea Baker

February 24th, 2025

Last week, I had the opportunity to go to Yuriten 2025 in Osaka, my first Yuri-themed event in Japan.

I’ve lived here for many years, but most of that time was spent in the Aomori countryside, pining from the sidelines as so many otaku events came and went in the big city. Finally, though, after moving to the Kansai area, I got my chance to see the Yuri fandom up-close and in-person.

Recently, I started my own lesbian game development studio, Yuri Kissaten! We’ve released two games so far and several more to come. So of course I am now honor-bound to go to all LGBTQ+ otaku events in the Kansai area!

Yuriten 2025 was held from February 8-16 in the Shinsaibashi area of Osaka, north of Dotonbori and close to a lot of Namba’s lesbian bars (a very nice touch). This year’s Yuriten was held in Osaka Space, which seems to be a different, and smaller venue than previous years where it was held at Namba Parks.

Osaka street scene. Osaka Yuriten 2025, by B. Baker

Curry and rice platter, with salad and a cup of water, napkin and flatware. Yuriten Osaka 20253, B. Baker.

I went with a friend on February 11th, a national holiday. Osaka was absolutely buzzing with activity, but the area around the event was surprisingly quiet. After curry lunch at a nice little cafe, we went to Osaka Space and descended down the stairs to the basement floor event.

Wire stand with chalkboard sign reading Yuriten in Japanese , decorated with lilies. Yuriten Osaka 20253, B. Baker.

 

Signboard for the Yuriten event, with the same scene rendered as a live photo and an illustration. Two girls in dark school uniforms sit in a window holding hands intimately. Osaka Yuriten 2025, by B. Baker

 

Yuriten definitely felt like a low-key affair. With free entry and a very quiet atmosphere, it was almost like a pop-up museum. High-resolution manga prints for a couple dozen series, a guided path through the space, and a place to write a memo for future guests to look on. Everyone was quiet, almost in reverence to the beauty of fictional lesbianism. I had to whisper to my friend anytime I had a comment.

With how museum-like it felt, I’d honestly have loved an actual exhibit with Yuri genre history and some really old magazines on display. But this is more like a showcase of creators and series past and present–it’s run by Village Vanguard (basically the Hot Topic of Japan), and so the goal is definitely to help boost manga sales in a niche but growing genre.

Cover art and message by Oku Tamaushi, featuring Arisa from Cheerful Amnesia

 

Card drawn by Sal Jiang featuring Hiroko and Ayaka on the cover of "Ayaka is in love with Hiroko" Osaka Yuriten 2025, Bea Baker

Sign card illustrated by Sal Jiang featuring Hiroko and Ayaka from "Ayaka is in Love with Hiroko". Yuriten 2025, Bea Baker

 

 
Cover image for "Even Though We're Adults, by Takako Shimura. Osaka Yuriten 2025, Bea Baker
 
Card drawn by Takako Shimura, featuring Fumi and Akira from Sweet Blue Flowers. Osaka Yuriten 2025, Bea Baker

There were many series on display, some I recognized, and some I had never seen before. That’s part of the appeal of the event, I imagine; see some really cool art from comics you’ve never heard of, or only seen a pic or two online, and finding new series to read through.

Art by Taka Shimura from Sweet Blue Flowers. Osaka Yuriten 2025, Bea Baker
 
Art from Strawberry Panic! Osaka Yuriten 2025, Bea Baker

Art from Strawberry Panic! anime showing Nagisa behind held by Tamao. Yuriten 2025, Bea Baker

Art from Strawberry Panic, showing all the characters of the anime, laying on the grass with their heads towards the center. Osaka Yuriten 2025, Bea Baker

 

It also showcased Strawberry Panic and Aoi Hana, two of the classic Yuri schoolgirl romance anime series of the 2000s. That’s some nice representation! Strawberry Panic was the first Yuri media I ever found, and it hit me in a very bad way to realize that it’s turning twenty years old next year.

Time passes very quickly…

Images of Yuri manga on the wall. Osaka Yuriten 2025, Bea Baker
 
Black and white manga drawings being exhibited at Osaka Yuriten 2025, Bea Baker

Anyway, most everything else was currently running or just-finished manga series firmly in the Yuri genre.

 

Black and white and color drawings exhibited at Osaka Yuriten 2025, Bea Baker

 

Art from Noir anime by Bee Train. Osaka Yuriten 2025, B. Baker

 

I noticed one RPG called Witch & Lily, but practically everything else was manga. It’s fitting for a Village Vanguard event, but I was disappointed to find little love for other mediums, especially games, music, movies, and novels. (Especially games… I’d love to be featured here one day…)

This year also seems sorely lacking in “heavy hitter” series. Compared to previous years like 2019, Yuriten didn’t feature many of the current bestsellers like I’m In Love with the Villainess, How Do We Relationship, or almost anything from Comic Yuri Hime magazine, let alone recent non-romance series with Yuri elements like Witch from Mercury or Dead Dead Demon’s De-De-De-De-Destruction. I understand that series like Love Bullet or The Guy She Was Interested Wasn’t a Guy At All probably became popular too recently to coordinate an appearance, but it felt distinctly like there was something lacking from Yuriten. Like we only got a slice of the fandom, not a full celebration.

Art from Yuri Espoir. Osaka Yuriten 2025, B. Baker

Still, I really appreciate what did show up. The fact that there’s so much popular Yuri out there these days that I’m lamenting what’s missing is a sign of just how many great series are running right now! I just hope Yuriten continues to expand in future years, and hopefully goes to more cities than just Tokyo and Osaka.

 

Art from Boys Who Gild The Lily Must Die? Osaka Yuriten 2025, B. Baker.

 

Art from The Magical Revolution of the Reincarnated Princess and The Genius Young Lady. Osaka Yuriten 2025, B. Baker

Of course, at the end of the mini-exhibit was the gift shop. Lots of exclusive, overpriced items from all your favorite series, and manga for series you want to dive into.

 

 

Yuri goods store Osaka Yuriten 2025, B. Baker
 

Yuri goods at Osaka Yuriten 2025, B. Baker 

Clearfiles and other Yuri goods at Osaka Yuriten 2025, B. Baker
 

Yuri goods on display at Osaka Yuriten 2025, B. Baker

 

 

 

Books and other Yuri goods on sale at Osaka Yuriten 2025, B. Baker
Comic Essay "Parlor" by Fujio on a pile of Yuri goods. Osaka Yuriten 2025, B. Baker.

 

I got me a couple cheap goods, as well as one nonfiction essay manga which stars a butch protagonist (very rare in manga!). I was very tempted to get a manga-branded t-shirt and parade that thing around for years, but I didn’t see any from my favorites.

Yuriten was certainly a fun experience, a free half an hour you can spend observing a slice of the Yuri fandom, and a place for a few exclusive items for smaller series that otherwise may never get any other merch. It made me really wish for bigger, more ambitious events in the future, though, especially something where we can actually meet and talk to other fans. A full Yuricon, perhaps…

(Also, look at this very strange and expensive dress my friend and I found while shopping after the event! Would you wear this to Yuriten?)

Artsy dress with hangining blue and yellow material under a white overpiece. Yuriten Osaka 2025, B. Baker.



Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – February 22, 2025

February 22nd, 2025

In black block letters, YNN Yuri Network News. On the left, in black silhouette, a woman with a broad brim hat and dress stands, a woman in a tight outfit sits against the Y. Art by Mari Kurisato for Okazu

Yuri Anime

Top news this week is the Kadokawa’s confirmation of an anime adaptation for Sumiko Arai’s The Guy She Was Interested in Wasn’t A Guy At AllVolume 2 of the manga is out on EN bookstore shelves – and Kinokuniya is offering a line of original merchandise and pre-order goodies, while Volume 3 is out in Japan and international Kinokuniya is going to be selling some special overseas-only goods for that, as well.

Via YNN Correspondent Burkely Hermann, Jellyfish Can’t Swim In The Night Blu-ray collection is up for pre-order on Sentai Filmworks. Burkely also suggests we keep an eye out for Maebashi Witches, which is coming to Japanese theaters soon. It’s another idol group story, but Burkely says that it focuses on friendship between the characters.

Also on ANN, Crystalynn Hodgkins has the scoop that Aniplex is teasing a new anime with the tagline, “Two girls, motorbikes, travel.” The key visual shows two young women standing next to a bike in Shibuya. I’m in.

 

Yuri Events

Join myself, Mala Kumar and J.D. Glass for an evening of queer joy on March 21, 2025 at the Ripped Bodice in Brooklyn, NY. Tickets are $15 – you get a $15 coupon for a book in return. Get some great books, signed by the authors, and fun talk about the Gift of Queer Love!

The second Queer and Feminist Perspectives on Japanese Popular Cultures symposium has launched it’s call for papers. I *highly* recommend doing something for this event. It’s a great place for independent researchers to speak alongside academic researchers. Last year the presentations were *amazing* and the audience was super engaged, welcoming and fun.  Don’t self-censor – get your research ideas out there. I’m working on two different projects right now (plus new job eating my life, yay,) so can’t put in to present, but I will definitely sign up to attend. Last year was a blast.

Via the official account on X, there will be a Sasayakuyouni Koi wo Utau pop-up in the Atre at Akihabara in April with an Alice in Wonderland theme. (I’m telling you that, because I had to actually read the post to understand what I was looking at. Extra points for Shiho as the Queen of Hearts, though.)

Mark your calendars for Flamecon, August 16-17 in NYC! It’s a great, gay time for comics, games and other pop culture media lovers.

 

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

Yuri Manga

Via YNN Correspondent an overachieving potato, Yuri Navi has announced the results of their Sixth Top Yuri Manga Election. Check out the ranking results and see which ones have you screaming at the screen. (^_^)

Kodansha has announced Sailor Moon Box Set 2, which includes Volume 7-12 of Eternal Sailor Moon and Codename: Sailor V, Volumes 1-2 for an autumn release. I have put a moratorium on any new Sailor Moon manga purchases until someone at Kodansha admits that academic rendering for the Outers’ names looks ridiculous as Ten’ô, Kai’ô, Mei’ô. When someone there just stops doing that, I’ll be back on buying every new edition. ^_^;

Rainbows After Storms, Volume 2 is out in English now, from Viz Media and Volume 3 is on the way in April.

Galette No. 32 (ガレット) is now available from multiple print and digital sources.

 

Support Yuri News and Reviews on Ko-fi!

Live Action

Big News in Live-action this week, as Ottona ni Nattemo (おとなになっても) / Even Though We’re Adults manga finished up, Comic Natalie has news that there will be a live-action series on Hulu JP in April.

Revue Starlight -THE STAGE- Seigfield Rerise (少女☆歌劇 レヴュースタァライト -The STAGE 中等部- Rerise) is happening June 7-14, 2025, at Hikosen Theater in Higashi, Tokyo.

 

Other Great Reading

Super exciting reading from Jamie J. Zhao, with her new article, Queer women prefer older sisters: the onee-san voice, the woman game streamer Southern Senior Female Schoolfellow, and the Aurora Australis fandom. You can read this for free at the above link. Obviously, I am ecstatic to see an analysis of another Yuri fandom.

Once again back to our friend Burkely Hermann, who does a retrospective of queer rep in animation in From Mahjong to Loving Magical Girls: LGBTQ+ Representation in Animation in 2024, which is well worth reading.

I once again want to highly recommend James Beckett’s ANN reviews of Momentary Lily, which are not only vastly superior to the anime itself, but have become a psychological horror story unto themselves. I am – no joke – watching the anime so I can more more fully experience his reviews, which are a masterwork.

 

If you’d like to support Yuri journalism and research, 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.

 



Kanojo no Kuchizuke Kansensuru Libido Short Movie (彼女のくちづけ感染するリビドー ショートムービー)

February 20th, 2025

Title image for Yorita Miyuki's Kanojo no Kuchizuke Kansensuru Libido Short Movie (彼女のくちづけ感染するリビドー ショートムービー). Two young women with flowers in their hair hold a bouquet. The girls with long hair strokes the other girl's cheek as they smile gently. In the wake of Yorita Miyuki’s successful kickstarter for Volume 2 of her series Her Kiss, My Libido Twinkles, she floated the idea of a new live-action adaptation of the series.

In fact, Kanojo no Kuchizuke Kansensuru Libido Short Movie (彼女のくちづけ感染するリビドー ショートムービー), a three-part adaptation, has been up on Youtube since 2022. I’ve been meaning to review it, and this seems like a good time to do so.

Let’s begin with a synopsis from my review of the Kickstarter reward of the first volume of  the manga: “Stuck in the hospital with an injury, Sana meets and is intrigued by Akane, a mysterious older girl who missed a year in school due to illness. Akane is a bit possessive, but Sana wants her to be friends with all her school friends too. When the chance finally comes to introduce Akane to her best friend, Mi-chan, Mi-chan discovers Yuri books in Sana’s room and impulsively hides, becoming a witness to Sana and Akane kissing.”

Right off the bat, this movie is a very decent live-action adaption of Yorita-sensei’s series. Pared down, as it is, to a mere four characters and a short running time, the emotions are very visible and the story moves quickly.  

Tsuboi Nagisa as Sana and Umakawa Moeka as Akane are excellent. Tsuboi’s smile is Sana’s smile, there was no question that we were seeing a live-action of this work. Akane’s behavior is toned down a bit, here and she seems less aggressively manipulative, while Sana comes off as having a stronger personality. As a result, one is pretty on board with them as a couple earlier than in the manga. 

Ratings:

Overall – 9

If you enjoyed the first volume of Her Kiss, My Libido Twinkles, this is a quick watch and a fun way to experience Yorita-sensei’s story.



Project A-ko 2, 3, and 4 Blu-Rays

February 19th, 2025

A Blu-ray cover, a girl with a lot of red hair, in a yello tank top over white -t-shirt runs full speed, while a little girl in pink dress with a flower in her blond hair hangs on. A cool beauty with long blue hair and a glowering man with purple hair in the background.by Matt Marcus, Staff Writer

In the wake of the success of the original Project A-ko film, A.P.P.P. released three sequels, all of which now have Blu-Ray releases from Discotek. All three—running for around 50 minutes compared to the original’s 80—felt a little too scant to review individually, so I’ve opted to combine my thoughts here (much like their previous DVD release from Central Park Media, subtitled Love & Robots).

Project A-ko 2: Plot of Daitokuji Financial Group

Three weeks have passed since the end of the first movie. The defeated alien ship remains perilously perched upon the military command tower at the center of Graviton City, but now it’s been converted to a glitzy shopping mall and recreation center. Of course, this is cover for Captain Napolipolita and her henchwoman D to raise funds for repairs, after which they intend to fulfill their original mission of returning the lost alien Princess C-ko to her home planet.

But this time, the villain is the military industrial complex, in the form of B-ko’s weapon’s dealer mogul father Hikari Daitokuji (or, as I like to call him, Phoney Stark). He sees the alien ship as a goldmine of advanced technology he’d like to steal and exploit for his own ambitions, and so the Plot of the Subtitle are his machinations trying to hoodwink the defense force into doing the dirty work for him. (Notably, he’s been stealing mecha designs from B-ko.)

Meanwhile, our main trio are simply looking forward to a summer break of fun. They end up obstructing both the aliens and B-ko’s father’s schemes, mostly by blowing everything up. Graviton City is left a smoldering ruin again, but life goes on.

All of the elements of the first film are here. The A-ko/B-ko/C-ko triumvirate continue their schtick. There’s a decent amount of mecha and exploding shit. Surprisingly, the non-mecha fanservice is relatively tame; I found the fully-animated scene of A-ko changing into a bathing suit without exposing herself particularly funny, as if it were an intentional troll to those seeking more cheap thrills. Honestly, the funniest bit was how the Alpha Cygnans painted C-ko’s face on the front of their ship, goofy open-mouth grin and all.

The extras are notably sparser than those for the first film (no extra documentaries or feature commentaries this go ‘round). The only unique bonus are screenshots from the PC-88 casino game collection tied to the film, which included several scenes lifted from the film but drawn in that classic 8-bit style.

Overall – 6

Project A-ko 2: Plot of Daitokuji Financial Group Blu-ray available on Amazon and Crunchyroll

 

A red-haired girl in a red dress and a blue-haired girl in hakama and gi glower at each other over their shoulders. Behind and above a gaping blonde with a flower in her hair and a boy in black.Project A-ko 3: Cinderella Rhapsody

This film is based around Spring Break, and every girl in Graviton High School is thinking about romance. A-ko becomes obsessed with a dress she can’t afford, and starts working at a fast food restaurant to save up. B-ko is still using her posse to stalk her, and of course the two are still fighting before school every day. C-ko is starting to feel neglected by A-ko, 

All of this is thrown out of whack when C-ko runs into the street and is nearly run over by a hunky-yet-gormless guy named Kei. A-ko falls for him immediately, followed by B-ko, while the whole time, Kei has caught feelings for C-ko. So much for the Yuri.

Hijinks ensue, which culminates with a destructive showdown in the fancy hotel atop the yet-again-renovated alien ship, which is now a theme park. As the chaos expands, the commander of the defense force decides to neglect his duties this time (off screen, no less), so a group of under-cover protective public works employees mobilize, which turns into a cavalcade of mecha and sentai winks. They even included a cameo by BaBe, the idol duo who sing the film’s theme song “Get A Chance!” (The English Version plays over the credits, the lyrics of which are basically inscrutable.)

In the end, everyone’s heart gets broken. Kei confesses his love to C-ko, who harshly rejects him, while A-ko and B-ko see their fantasies shatter along with the floor of the hotel. Everything resets back to the status quo again. Hooray.

This one definitely feels like a step up from the previous film, but having the central conflict shift to center on Kei was honestly a bit deflating even if, as the trivia notes say, this would have been expected by the audience at the time. I know that the joke is that his cool surface image is actually the result of being too shy to talk, but it’s not quiet a strong enough joke to hang an entire plot on. I also wish more came out of the extensive mobilization scene; having Graviton City secretly be a hotbed of superheroes and super robots could have been used more for the comedy besides “look, an off-model reference!”

As with the previous release, the bonuses are relatively slim, though the trivia section is always a fun treat. I did notice one omission, though, which led me down a bit of a rabbit hole. In the film, we see a brief segment of a porn flick, where a girl with short blue hair (and no clothes) is about to, uh, impose herself on a red-haired girl. The scene is interrupted by the mobilization call (somehow within the movie!) by a girl with orange pigtails. Turns out, these three are the animated versions of an idol group Lemon Angels, a multimedia project that was an offshoot of the Cream Lemon hentai series, much like what Project A-ko began as. Seems like an odd thing to leave out from the otherwise exhaustive trivia notes, especially since they are even explicitly credited.

Overall – 7

Project A-ko 3: Cinderella Rhapsody is available on Blu-ray from Crunchyroll and Amazon.

 

Red haired girl in a school uniform, blue-haired girl in black dress and cowering little blonde girl with a flower in hair are backed by a mecha that looks like the redhead, a pair embracing in wedding clothes of a guy with brown hair and a teal-haired girl.

Project A-ko 4: Final

The aptly-titled fourth film of the mainline series is about two impending threats: a new alien invasion, foretold by ancient inscriptions found in Iraq, alongside the teacher Miss Ayumi’s engagement to…Kei??!?!

Out of all of the sequels, this one has the strongest set-up for farce. Phoney Stark is back as the facilitator of the omiai between Miss Ayumi and Kei. Since he is basically in charge of the military, he orders them to protect the bride and groom from terrorist threats (read: B-ko, who is back on a rampage to steal Kei for herself). This provides cover for the defense force to mobilize against a massive alien fleet that is approaching earth (circumventing the cowardice of the commander who bailed in the previous film).

A-ko is, for her part, is also trying to wreck the wedding, again leaving C-ko feeling abandoned; in fact, her crybaby friend begins to fear that A-ko and B-ko’s love of fighting is going to turn into feisty romance, leaving her alone. When it turns out the fleet is helmed by C-ko’s long-lost mother, C-ko decides willingly to leave. (We are led to believe that Ayumi is tied to the aliens, but that turns out to be a fakeout.) A-ko and B-ko fail to take her back, only for C-ko to unceremoniously show up at A-ko’s door the next day, having changed her mind on leaving. C-ko asks A-ko not to fight B-ko anymore, to which A-ko happily agrees.

To be honest, this one might be my favorite of the bunch. Seeing A-ko and B-kos fights become so regular that even their friends see it as just another ordinary morning got a good chuckle out of me. C-ko getting Yuri-goggles was a fun twist that I wish the movie leaned more into. Still, the plot AGAIN is centered around Kei, who is even less charismatic here than in the previous film.

The extras here match what we saw in the previous releases. Would you know that there are a lot of Lupin cameos??

Overall – 7

Project A-ko 4: Final Blu-ray is available on Amazon and Crunchyroll.

 

All in all, none of these films reach the heights that the first film did, and in some cases detract from it (*cough* Kei *cough*). That said, if you wanted to see more bubble-era OVA hijinks chock full of parody, none of these are an awful time.

 

Matt Marcus is a cohost of various projects on the Pitch Drop Podcast Network, as well as the writer for the blog Oh My God, They Were Bandmates analyzing How Do We Relationship in greater depth.