Kimi no tame ni Sekai ha Aru (きみのために世界はある)

July 23rd, 2020

As you may remember, I’m a huge fan of Usui Shio’s series Kaketa Tsuki to Donuts. So when a collection of Usui-sensei’s work came out from Ichijinsha, I scooped it right up!

Today I’m looking at Kimi no tame ni Sekai ha Aru (きみのために世界はある). This single-volume collection contains six short stories that range in character age and setting. None of these are unique and, at first read, I felt like I had read all of them somewhere else, but…I probably had. A few of the setups are pretty well-used even now, like an ex-lover getting married in “Jewel of You,” or a boyish girl who actually likes girly things, in “Secret Closet.”

Scenario staleness notwithstanding, I genuinely enjoyed this collection. I like Usui-sensei’s art, the gentleness with which the characters are treated, even when they are processing hurt or anger. This is not emotional torture porn, it’s situations we are supposed to know, and have felt inside ourselves. And forgiven ourselves for.

The women in this collection learn to accept the parts of themselves they have been denying and I do not mean just their sexuality when I say this. In some cases, that’s not the issue at all.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – Variable
Characters – 8
Yuri – 8
Service – 1 mostly on principle, there’s nothing really

Overall – 8

Just learning to love one’s self is still a powerful story and Usui-sensei understands that.



Where to Watch Yuri in English Online, Free and Legally – 2020

July 21st, 2020

So you want to know where and how to watch Yuri anime free and legally. That’s not a bad thing, but we’re in 2020, a year that has been outrageously written by crazed Albanian monks. The last time we did this round up, in 2017, there were a number of new services and a lot of companies were getting in on anime. Quite a number of previously free services have gone out of business, others have been simply absorbed by not-free services.  That 2017 post remains one of the most popular I’ve ever done, and it’s long past time it gets an update. ^_^

Before we begin, let’s set some ground rules:

My focus is on US-based or accessible services, because while I am dedicated to bringing you good information, my dedication still does not extend to working with proxies or VPNs in every major market to see if these services work in your hometown. Assume there are regional restrictions in place for some or all of these services. But feel free to use proxies or VPNs on your own. ^_^ If you use a regionally legal, free streaming site in a non-US country, by all means, please let folks know in comments!

Today we’re focusing on services that are legitimate and free. To be very honest, there are far fewer of them than there used to be. I will also touch upon a few that are not free, because they allow for extended trial periods and, if you and your friends pitch in, you can enjoy them for a very reasonable amount. And because without them, you’ll miss a lot of Yuri. I will not suggest illicit services and all comments suggesting them will be removed instantly. This is for legal services only.

 All streaming services have shifting catalogs. Video licensing contracts go in and out of use and every single IP holder is always on the lookout for a better deal and major ones are launching their own god-forsaken channels.  In fact, between 2017 and now, Funimation pulled all of it’s IP from other services and went on their own.  Another good reason to update this list periodically. I am checking to make sure things I mention are actually on the service where I mention them. Some of these channels can be accessed on channel-aggregation services like VRV or Hulu or Amazon Prime. I’m not touching any of those. Netflix also has a lot of anime and is both licensing and making more, so if you have a subscription to that, or any of the above, yes, there’s more stuff you can watch legally.

Region-blocks are still an issue, but less than it used to be. Streaming has had an impact on this stupid relic of the 20th century, but it still does exist, and licensing companies do usually not have much say on the issue. With all that in mind, here we go.

 

Crunchyroll

Crunchyroll is pretty much the industry standard now,  with a good chunk of anime from multiple companies, which is it’s main appeal. Crunchyroll is my go-to, because their catalog is one of the most comprehensive, from Aoi Hana/Sweet Blue Flowers to to Yuru Yuri. (There wasn’t a good ‘Z’ title, but come on A to Y isn’t bad! ^_^) They often have simulcasts for subscribers and they are still honest-to-goodness free on a delay. They are partnering with Japanese anime companies directly to create their own content these days, which just means your money goes back into the greater anime ecosystem, which is exactly where you want it.

There’s no “Yuri” tag in search, nor is it listed as a genre (and I sympathize with that and agree as long as BL is likewise not included.)

Rating: A- It’s not an all-in-one place for everything anymore, especially as Sentai and Funimation have chosen other options, but they still have the largest and most varied catalog.

 

Tubi TV

Tubi has – to my genuine surprise – survived a few years now. They’ve still got a mostly random smattering of anime and a lot of it isn’t new or, sometimes, good. They have Valkyrie Drive, but they also have Vampire Princess Miyu.  They’ve also got a few other notable series, like Bubblegum Crisis and .hack/Sign. (This was a decade pre-Sword Art Online massive media franchise about a MMOPRG that didn’t exist.) Their catalog is worth a look, if you’ve got some time to kill and want to watch older, maybe less well-known stuff from before Yuri was its own genre. ^_^

Rating: B It’s worth looking at, but I probably wouldn’t subscribe. Their catalog still seems random, They have Bubblegum Crisis, and AD Police, but not Bubblegum Crash. No idea why.

There is no Yuri tag in search. Their search isn’t really good, generally.

 

RetroCrushTV

RetroCrushTV is new since the last update and I haven’t watched it at all. But is it is genuinely free, ad-supported anime and RetroCrushTV has Bubblegum Crisis and Bubblegum Crash, as well as Project A-ko, which is nuts and you should watch it.  It has Devil Lady dubbed, which I should point out is a thing you ought to note – some of the series are dubbed, others subbed; they do seem to be labeled appropriately.

RetroCrushTV specializes in older stuff, obviously and it has a “random” button which will give you some random title. I found it charming as heck and I will totally use this!

There’s no “Yuri” tag in search. Their search is meh generally.

Rating: A-  I really like the “love for classic everything” that shows through here. For free, it’s an absolute delight.

 

Viz

Viz doesn’t have much Yuri anime, but you can still watch all of Sailor Moon here, for free. While you are there, you can watch all the big Shonen Jump series and read sample chapters of manga for free, or get new chapters as simulpub – this includes Yuri titles like How Do We .Relationship and Tropical Fish Yearns for Snow.

There’s no “Yuri” tag in search. Their search is meh generally.

Rating: B Obviously, they only carry their own titles, but those are some of the biggest titles in the world and they make it pretty damn easy for you to watch and read for free and even get simulpubbed new manga chapters for free.

 

Funimation 

Funimation has Funimation anime exclusively – overwhelmingly I think that is for the birds. But, then, my antipathy towards Funimation’s attempts at streaming go back a decade and at least their website works, even if I think it gets in its own way all the time. Which is actually a huge improvement over previous years of barely functioning nonsense. I will never forgive them for their mobile app zippering open. Gawd.

Funimation offers a free trial and most series have the first few and most recent episodes streaming free so you can watch a whole series as it comes out with, predictably, ads suggesting you subscribe to Funimation’s service. They’ve got recent favorites like If My Favorite Pop Idol Made It to the Budokan, I Would Die and they’ve got Revolutionary Girl Utena, which surprised the heck out of me.

There’s no “Yuri” tag in search.

Ratings: B+ No complaints, honestly. You don’t even have to register anymore to watch stuff for free. And if Funimation’s titles are your jam, it’s competitively priced.

 

HIDIVE

HIDIVE is Sentai Filmworks’ and Section23’s streaming service. Since Sentai historically licenses a lot of Yuri, you’ll be able to see Bloom Into You and Kase-san and Morning Glories here, along with older titles like Flip Flappers and the amazing fantabulous live-action movie Arch Angels (!!! You should all go watch this immediately!!!). They’ve got a pretty amazing selection of queer-friendly and queer-adjacent stuff. I do like that their trial is 30 days long, not a week. They offer subs and dubs pretty clearly labeled.

I don’t much care for the fact that they don’t make at least some of their episodes free, especially as some of their titles are also available on Crunchyroll (just not the ones we want.) It seems a wasted opportunity. (Update, they have pulled their titles from Crunchyroll, so that’s that.)

There’s no “Yuri” tag in search.

Rating: B I hated their fullscreen mode when I was watching anime on their site. Why should I have to exit fullscreen to increase/decrease the volume?!? I remember bitching about it every time. Their search is sort of organized by topic, but I still cannot find what I want easily.

 

2020 Takeaways:

1) Overall, the sites where you can stream Yuri anime are good, they are simple to use and, if you know what you’re looking for, it’s easy enough to find stuff.

2) The search on these sites are crap.  If you’re looking for “Yuri” welcome to 2000, because none of these sites know what you’re talking about. All these services have bleh search, which focus mostly on searching by title. A few attempt genre or topic, but tags are inadequately and inconsistently applied. For instance Crunchyroll has shojo, shonen and seinen, but not josei. Go figure. Hire a librarian, folks. Your taxonomy is terrible, series aren’t tagged appropriately and there are a lot of catalogers out of work right now. Quick, someone build a decent anime search engine taxonomy and sell it to all the streaming sites.  Or, heck, let viewers suggest tags and just have someone clean up the messiness. User-generated taxonomy would at least give viewers a chance.

3) Fullscreen mode is crap. I want a fullscreen mode with a disappearing toolbar that comes back up with mouse movement that includes volume, etc, and a click-start click-stop. It’s shocking how few of these sites have this.

4) Episodes should be free to watch on your site, especially if they are free to watch elsewhere…Sentai. Go ahead, pound us over the head with “subscribe now” ads and make some money on my eyeballs with other advertising.

5) There is no reasonable excuse for fansubs or scanlations at this point and should you encounter anyone who is arguing that the companies in the industry are damaging the industry, quick, block and report them because that is – at best – nonsensical.

6) There is an industry-wide problem of poor pay for folks doing translation, subtitles and all production work. This needs to stop. Fans, pay for services you use and companies…pay people who do the work.

Last, we’re in such an amazing place regarding streaming anime so my last thought for this update is this…

Look how much free stuff you can try out! Watch a different episode 1 every night, hit that “random” button and watch Twilight of the Cockroaches. Sit down and crank through Haikyuu!, finish that series you meant to get to. Find out why I rant endless about how amazing Devilman Lady is.

What are you waiting for?  Go watch a lot of anime!

 

 



The City We Became, by N.K. Jemisin

July 19th, 2020

I know you know, because I tell everyone, that I love my state. I love it with a deep and visceral love. I almost weep with joy at the loamy smell of the Northeast woodlands and the salt/tar/sugar/suntan lotion air of our much-maligned Shore. I love the hot burning smell of asphalt on summer days, the scent of wet snow about to bury us in the winter, the warm autumn days and the clarity of the air on autumn nights, the green of spring for a month before flowers show up. I love the traffic, the vulgarity of the people, the diversity, the everything.  

The thing is…I’m not alone. Our closest friends feel the same way. Sometimes, we’re stuck in traffic caused by poorly planned construction or at a Hungarian festival, eating sausages made by some old lady sold out of a cooler and we’re full of glee at the New Jerseyness of it all. We’ve all talked for years about how deeply rooted we are in this place, how much we honor our genus loci; the loud, dirty, impossibly beautiful place we live in and which is part of us.

The moment I opened up N.K. Jemisin’s The City We Became, I felt that this was a book about those of us who love a place so deeply, so viscerally, that everything beautiful and awful about that place become a beacon of existence for them.

A man stumbles off the train to find he has lost who he was and has become, beyond belief, part of a city. An artist whose ancestry is traced back to the first people on the land and to many of the people that colonized that land after, a musician turned politician, a homeless person and a unloved woman find themselves drawn inexorably into an ancient battle as part of a Lovecraftian paean to New York City.  I didn’t want this book to end and I’m so very glad that there will be a sequel.

I loved this book. It’s angry and it’s hateful and it’s gorgeous and it’s beautiful and it is real. I do not doubt for a second that there are avatars of places, because as I said above…I know people whose roots run deeper than the sewer systems of their cities.

If you like MURCIÉLAGO, you will very probably like this book for many of the same reasons – eldritch horror, queer characters, creeping paranormality. This book also has characters you will believe in and root for, sometimes even when the decisions they make are the wrong ones for the worst reasons. They are immensely well-conceived characters and well-written. I can tell you nothing about them that wouldn’t be a spoiler. ^_^

Ratings:

Characters – 9
Story – 10
Queerness – 9

Overall – 10

This novel had the perfect climactic scene. Made me sit up and say, “Fuck, yeah…!”



Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – July 18, 2020

July 18th, 2020

Yuri Manga

We have some new titles up on the Yuricon Store for your reading pleasure!

Kyou, Koshiba Aoi ni Aetara, Volume 2 (今日、小柴葵に会えたら) hit shelves in Japan last month. You’ll be able to read Volume 1 in English as Chasing After Aoi Koshiba from Kodansha in spring 2021.

And while we’re talking Kodansha, here’s a reminder that Yuri is My Job, Volume 6 is available for pre-order. Paperback will be released this autumn.

Yoshitomei Akihito’s new schoolgirl time travel store, Kyou Kara Mirai (今日から未来) is up.

I’m still playing catch-up with Kobachi Ruka’s Hana ni Arashi, Volume 5 (はなにあらし).

I really like Kuwabara Tamotsu’s art and we’ve got adult-life Anata to Watashi no Shuuhassuu (あなたと私の周波数) on the Store!

Takeshobo has kind of been conspicuously missing from recent Yuri, but they are back in the game with drinking and Yuri Happy Hour Girls, Volume 1 (ハッピーアワーガールズ) by Agetate Shino.

Global Bookwalker let me know that Yuritora Jump ~ Ultra Jump Yuri Digital Anthology Volume 3  (ユリトラジャンプ~ウルトラジャンプ百合アンソロジー~) is now available. Like Volume 1 and Volume 2, which was reviewed on Okazu, both are available in digital format only.

 

Yuri Webcomics

YNN Corespondent Megan wants you to know about a “student council love triangle Yuri comedy” that started on Japanese-language 4-koma Twitter account Twi-yon this week, called Lily Triangle.

Sal Jiang has a new Yuri series with Action Comics, Ayakachan ha Hiroko-sempai wo Otoshitai (彩香ちゃんは弘子先輩を落としたい). Check out Chapter 1 for free in Japanese on the Web Action site.

Sal-sensei has another new comic, too – 白と黒~Black & White~. The first three chapters are online in Japanese on the Comic Ruelle & Comic Jardin website!

And while you are on the Comic Ruelle & Comic Jardin website, check out their page for sono.N’s Yuri action series SHWD. ^_^

 

Yuri Anime

Rafael Antonio Pineda on ANN has the news that Funimation has announced that it will be streaming Adachi and Shimamura this fall on Funimation.com.

ANN’s Adriana Hazra reports that classic gonzo Yuri anime Project A-ko is streaming on RetroCrush.

YuriNavi says we should keep our eyes out for Mahou no Tabitabi (魔女の旅々) an upcoming anime based on a series of GA Bunko novels that, YuriNavi says, includes Yuri meetings. Based on the trailer, I assume that means admirable women are admired by our female protagonist. It looks pretty, in any case.

 

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Yuri Studio

In case you missed it, last week we posted the first of our new projects on Yuri Studio 3.0, Why Are There So Many Schoolgirls in Yuri? We kept this initial video down under 10 minutes, take a look for a brief, fun look at the answer to the most commonly asked question I get at Yuri panels! I have a bunch of ideas and will be working on the next video shortly. 

Not Yuri, per se, and not Yuri Studio, but Peter Fobian has done a pretty decent video on the History of Magical Girls for Crunchyroll.

 

Yuri Visual Novels

Studio Élan has announced a new Yuri Visual Novel, Please Be Happy, and Sekai Project has picked it up for distribution to Steam and Switch. Rafael Antonio Pineda and Alex Mateo have the details of the license announcement on ANN. Studio Élan has opened a questionnaire to hear from folks about what they like and are looking for, so let them know what you’d like to see.

JAST USA has announced the release of the third of the Flowers Yuri VN franchise, Flowers ~Le volume sur automne will be available on July 30. Their premium release will come with physical extras like acrylic standees and postcards!

 

LGBTQ Media

The folks at itch.io have put together a Visual Novel Romance Collection for Black Trans Lives bundle – $140 value for $10, and the money will go to The Okra Project, a group that helps black trans folks with mental health services and food. This collection includes Ladykiller in a Bind and Heaven Will Be Mine, both of which were reviewed favorably here on Okazu by Louise. ^_^

YNN Correspondent, Joek K. wants you to know that live-action Amazon Prime series, Hannah, Season 2 includes a storyline about a university professor and her wife. I watch some of the first season of this series. It didn’t keep my attention, but it might be in your wheelhouse. (Right now I’m watching Wynona Earp on Netflix – yes, I’m years late to that – and it’s perfectly ignorable while I work.)

 

Other News

Artist, and our good friend, Rica Takashima is interviewed in manga art magazine S  季刊S(エス) this month! I enjoy this magazine, it’s always a little wide-eyed and fannishly fawning about cool art and artists. ^_^

I’ve been having a little fun with a side project: Check out Yuri Manga Bot on Twitter. ^_^

 

Become a YNN Correspondent by reporting any Yuri-related news with your name and an email I can reply to – thanks to all of you – you make this a great Yuri Network! Special thanks to Okazu Patrons for being an important part of the Okazu family. I couldn’t do it without you!



Hana ni Arashi, Volume 4 (はなにあらし)

July 17th, 2020

In Volume 1 we met Nanoha and Chidori, two girls who have a secret – they are lovers. They aren’t lovers, but they are in love and they dating. In Volume 2 and Volume 3, they are still dating.

Together they do normal teen stuff. They go out with friends and hang out, they visit the beach and do school things. It’s all very pleasant, very noncommittal and very low-key. In fact, I was describing it to my wife as a series in which basically nothing happens. For a Shonen Sunday Comic, it was satisfactory. Only a little service, no weird manipulative characters, no gods-help-us-its-not-funny comedy. Just blandly pleasant schoolgirl Yuri.

And then we hit Hana ni Arashi, Volume 4 (はなにあらし) and something happened.  In comparison with the little happening in previous volumes it seems really big, but wait for it, because it is, kind of, really big.

It’s summer and Nanoha and Chidori go to the beach with friends and we spend a little more time looking at girls in bikinis than I care to do. Then we return home and the school festival is upon us. Chidori is representing the literature club when her old sempai shows up. We understand immediately that sempai is Chidori’s ex who took the time honored hoary route of seducing Chidori into a lesbian lifestyle, then chickening out on it herself.  Sempai dismisses Chidori’s feeling with a snide, “Are you really onna-doushi?” which proves that the folks at Shogakukan are stuck back in 2000 or so in terminology. Sempai uses the phrase the way you might expect an actual human to use “queer” or “lesbo” or something more pointed.

Chidori is fairly paralyzed by the reappearance of Igarashi-sempai and we are given a chapter to see that sempai was a fairly stereotypical Yuri villain, steamrolling over Chidori’s objections, time and time again. Like Sayaka, Chidori has learned to love herself. When Igarashi-sempai appears to be ready to tear Chidori down once more Nanoha steps up and does the thing. “Yes, we’re onna-doushi,” Nanoha takes Chidori’s hand and faces Igarashi…and here’s the thing that happens….Igarashi suddenly discovers that Chidori and Nanoha are not hiding from themselves at all. Her expression is one of shock. Up to this moment, she has bought into the idea that her feelings for Chidori had to be – must be – temporary. And here is Nanoha, without that illusion at all. Igarashi-sempai asks, her eyes wide with shock as her world crumbles…”Are you going out for real?” “Yes,” Chidori affirms.

To her credit, Igarashi-sempai covers her nervousness with a bit of normal teasing, but as she leaves, she realizes that she might well have made a terrible mistake with her life.

And, finally, later than night at the festival fireworks, Nanoha and Chidori kiss.

So, aside from the now-outdated terminology (which, to be fair I absolutely would expect nothing else from publishing behemoth Shogakukan,) this was a pretty meaty moment. Firstly, Nanoha rescues Chidori, then the two of them admit their relationship to anyone at all, and affirm that it’s real, and the result is that a girl who had been lying to herself is suddenly unable to do so anymore.

Ratings:

Art – 6
Story – 6
Characters – 6
Yuri – 6
Service – 4 Bathing suits and showers. So…ugh

Overall – 6

For a series which, until this moment, had climaxed with hand-holding, this was a big volume.