How Do We Relationship, Volume 10

March 13th, 2024

Two women smile at us, as they walk arm in arm in a city at night.by Matt Marcus, Staff Writer

The other day I attended an “empty the bar” party for a friend of mine who is moving to Hawaii. Naturally, most of the drinks served were tiki drinks, strong but easy-drinking concoctions of tropical fruit juices mixed with multiple types of overproof rum, often complimented with an earthy hit of allspice dram. The first drink I reached for, however, was not like the others: it was a Bardstown, a potent mix of apple brandy and rye, the kind of drink you nurse slowly as the ice in the glass melts, softening the bite of the booze. I took one large sip and nearly coughed it up onto the floor. I decided to set it aside and make the rounds through the other offerings—a mai tai, a zombie, a painkiller—but I would come back and take a sip of Bardstown here and there. I liked it, but I was not looking for something so intense in such a large dosage.

I was thinking on how to approach this review of How Do We Relationship Volume 10, and as I mulled it over, I was thinking about the discussions I’ve had within the Okazu Discord and elsewhere, especially after Erica’s review of Volume 11 in Japanese. I remembered that Bardstown, and the thought rose in my mind that you can think of manga series like cocktails. Citrus is flashy and trashy like a tequila sunrise—a poor decision in a glass. Whispering You A Love Song is a virgin Shirley Temple: bubbly, sweet, and at worst will give you a tickle up your nose. How Do We Relationship—when the mix is right—is a negroni. It’s complex, with top notes of herbaceous bitterness but lying beneath is a sweetness that carries you forward to the next sip. And if you have a low tolerance it will knock you on your ass. It’s not to everyone’s taste, and it may not be the right drink for every occasion, but those that love it will reach for it over and over again. The rub is, after all the heartbreak we’ve seen these girls endure, I’m sure that a lot of readers are thirsting for some sweet relief. But Tamifull is the bartender, and their hand is getting heavier on the pours.

In Volume 9, Saeko went through a rough stretch leading up to her coming-of-age ceremony only to be saved serendipitously by Miwa. Saeko opens up to Miwa about her past, and the two connect more deeply as friends than they ever had as lovers. Meanwhile, both are having mild struggles with their respective girlfriends, but with each other’s support they should be able to weather these small bumps in the road. The volume ended with a potentially awkward run-in with Tamaki that may blow their “we’ve only ever been friends” story.

Of course, if you’ve read the series this far you know that Tamifull loves to set up a cliffhanger to end a volume only to lead to an anticlimax at the start of the next. Despite a little bit of sulking, Tamaki ends up making use of the knowledge that Saeko used to date Miwa, because she’s in need of some advice. Miwa wants to have sex frequently and she just can’t understand why. But even knowing the “why” does not answer the “how” she will handle it.

What it boils down to is that Miwa and Tamaki have completely different feelings on sex. Miwa’s sex drive is high but has yet to be satisfied; Tamaki mostly feels like sex a chore, albeit one she can sometimes enjoy in her own way. They do have a conversation about it, but you can tell that they are not really understanding each other. Tamaki isn’t really being honest with herself about her needs and wants, and she is definitely unaware of the mixed signals she gives to Miwa. Miwa for her part is letting her anxiety overpower her ability to listen. The tension continues to simmer throughout these chapters.

Meanwhile, it turns out that Yuria struggles with depression (surprise!) and does not want Saeko around when she is in that mood. Adding to her feelings of personal failure at work, she feels miserable about Saeko’s decision to aim for a high-paying office job to help support her dream of starting her own salon. Saeko feels like she’s acting with the best of intentions, but she can’t convince Yuria to accept her choices. The injection of this point of conflict feels like a hard left turn for Yuria’s character in a way that seems calculated. On a metatextual level, I can feel the hand of the mangaka planting the seed of destruction for the relationship, which is a bummer especially after all the work and growth that those two have accomplished together. Nevertheless, it is darkly funny to me for this turn to happen right after I sang Yuria’s praises in my last review.

That’s not to say that this volume is all doom and gloom. When Tamaki reaches out to Saeko to talk about Miwa, it is a nice moment of vulnerability for her and an opportunity for Saeko to help her friend. Miwa also runs interference with Yuria and helps smooth over the current rough patch with Saeko, demonstrating how much she cares about Saeko’s happiness. Yuria and Saeko have a fun onsen trip together, and at the end of the volume they visit Yuria’s hometown to meet her twin sister and her fiancé. All of this great character growth building off of the last volume. That said, there isn’t much relief to be had because of the festering undercurrents that are flowing beneath both relationships. Think of it like replacing the Gosling’s in your dark & stormy with the Reed’s Extra.

I’ve noted in past reviews that the way this series tracks time is quite loose, and in this stretch I felt it most acutely so far. It was surprising for me to realize that by the  end of this installment over a year has passed since the end of Volume 8. (Someday I will map out each volume on a timeline for the blog, which I will update eventually I swear.) That leaves an awful lot of time that we don’t get to see. In particular, we don’t really spend any time with Miwa and Tamaki enjoying an outing without some kind of tension undercutting or tempering the proceedings. What Tamifull choses to show has always leaned towards scenes that drive the plot forward, which naturally means conflict. It can be exhausting, unless you are someone who has a high craving for drama. After all we’ve seen Miwa go through, I think we deserved to have her be happy and satisfied on the page for more than a few fleeting moments.

There is one other pattern in Tamifull’s writing that I am starting to notice, which is that relationship developments for side characters function almost entirely to comment on or signal something about the main pairings; in this volume, it is Mikkun and Rika who serve that purpose. It can feel a touch on the nose, like when Tamaki voices her empathy for Mikkun’s old ex-/current/soon-to-be-ex-again girlfriend, who is described as  sex-repulsed. Tamifull does mention in the author commentary that there are lots of dangling threads for the secondary characters that had to be cut to keep the story moving, and this is one of the consequences.

Personally, I’m still enjoying the story even if moments started to wear on me. There are plenty of elements of Tamifull’s writing that I continue to appreciate, such as the continuity of character. I briefly turned into Leo DiCaprio pointing at the TV when Tamaki observes that Miwa has a preference for romantic clichés, something that goes all the way back to the beginning of the series. Also, Saeko’s tendency play caretaker makes another appearance as she tries to keep Yuria from falling deeper into a self-care spiral. The dishwashing scene is a very well observed moment of caring for a partner who struggles with depression that really hit home for me. It’s the depth and nuances of small moments like these that constitutes the sweetness that lingers after the bitterness fades.

Apropos of nothing, I am always amused when a series sums itself up in a single panel

If nothing else, How Do We Relationship continues to serve up the most potent dose of painfully relatable love in the Yuri/GL space. If you’ve missed that stinging sensation on your palette from earlier in the series, you’re going to be savoring this volume.

Art – 9 You know you’re in too deep when you start to notice how the way the character’s noses are drawn has been subtly changing over the past few volumes
Story – 8 You can start to feel the needle move back towards the negative, which may be fatiguing for some
Characters – 8 There is some unevenness with Miwa and Yuria in the service of drama that feels a touch heavy-handed
Service – 6 Yes there is sex but I’m also counting Saeko in her job hunting suit in this score
LGBTQ – 10 Is there really any doubt at this point?

Overall – 8 The bitter top notes are starting to overpower the other flavors, but it is still plenty potable

Volume 12 is currently available in Japan and you can catch up completely with the simulpub chapters on the VIZ Manga site or app. A college LGBTQ drama so real, you’d swear you owe tuition. 

Matt Marcus is a serial enthusiast whose range of appreciations include guitars, watches, and a particular genre of Japanese popular media named after a flower. Outside of writing for Okazu, he cohosts various projects on the Pitch Drop Podcast Network, where he frequently bloviates about video games, anime, and manga. He also hosts a blog Oh My God, They Were Bandmates analyzing How Do We Relationship in greater depth.



Yokohama Shopping Log, Volume 3

March 11th, 2024

A woman with green hair, wearing a light blue tank top, beige slack and white sip-on shoes, leans back as she sits on shallow stone stairs by the sea, Seagulls fly above her in  broad blue sky.In Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou, Volume 3, Alpha, an android, can see that time passes – and so can we. The adult humans she knows have gotten older, the children she played with are now young adults. There are fewer and fewer people. At her cafe, which never managed more than a few visitors on most days, now goes many days without anyone coming by. 

And yet, Alpha is mostly content to enjoy her time, sipping coffee, exploring the local area, until a crisis pushes her to leave the cafe behind and go on an extended tour of as much of the country as she can visit on foot in about a year.  While she is gone, we learn more about Alpha from Kokone’s discussions with the professor who was part of the design team than we even learned from Alpha herself.  However, like the end of humanity, there are still many holes in that story…we are unlikely to get them all filled in.

In this volume we learn, too, that Kokone truly has no room for anyone other than Alpha in her heart. And, while Alpha treasures Kokone as a friend, she’s not thinking about anyone that much…not even the owner she used to be waiting for.  She’s pleased with the small joys of existence; eating a giant chestnut, meeting a new android, finding a new place to stay and work. We also learn that Meruko is interested in Kokone, but is rejected for Alpha.

As nature takes over the landscape, and humans pass out of existence…how much longer will the androids exist without humans to need them? Nai’s plane will need fuel and Alpha needs beans for her coffee. Who would Kokone deliver to? I assume Meruko would probably make art regardless of whether she had an audience, as artists often do.

It’s hard to feel anything other than the melancholy of the passing age, in between the small joys here. What will life look like when the humans are gone? And how can we get to a point where this gentle twilight is humanity’s end instead of what we appear to be headed towards?

Ratings:

Art – 9
Story – 9
Characters – 9
Service – 1 pinups of Alpha are drawn with love, not service
Yuri – 6

Overall – 9

Yokohama Shopping Log, Volume 4 is out now from Seven Seas. Come for the coffee and company. Relax and enjoy the end of the humanity.



Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – March 9, 2024

March 9th, 2024

A blue silhouette of a girl with a white flower in her hair, embracing the earth. Blue block letters read YNN Yuri Network News. Art by Lissa P. For Okazu.LGBTQ Events

April is the second-best month to be in NYC, so if you’re around, join me and Rica Takashima at the Rainbow Book Fair at CLAGS: The Center for LGBTQ Studies in midtown. Pick up a dual-signed copy of By Your Side: The First 100 Years Of Yuri Anime And Manga in person!

 

 

Anime News

Whether you think they will be “Yuri” or not, the YURI TIMES has an overview of what they think is the upcoming season’s Yuri anime in Yuri Anime of Spring 2024!

To start, the definitely Yuri anime Whisper Me a Love Song, which will be premiering in Japan on April 13. Adriana Hazra has the details over at ANN.

Also check out the write-ups on ANN for maybe-there-will-be-some-Yuri series; Seiyuu Radio no Ura Omote (which initially was being promoted as Yuri, then that disappeared, so who knows), Highspeed Étoile  both by Crystalyn Hodgkins and I’ve Been Killing Slimes for 300 Years and Maxed Out My Level, Season 2 by Egan Loo.

Definitely not Yuri, but golf, because they think golf is what made Birdie Wing great, Sorairo Utility. Joanna Cayanan covers this one.

In the Ep. 24 cast commentary for Mobile Suit Gundam – The Witch From Mercury, the cast and staff once again take the opportunity to note that Suletta and Miorine are married. ^_^ I love that they are not letting that go.

Toei Animation noted on Twitter that March 7th is the anniversary of the very first time Sailor Moon appeared on Japanese TV.

 

This year, with your help we have added four Staff writers. 
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Yuri Manga

Heading our way this month is How Do I Turn My Best Friend Into My Girlfriend? Volume 1 from Seven Seas, by Syu Yasaka, creator of Monologue Woven For You.

Maitsuki Niwatsuki Ooyatsuki – Monthly With Ooya, Volume 4 (毎月庭つき大家つき) by Yodokawa is out in Japan (and on my to-read pile!) Monthly in the Garden with My Landlord, Volume 2 will be headed our way in English this month from Yen Press!

Usio Shio, creator of Doughnuts Under A Crescent Moon, is starting a new Yuri series starting in Storia Dash called “Koi ni Koi suru Koibito no Kankei.”

 

Yuri Light Novels

Stellar Step, Volume 1 (ステラ・ステップ)  tells the tale of a post-apocalyptic Earth in which idol competitions take the place of wars.  Undefeated Rain meets and has her life changed by Hana, whose song moves her heart. This is the first of a series.

Via Yurimother, we have news of Miss Savage Fang: The Strongest Mercenary in History Is Reincarnated as an Unstoppable Noblewoman, which is about, according to Yurimother, “a gender bender light novel focuses on a male mercenary reborn as a woman and becomes involved in a bisexual love triangle.”

 

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Other News

I am incredibly pleased to announced that Rediscovery: Science Fiction by Women, Volume  3 (1964-1968)  is now available from Journey Press. I was able to contribute to this volume in a small way, as I wrote the end word for the story by Miriam Allen deFord. I also contributed to Volumes 1 and 2 and am thrilled to be in such amazing company as Seanan McGuire and Marie Vibbert. I hope you will pick this book and the rest of the series up. It’s amazing stuff.

 

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 2024, 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.



Chaser Game W

March 6th, 2024

by Frank Hecker, Staff Writer

One result of yuri’s increasing popularity is the creation of more and more live-action yuri series, like the popular Thai production GAP: The Series and the recent Japanese series Tsukuritai Onna to Tabetai Onna (based on the manga currently being released in English as She Loves to Cook, She Loves to Eat). Some of these productions are follow-ups to or re-workings of non-yuri material, like the Thai series Love, Senior (a gender-swapped version of the Thai BL series SOTUS). Such is the case with the subject of this review, the eight-episode Japanese series Chaser Game W, which originally aired on Tokyo TV and is now streaming internationally on the Taiwanese LGBTQ-focused streaming service GagaOOLala, with subtitles in English, Spanish, Chinese, Thai, and Indonesian.

The “W” stands for “women”. Chaser Game W is a spin-off of Chaser Game, a previous manga and live-action drama about a male game developer; it shares a setting but not much else with the prior work. The subtitle, “My Evil Boss is My Ex-Girlfriend”, states the premise: 27-year-old Harumoto Itsuki is a closeted lesbian working as a team lead for a game development firm. One day she finds that her girlfriend from university, Hayashi Fuyu, has returned to Japan as the representative of a Chinese company looking to contract with Itsuki’s firm to create a game adaptation of a yuri(ish) manga (or manhua?). Unfortunately, Fuyu has brought with her an older husband, a young daughter, and a vengeful attitude — the result of Itsuki breaking up with Fuyu in college to (apparently) pursue a boyfriend.

Being a yuri production this state of affairs can’t continue unchanged, of course, so the show finds various (and at times contrived) ways to throw Fuyu and Itsuki together and encourage them to re-kindle their relationship. However, corporate intrigues and the demands on Fuyu as a wife and mother threaten to derail it once more. Nakamura Yurika does an excellent job portraying Fuyu’s transition from office terror to a woman approaching her breaking point, while former idol Sugai Yūka acquits herself well in the less demanding role of Itsuki. The two also have good chemistry as partners in romance, although some viewers may bemoan the relative lack of kisses and other physical affection. I should also mention Kurotani Tomoka as Ro Asami, an older corporate manager who takes over the villainess role midway and does a bang-up job of it — although her motivation when revealed proves to be more than a bit clichéd.

Other notes: Beyond the three characters mentioned above, the others in the game development team are also women, while the men are all side characters, ranging from innocent and even sympathetic bystanders (Fuyu’s husband) to sexist buffoons (a character designer himself caricatured). The series finds multiple occasions to favorably portray Japanese work practices and social mores as more relaxed and tolerant than those of China, something I found quite amusing given Japan’s reputation in the West as a land of overworked employees and conservative attitudes. Finally, the epilogue, which occurs after a time skip, gives viewers a happy ending, but I found it a bit rushed and hand-wavy. I would almost have preferred something more bittersweet as being more in keeping with the show’s relative realism about being a lesbian in Japan (or, worse, China).

Ratings:

Story: 7

Characters: 8

Production: 7 (it has its cheesy moments, most notably in a coming out scene that’s accompanied by sound and lighting effects more appropriate to a Gothic horror movie)

Service: 3 (a fairly tame bedroom scene)

LGBTQ: 7 (both Itsuki and Fuyu are explicitly lesbian, although Itsuki is initially closeted and Fuyu entered into a heterosexual marriage due to family pressure)

Overall: 7

Chaser Game W is well worth watching if you’re a GagaOOLala premium subscriber, and worth checking out during a free trial period if you’re not. GagaOOLala has recently established itself as _the_ place to go for current Japanese live-action BL series; perhaps Chaser Game W is a harbinger of an increased GagaOOLala focus on Japanese live-action yuri as well.

You can watch the official GagaOOLala trailer for the show. GagaOOLala also released several scenes from the show on Youtube; spoiler warnings for all these, but especially the second:

Fuyu in vengeful mode

Fuyu’s backstory

Reminiscing about their past

A contrived excuse for wedding cosplay

A romantic moment



Hana Monogatari, Volume 2 (はなものがたり)

March 5th, 2024

An older woman with collar-length brown hair, wearing an orange blouse, looks in a mirror in which she is reflected towards us, as she applies blush. A flower-patterened dress hang in the background.In Volume 1, we met Hanayo, a woman whose husband has passed away, leaving her both free to do whatever she wants and confused as to what that might be. She meets Yoshiko, a woman of similar age, who runs a cosmetics store in town and her life begins to change.

In Hana Monogatari, Volume 2 (はなものがたり), Hanayo begins to build her new life and runs into a new version of an old problem. We learned in Volume 1 that her husband lacked imagination and greatly impeded Hanayo’s chances at growth. When he retired he clung to her selfishly, forcing her to continue to cater to his needs until the very end. She loved him, but she had been ready to start fresh at retirement. Now that he is gone, she finally has a chance at that fresh life.

Hanayo signs up for a college class on Yoshiya Nobuko’s and ends up with a surprising new acquaintance. Subtly, in the instructor’s story, schwinn-sensei’s shows the kind of disdain Yoshiya’s works received for decades at the hands of academic literary scholars. And then a crisis occurs.

Riko, Hanayo’s granddaughter has been fabulously supportive of her grandmother and her daughter-in-law knows what she’s doing and supports it as well. Almost predictably the only person who is not on her side is her son…a man who clearly takes after his father. He condescends at his mother, claiming she is not able to keep up with the times (a projection, as he himself is unable to) and sneers that this is the influence of that “old lady” friend of hers. When Hanayo demands he show respect to her friend and stop being an ass, again predictably, he storms off, his feelings hurt.

Around this time when the series was coming out, schwinn-sensei noted on social media  that her editor started making fun of this story  – not in a kind way. He undermined her confidence in exactly the same way that the son attempts to do with Hanayo.  I don’t know if this chapter was in response to the editor, or was the inciting incident, but it is clear that, like Hanayo’s son, this  guy found even the mildest of criticism of men undermining women’s work too hard to accept, thus proving the problem. Apparently Comic Flapper was not at all supportive of this work.

At least in Hanayo’s case, but one hopes in scwhinn-sensei’s case, as well, standing up for herself brought renewed dedication and strength. Hanayo invites Yoshiko out to what turns out to be a lovely birthday dinner. They tell each other their ages…and Yoshiko admits to having dated older women before. Yoshiko suggests that they do this again next year. Adorably when she gets home, Hanayo freaks out about the idea that it was a date – and is thoughtful at the idea of “next year.”

Another key point in this story is a great deal of Yoshiko’s history. She goes out with friends – on the screen is an older idol celebrating a 20 year retrospective and we learn that she and Yoshiko were once lovers.

Ratings:

Art – 8 Hanayo is adorable
Story – 10
Characters – 10 They have lives, and family and society, like real people do
Service – 0 salaciousness, 10 empowerment
LGBTQ+- 9
Yuri – 7 It notches up

Overall – 10

While this series did not get the love it deserved from its editor, it has been popular enough to be translated into Korean and Chinese in Taiwan and, sxhwinn-sensei announced on Twitter last month that it is coming out in French! I am endlessly hopeful that someone in the US will pick it up for localization, because we definitely need more older adult Yuri! I say “older” but Yoshiko is only a few years older than me at this point. So, yeah, gimme old lady Yuri because I am an old lady. ^_^