Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – April 19, 2025

April 19th, 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 OkazuYuri Events

I am writing this in a post-show haze from an incredible Sailor Moon The Super Live! event. Tomorrow, I’ll write it all up. There are a very few tickets left for the remaining shows in Connecticut, Philadelphia and New York City. If you can, go. It was a great show. ^_^

I am incredibly excited to announce that I will be guest at Y/Con in Paris, France, on November 14-15, 2025. I cannot wait to meet French Yuri fans and folks from all around Europe!

Girls Love Fest 44 Yuri doujinshi event will be held on June 29, 2025 at the PiO building in Ota-ku, Tokyo. I’m already hoping to attend the March 2026 event, because I miss GLFes! Last time we made it to one was 2019 for the 100 years of Yuri Tour.

 

Baihe

Baiheverse has begun releasing chapters of The Clouds of Past Millennia,  a time-travel tale of fate. They appear to be taking a free-sample-to-paid-chapter model.

Help us raise Yuri reviewer’s wages!
Become an Okazu Patron today!

 

 

Yuri Manga in English

Ize Press has announced a manhwa license, I Love Amy, by unni, a 4-volume girls love series. Wonhee Cho has the details on ANN. This is Ize’s first Yuri release!

Yen Press has also announced a new Yuri license, Monster-Colored Island. ANN’s Alex Mateo has the news. Mariko S. reviewed Volume 1 in Japanese in 2021 here on Okazu.

We have some new items up on the Yuricon Store!

I Can’t Say No To The Lonely Girl, Volume 6 finishes up this series with a surprisingly warm fuzziness given the beginning premise.

Yodokawa’s Monthly in the Garden with My Landlord, Volume 4 hit shelves in March. This is low-key one of my favorite series of the year, just for the way it does….well, everything.

The Anemone Feels the Heat, Volume 1 is the first of a LOT of volumes following a girl who accidentally missed her chance at the path she wanted to take and now is trying to rebuild, who meets someone who never had those chances at all. Anemone ga Netsu wo Obiru, Volume 2  (アネモネが熱を帯びる) in Japanese is also up on the Store.

The slow, but inexorable, romance between Chidori and Nanoha continues to build in Rainbows After Storms, Volume 3.

There are a lot of monster who want to eat Hinako, but her days with two monsters in paticular are special in This Monster Wants to Eat Me, Volume 4

Assorted Entanglements, Volume 7 by Mikanuji, continues to throw us tidbits of the lives of various women finding their places with each other

 

 
Yuri Manga in Japanese

I fell very behind on these, in the last few months, so I apologize for the manga dump, but I am now caught up with my previous bookmarks and am starting in on the new ones. ^_^

Watashi no Oshi ha Akuyaku Reijou., Volume 10 ( 私の推しは悪役令嬢。) will be the penultimate volume of this series, which will wrap up the “Revolution” arc. It’s been a great run.

Tsumetakute Yawaraka, Volume 1 (冷たくて 柔らか) by Uozumi Ami is also out now in English as  Pink Candy Kiss, Volume 1 from Viz Media.

Doushi Shoujo yo, Teki o Ute,  Volume 1 (同志少女よ、敵を撃て)  is a dark tale of a girl whose family is killed by the Germans, so she is taken in by Russians to become a sniper, and her intense and violent relationship with the woman who trains her.

Amayo no Tsuki, Volume 9 (雨夜の月) New volume, new volume! I can’t wait to see what happens with Saki and Kanon. ^_^

Gal Maid to Akuyaku Reijou ~ Ojou-sama no Happy End Shika Katan!, Volume 2 (ギャルメイドと悪役令嬢 ~おじょーさまのハッピーエンドしか勝たん!) When a gal is reincarnated into an otome game as the villainess’ maid, she wants to protect her life and live happily with her mistress.

Koi Yori Aoku, Volume 1 (恋より青く) Two girls meet through a book dropped on a train.

Kimi ga Hoeru Tame no Uta o, Volume 1 (キミが吠えるための歌を、) Haru loves to sing, but is afraid of being mocked for her deep voice, Yu is a “vocaloid”_type singer who wants to write for her.

Kekkonshitai Ryuuguu-san ha Jourikushimashita, Volume 1 (結婚したい竜宮さんは上陸しました) A girl is taken to the Dragon Palace under the sea by a mermaid who falls for her.

Haikei, Arishi Hi ni Saku Sana-tachi e  (拝啓、在りし日に咲く花たちへ) In this books and Yuri story, a girl transfers into a girls school and discovers a relationship from the past in letters hidden in library books.

Kiraware Majyo Reijō to Dansou Ouji no Kon’yaku, Volume 3 (嫌われ魔女令嬢と男装皇子の婚約) Eve and Ciel take on the final boss in this fantasy about magic and society accepting people as they are.

 

LGBTQ Comics and Manga

YNN Sr. Correspondent Sean Gaffney says fans of LGBTQ manga and Yoshinaga Fumi ought to keep an eye out for Tamaki & Amane from Yen.

Via Okazu Staff Writer Matt Marcus, Kathleen Gros’ graphic novel I HATED YOU IN HIGH SCHOOL “is an enemies-to-lovers story inspired by classic romantic movies—with a queer twist.”

 

Support Yuri News and Reviews on Ko-fi!

 

Yuri Games

Nichegamer wants you to know that The Great Villainess: Strategy of Lily, a deception-based turn-based strategy game will available be on Steam this July.

 

Yuri Anime

Cutie Honey – The Original TV Series – Blu-ray is now available from Discotek. This is Go Nagai’s original vision for the series and, as weird and horny as it is, it also has some amazing moments.

Sentai Filmworks has the Blu-Ray collection for Jellyfish Can’t Swim In The Night up for pre-order, with a May release date.

ANN”s Steve Jones is on point, as usual, with his review of Rock Is A Lady’s Modesty, Episodes 1-3. Series streaming on HIDIVE.

Girls Band Cry Compilation Film announces staff, cast and offers up this teaser on Youtube, says ANN’s Joana Cayanan.

 

Light Novels

Fans of Hitoma Iruma’s series won’t want to miss Adachi and Shimamura: Short Stories, a collection of shorts that were, as reviewer Sean Gaffney noted, probably extras for print volumes.

Next week we have a brand-new original self-published work from inori.-sensei, illustrated by Aonoshimo, Homunculus Tears: Alchemy for the Brokenhearted. Don’t miss this fantasy light novel about finding one’s place in life when everything around you is changing.

 

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.

 



Gakeppuchi Reijou ha Kuro Kishi-sama o Horesasetai!, Volume 1 ( 崖っぷち令嬢は黒騎士様を惚れさせたい)

April 17th, 2025

An extremely tall, serious woman with silver hair in an elaborate black uniform stand back to back with a woman with scarlet hair that graduates to orange, in a pink dress, smiling, a portrait of the demonic "black knight" on the wall above her head.Gakeppuchi Reijou ha Kuro Kishi-sama o Horesasetai!, Volume 1 / 崖っぷち令嬢は黒騎士様を惚れさせた has a great title. Honestly. ^_^

Gakepucchi means “on a cliff’s edge,” that is to say, someone pushed to desperate straits. And so, we meet Clarice, the eldest daughter of a failing minor noble household. Her sister Charlotte is ill and her parents have sold everything they can to pay for her treatment. In order to save her family and her beloved little sister, Clarice accepts an offer of marriage from the infamous Black Knight Frost.

And this is where I really kind of like the way the English and Japanese play in the title. Because Frost is a Marquis or Marquess (depending on your language of origin,) which is to say a rule of the March…the very edge of the land. So when Clarice goes to Frost’s home, she is literally on the very edge of the civilized world, where she finds that the edge is not that civilized after all.

Frost is a huge, black-armored creature who, when a monster attack during their wedding, dispatches it with ease, but seems antagonistic toward Clarice. Clarice is not a shrinking violet – she has committed to this relationship and she’ll be damned if she fails. When she discovers that Frost is a still-huge, angry and fearsome creature, she is also a very attractive women. While Frost shuts her out, Clarice rallies the few maids left in the household and bring Frost the best dinner she can muster and seeks to win her heart.

Frost clearly has some ancient trauma she is avoiding, so is spending her energy keeping Clarice at a distance, but her new wife is energetic, dedicated and a really kind and competent person. When a visiting merchant is attacked, Clarice defiantly saves teh merchant and his daughter, proclaiming herself of you the wife of the famous Black Knight, Clarice von Galeria!  By the end of volume one we are merely waiting for Frost to…defrost, if you will. There’s a lot of road to travel before that will happen, however, Clarice is showing herself to be a very determined heroine. I really like her!

The art by sometime, creator of Superwomen in Love! is fun, energetic and provides us a lot of near-naked, Frost bulging with muscles and covered in scars, both physical and emotional. suoh’s story is adapted well buy this veteran artist.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 9
Characters – Clarice is 9, Frost needs some work
Service – 1 Mild semi-nudity only
Yuri – 4 Actually, very little as of yet. Something tragic in Frost’s history, but it’ll be there in a bit

Overall – 8

Of the several fantasy stories running in Comic Yuri Hime, this one, along with Muryoku Seijo to Munou Oujo ~ Maryoku Zero de Shoukansareta Seijo no Isekai Kyuukokuki (~無力聖女と無能王女~魔力ゼロで召喚された聖女の異世界救国記~) are my favorites, with this one leading, simply on the force of Clarice’s personality. ^_^



Girls Made Pudding

April 16th, 2025

A view of a winding highway, surrounded by green hills, A girl with long silver hair in a long black tee shirt leans on an old military motorcycle, a cat-girl with purple hair wearing a maid's uniform, holding a pot with a leek in it, stands in the foreground looking at us over her shoulder.By Christian LeBlanc, Staff Writer

Girls Made Pudding is an adventure game and visual novel from Kazuhide Oka and KAMITSUBAKI STUDIO, which just came out on April 10th for $9.99 US (but is currently 17% off until April 23rd). It is available on both Steam and on the Nintendo Switch Virtual Store; this review is of the Nintendo Switch version.

Joining the ranks of Japanese Yuri-adjacent media featuring girls riding around on bikes together (Super Cub) at the end of the world (Girls’ Last Tour), Girls Made Pudding is a soft, gentle game about the end of the world and the last few remaining humans in it. Also, it’s an exploration of intersubjectivity and shared realities. Also, it’s about pudding, made by girls.

Aside from briefly showing you how to use the camera and move the characters, the game tells you little about how the game works (aside from some tips on loading screens), so for the first little while, you’ll be figuring out the mechanics as you go (muscle power and brain power both deplete as you accomplish certain tasks, while your hunger meter constantly ticks down, and you also have a time meter that marks morning to night).

Cooking two-or-three-ingredient meals not only replenishes your meters, but is also the way to unlock certain conversation topics. Girls Made Pudding is a visual novel, you see, but instead of passively clicking a button to advance the story, you’re riding around on a motorbike exploring deserted towns, collecting recipes and ingredients, finding places to spend the night, and dealing with obstacles in the road (including groups of cats you can pet to restore your brainpower). Zooming forward is what advances the conversation, so you’re always on the move.

When I first started playing I was worried about getting lost and whether I should be making maps, but it turns out you’re always in one of several types of locale (forest, countryside, city, seascape, factory area) that repeat. Houses with items replenish their stock when you return to an area later, so it is impossible to get lost or miss something important.

You can change the difficulty so that your meters don’t deplete, but it’s so low-stakes you may as well leave them on, just to make the game feel a little more like a game. One time I used up all my brainpower and the girls just decided to finish their day early, which meant I had to re-start a conversation I’d been in the middle of. No game over screens. I did reach a game over scenario once from a conversation path I wasn’t supposed to go down, but I was able to continue from a better spot and not lose any progress. I didn’t even have to worry about branching storylines or alternate endings; again, low stakes.

To accompany these low stake adventures and conversations had while zooming through deserted neighbourhoods, there’s a beautiful guitar score (with the odd math rock flourish) by Daijiro Nakagawa that, along with the lovely art and character models by Zumochi, gives the entire game a pleasantly cozy feel.

Which brings us to our characters: Nikomi is a cat-girl in a maid outfit who drives the motorcycle, cooks, and goes with the flow, and she is riding with no-nonsense, white-haired Sumibi. Very early into the game, Nikomi expresses how she thought the two of them were dating to marry, which Sumibi immediately shuts down; an exploration of what these two mean to each other takes place concurrently with the exploration of deserted locales and what happened to humanity.

And just what has happened to humanity? You’ll have fun puzzling this out as you go along, but all you’re given up front is that people just started disappearing. You do meet a couple of other characters during your travels who both shed light on what happened, and while the science behind the fiction may not always feel right, I recommend just going with it so as to catch the right feels from the social commentary that’s being made.

So, is this a Yuri game, you rightly ask? Yes, and no. But also yes. The game gives details about Nikomi and Sumibi and how they interact with each other, and I don’t wish to spoil any of that. I will say that the game definitely wants you to consider these two as a potential couple, and that a lot of cliches are refreshingly avoided as we observe how two people can be important to each other.

 

 

 

Girls Made Pudding does have a few rough spots: it can feel a little exposition-heavy near the end, and while the game does a decent job of giving you the right ingredients at the right time, you’ll occasionally find yourself driving longer than you should looking for an egg so you can cook some buchimgae on the side of the road so you can ask someone about a photograph (a common theme in Jack Kerouac’s On the Road, probably…I still haven’t read it). I’ve included instructions in the comments on how to beat one particular mini-game, because it is not at all intuitive. The translation also gets a little rough in places, especially in one late-game sequence where it labels the wrong character as talking, but for $10 you’re getting six to seven hours of entertainment, a mystery, some science fiction, some deep thoughts, delightful music and scenery, and some cozy Yuri content. And, a liminally wonderful lack of crowds.

There’s also a very cute and funny post-game sequence; be sure to play some more after you’ve beaten the game and then check through your inventory for something that wasn’t there previously, and that will trigger a hilariously self-aware conversation.

Art – 8
Graphics – 7
Story – 8
Sound – 9
Control – 7
Characters – 7
Service – none, unless just seeing a maid outfit does it for you. And/or cat ears.
Yuri – 6

Overall – 7

Get on the same wavelength as Girls Made Pudding, and you will find a fun Yuri game that gets you thinking about relationships and shared realities long after all the pudding has been finished.



Rock Is A Lady’s Modesty, Streaming on HIDIVE

April 14th, 2025

Four girls, dressed in old-fashioned modest white Japanese school uniforms, with black trim, rock out hard at one another, glaring over their instruments.If you hang around in Yuri spaces long enough, you’ll discover that an inordinately large amount of early Yuri takes place in private schools for young women from the upper classes. There are several good reasons for this. One, by putting the story in a place or time or status level that is unreachable by the average reader, the story is given an exoticism, and therefore freedom to explore outside the mores of Japanese society. This story happened “over there” and “at that time,” so our rules do not apply.

Also, as James Welker explores in his book Transfiguring Women in Late Twentieth-Century Japan: Feminists, Lesbians, and Girls‘ Comics Artists and Fans, that exoticism adds legitimacy by the connection to high art of the 20th century through cinema, literature and drama. This second piece was a new thought to me, but when James mentioned this in his book lecture at NYU, it opened a whole new field of perspective for me. Of course artists and writers of the Japanese new wave were reaching over towards their literary, artistic and cinematic peers in Europe and America.

This perspective is shockingly relevant for this season’s girl band comedy-drama, Rock Is A Lady’s Modesty, currently streaming on HIDIVE. Especially as I am reading Ada Palmer’s book, Inventing The Renaissance, in which she makes a strong case for “legitimacy” as a kind of currency among the elite.

We are swept up in the life of Suzunomiya Lilisa, a first-year at Oshin Girls’ Academy. She is admired by the students that surround her, for her grace and refinement but this is a façade, as Lililsa is a Suzunomiya by marriage and is working on faking her way into legitimacy to make her mother’s life easier. When she finds a guitar pick that was dropped by the equally refined and graceful Kurogane Otoha, Lilisa is sucked back into her previous life of hard rock, competing with Otoha for supremacy in music.

If this story sounds intense, well, it is, but it is also very funny, as both Lilisa and Otoha are vulgar at one another, as they seek to dominate the other in an abandoned music room, drum versus guitar, but the very essence of polite society in other ways. Their Keigo is polished and perfect. We have had discussions here on Okazu about the status of elite families in Japanese entertainment being communicated by the number of syllables in their family name. 3-4 syllables is pretty common. Lilisa’s family is a clearly superior 5-syllable family. When we meet the Student Council President, we are meant to understand that Fujimurasaki Yukari, with her impressive 6-syllable name puts her way above even Lilisa’s family’s elite status. We all had a good laugh about it.

I admit to having been disappointed by some of the music in last year’s girl band stories, but Band-Maid puts down some strong work in that department for this anime. The music is good and hard, which aptly fits the story.  The music scenes are animated with CGI, which not everyone liked, but I think it’s fine here, because, more importantly, what we see them playing is what is being played. That is always important to me, that it’s not just generic wiggling of fingers.

Yuri fans might expect that a story set in an elite private girls’ school might have something of interest, and indeed, there is. Otoha’s behavior towards Lilisa rides a boundary of shameless macking designed to excite the girls around them into absolute tizzys…which is exactly what happens. Lilisa is not above noting how beautiful Otoha is and their first meeting is wrapped in a haze of “fated meeting of one’s eternal partner in front of Maria-sama,” or something similar.

Ratings:

Art – 7 More funny than good, and YMMV on the CGI, but it works
Story – 9
Characters – 9
Service –  Otoha does it all on purpose
Yuri – 4

Overall – 9

With two episodes having aired, I am an enthusiastic fan of the mashup of Class S school vs commoner sensibility, Yuri service and rock and roll that Rock Is A Lady’s Modesty is offering up.



Mobile Suit Gundam: The Witch From Mercury, Season 1 Blu-Ray Steelbook, Disc 2

April 13th, 2025

The front and back cover and two blu-ray disks of a steelbook set. On the right is a girl with scarlet hair in a white uniform with black and gold collar, on the left is the same girl standing in front of a giant white robot with red, blue and yellow features. The two disk are gold and black. If you have ever watched Mobile Suit Gundam: The Witch From Mercury, Season 1, then you know why it took me this long to get through disk 2 after I reviewed Disk 1 in January. It is large heaping doses of trauma with just enough wholesome that you’re ready to be traumatized all over again.

The duels has been all but rendered moot, by the corporate shenanigans of unsavory adults who see their and others’ children as pawns. The council members frankly lose their minds in this disk. Guel’s arc becomes increasingly desperate, culminating in yet another horrific moment, while his brother Lauda begins his descent toward unhinged. The politics of Space vs Earth, which one might hope makes sense, simply doesn’t. as Earth attacks not the products, but the people, with a team lead by a psychotic pilot. The plot spins out of control, and Shaddiq pulls strings to no apparent purpose. Who was any of that for? It wasn’t going to help Earth, obviously and no one in Space gained, either.

Suletta and Miorine have one of their periodic fights only to be reunited just before they suffer yet another trauma, this one well-intentioned, but utterly horrific, nonetheless. Suletta’s continued “baby seal waiting to be slaughtered” isn’t the right tone one wants from one’s hero…or villain. And one begin to feel that Prospera doesn’t love Suletta so much as sees her as a useful pawn, like all the other adults in this story. Should there be a moment of respite, another trauma will rush to fill the void.

This disk is rough, there’s just no getting around it. Knowing that going in to it did not actually help. Worse, the animation is really very good, one can mostly follow the mobile suit fights, which are always, IMHO, the weakest points of any mecha show. Good animation when terrible stuff is going down, again, does not make it better. ^_^;

Phew. I’ll need a long break between this disk and the next season, for sure.

Ratings:

Art – 9
Story – The continued trauma of children for no reason is so much fun. Not.
Characters  –  Deep breath….8
Service – I’m going to say that the violence is the “service” this time. That’s a lot of detail for animated violence.
Yuri – 5
Rage – 10

Overall – 8

In those few moments when Sulette and Miorine do connect, one feels hope and sees the beginning of a meaningful relationship. I know it’ll be fine, but there’s a lot between the story now and that end.