Rainbows After Storms, Volume 1

January 7th, 2025

Nanoha and Chidori are high school students. They are friends. And, unbeknownst to the girls around them, they are dating. In theory, at least. ^_^  Volume 1 of Rainbows After Storms is the kind of very slow, very mild Yuri romance with which media giant Shogakukan took it’s first tenuous steps into Yuri.

There is no high drama here…there is only the  simultaneously adorable and irritating blushing of two girl who are more likely to be in a glass closet than they realize. Yes, they tell us that they are dating and they have not told their friends, but right from the first pages, it seems pretty obvious that their friends are pretending to not notice. When the two have the smallest of falling outs, their friends are right there making sure they are okay.

Having read and reviewed 12 of the 13 volumes in Japanese, I know this series will move at a glacial pace but, like plate tectonics, it will move. Chidori and Nanoha will become closer and begin to think about a life together after school.

This gentle Yuri romance by Luka Kobachi will stay gentle, with a little cringey-ness for spice. The translation and lettering are as unintrusive as Nanoha and Chidori’s feelings. If you finish this volume and wonder if you maybe missed something…you didn’t. It’s just that there is no storm here, only rainbows. ^_^

Ratings:

Art – 6
Story – 6
Characters – 7
Yuri – 3
Service – 1, mostly on principle

Overall – A pleasant 6 with lots of room to grow

Volume 2 will be hitting shelves next month, so settle in for a story about likeable teens and some barely-there Yuri. ^_^



Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – January 4, 2025

January 4th, 2025

In blue silhouette, two women face each other. One wears a fedora and male-styled attire, one is in a dress and heels. Their body language is obscure - they may be dancing, or laughing or fighting. Art by Mari Kurisato for OkazuYuri Manga

News this week has to start off with the blazing success of Galette magazine’s Galette- Special English Edition02 Kickstarter campaign which launched on January 1st and surpassed the first four stretch goals by today where it is at about $300 away from beating that final (for now) stretch goal at time of posting.

I reviewed the first issue of this EN translated special edition on the 1st and found that it was exactly what I hoped and more. I expect Issue 02 to be just as good and possibly better, as the number of backers on 01 ended up at 674, and the 02 campaign (which does have a method to get Issue 01 as long as supplies last) is already over 400 – with 26 days left! So if you want to support independent, crowd-funded Yuri manga, this is a great Kickstarter campaign.

Yorita Miyuki is also about to launch the 2nd volume of her independent Yuri series, [her kiss, my libido twinkles]. According to Yorita-sensei, Volume 1 will be available as an add-on to the V2 campaign.

Former Bilibili manhua, Straight Girl Trap by 42℃ Latte and Ice Free Herbal Jelly has been picked up by Tapas comics. This is about a bitchy boss and the worker she favors who is sure that the boss is straight, but wishes she wasn’t….

Via Sr. YNN Correspondent Sean Gaffney, here is a very cute 6-part Yuri manga in Japanese on X. Idol Group no Oshimen to “Kekkon” Suru to Hanashi (アイドルグループの推しメンと”結婚”する話) is by Akuse-chan.

ANN’s Rafael Antonio Pineda has the news that Yomogimochi’s Yuri manga “Boys Gilding the Lily Shall Die!? (Yuri ni Hasamaru Otoko wa Shineba Ii?!) manga will change its title to Kiss Yori mo Kimi no Neiro de Me ga Sameru (Your Timbre Brings Me to My Senses More Than a Kiss Would)” and then begin serialization once again.  I was able to read the early chapters of this as a doujinshi. The story isn’t at all suited to the original title – possibly not the new title, either. ^_^  Volume 1 of this band rival Yuri is out from Tokyopop.

 

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Anime News

Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha EXCEEDS Gun Blaze Vengeance anime has been announced for 2025. Anita Tai has the details on ANN.

We had a pleasant watch-along on the Okazu Discord, but I have not had a second to write up a review of this so, here is ANN’s Rebecca Silverman’s review of the Whisper Me A Long Song anime, Episode 11-12 finale.

Not Yuri, but firmly in Cute Girls Doing Cute Things Cutely territory, Egan Loo has the news that Non Non Biyori anime staff has reunited for Hibi wa Sugiredo Meshi Umashi: Food for the Soul.

 

Light Novel News

Did You Think My Yuri Was Just For Show sounds like it could be interesting as a tale of two voice actresses, one up-and-coming and the other trying to hang on to her career, which will be out in February from Yen Press.

 

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Other News

Okazu Staff Frank Hecker has done some analysis of Yuri titles and has put together a nice chart detailing the growth of Yuri published in the years since 1990 using the listings at Anime Planet as a dataset. It’s interesting reading, you should take a look. There was an apparent peak of titles in the year just before the pandemic, which has not been met since, but I would say that has to include some work that was self or small-press published, since I’m seeing far more Yuri being published by the top half dozen JP (and EN) publishers now.

The folks at ANN put together their Best Manga and Light Novels of 2024 list which includes a number of Yuri titles.

I did a not-Yuri thing! My review of Tonbo!, Season 2 is up on YNN.

 

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Pluto: The Series

January 3rd, 2025

A promotional poster for the Thai yuri series Pluto. It shows the two main characters, Aioon and May, sitting on top of Aioon's van, looking at the sky.by Frank Hecker, Okazu Staff Writer

Believe it or not, there are Thai yuri novels written by Chao Planoy that are not part of the GAP extended universe; Pluto: The Series (streaming on YouTube) is an adaptation of one of them, from the powerhouse Thai production company GMMTV (who also produced 23.5: The Series). Unlike the other Chao Planoy adaptations reviewed here (GAP, Blank, and Affair), Pluto adds a mystery to the typical romance plot—though whether that’s an improvement is debatable, as we shall see.

Aioon (Namtan Tipnaree Weerawatnodom) is a tomboyish slacker working as a motorcycle courier. Ai is estranged from her younger twin sister Oaboom (also played by Namtan), and is thus surprised when right after Oom’s wedding (to wealthy heir Paul) Oom asks Ai to pretend to be her and break up with her ex-girlfriend May (Film Rachanun Mahawan). That night Paul and Oom are in an auto accident that kills Paul and leaves Oom in a coma. Ai feels compelled to carry out her sister’s last wish, goes to see May, and finds, first, that May is blind and, second, that she herself is becoming attracted to May. Ai decides to continue pretending to be Oom and not go through with the promised break-up. And thus the game is afoot.

The ensuing mysteries are many: Why did Oom decide to break up with May? How did May lose her sight, and is there any hope of her regaining it? What’s the connection between May, a lawyer, and Ai’s “motorpunk” friends? Will Oom ever come out of her coma? And most notably: Why doesn’t May figure out that Ai is not Oom, and why does Ai think she can get away with the pretense? The answers to these questions are revealed in the following episodes, so I won’t spoil them here. However, I will note that the series depends on a series of coincidences, connections between characters, and plot resolutions that are mostly implausible and contrived and therefore also mostly unsatisfying.

The appeal of the Pluto: The Series instead rests on the characters themselves and the actors who portray them. Here the series does better: both Namtan and Film are TV and film veterans, and both have challenging roles that they execute reasonably well, Namtan portraying twins with separate personalities and Film portraying a woman who’s lost her sight. Film also rescues May from being thought of solely as a victim of unfortunate circumstances, and shows that she has a scheming and conniving side as well, as befits a successful lawyer. As for their portrayal of the relationship between Ai and May, Namtan and Film can’t match the level of sensuality displayed by Freen and Becky in The Loyal Pin (or, for that matter, by Faye and Yoko in Blank), but they do make for a very affectionate and appealing couple, and they nail the occasional scenes of extreme emotion.

Finally, while I enjoyed Pluto: The Series for the most part, its existence does make me wish that Thai production companies would find more novels from other authors to adapt. Even the best screenwriters can do only so much with Chao Planoy’s novels, filled as they are with plot contrivances and sensationalistic elements. Other Thai authors surely deserve a chance to have their yuri novels become successful live-action series.

Ratings:

Story — 5 (too many complications, coincidences, and implausibilities)
Characters — 8
Production — 8 (the usual GMMTV professional work)
Service — 2
Yuri — 10
Overall — 7

Pluto: The Series is an enjoyable but uneven watch that struggles to overcome the implausibilities and contrivances of its source material and doesn’t completely succeed in doing so, despite the best efforts of Namtan and Film.



Love Bullet, Volume 1 (ラブ・バレット)

January 2nd, 2025

On a bright red cover, with the title "Love Bullet" in white English block letters. A girl in a school-uniform blouse and skirt with white hair and wings holds a gun as she runs.inee’s Love Bullet, Volume 1 (ラブ・バレット) is best known for being saved from cancellation by a social media campaign begun by lexie on X – which happened while I was on vacation and mostly offline, so all I could do is marvel at the response! ^_^ Of course, once I could get myself a copy. I did. And what I found honestly surprised me.

Cupids have gotten a modern upgrade since Ancient Greece. No longer using bows and arrows, cupids are armed with guns and artillery. But their mission is mostly the same – pairing people up in romantic relationships. We learn that cupids are people who died before their own love was able to blossom – and they can earn their way back to life by creating enough pairings, but of course there are conditions.

We meet our protagonist Koharu as she and three other cupids ponder the fate of a trio of young people in a fast-food restaurant. A battle breaks out as the cupids split on which pairing they prefer, Koharu takes a risk and solves the problem.

The story then moves backwards to show how Koharu became a cupid. We already know that the premise is a poignant take on love, and Koharu’s story continues in that vein. When her first mission turns out to be very personal, I noted to my wife that this series is quite original, but very sad. As I mulled it over, I found I would describe it as straight-up bitter, rather than even bittersweet. The art is fun, even as it is quite violent. Explosions and bullet impacts are heart-shaped, for instance. The combination of extreme action and Greek tragedy makes for a pretty unique work that is likely to appeal to completely different audiences for different reasons.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – A bitter, but well-conceived 9
Characters – 8
Service – Guns and fighting mostly
Yuri – 8

Overall – 8

In a world in which more Yuri means some stories will go under the radar (and, globally, publishers often don’t promote more original Yuri work in favor of school girl romances that offend no one and take no risks) Yuri fandom is making its voice heard more often – a topic I plan on writing about as soon as I have a moment. ^_^ In this case, inee’s series has been given a second chance at life, a fitting fate for a story that offers the same choice to its protagonist.

 



Galette Magazine 01, Special English Edition

January 1st, 2025

Magazine cover of two girls in different Japanese school uniforms holding hands in front of a fence behind which greenery and a building. One girl with short reddish-brown hair wears a short brown skirt and yellow windbreaker, her eyes open, but veiled. The other girl, with long dark hair in a longer blue skirt and dark blue jacket has her eyes closed.It has been my habit of the last few years to begin the year with an exceptional Yuri series. I immediately thought of Galette magazine, whose evolution I have been supporting since the first issue.

In 2017, in the years after the collapse of two Yuri manga magazines, several Yuri manga artists and writers built a new project – an independent, crowd-funded, quarterly Yuri manga magazine, which they named Galette.

As a publishing project, Galette has weathered a number of storms – more than one crowdfunding tool pulled out from underneath them because of credit card issues, a pandemic which impacted sales at events, and the usual kinds of obstacles magazines face of shifting readership and economic downturns. Galette has survived for seven years now and is still quarterly, which is pretty amazing for a magazine, for an independent project and for a crowdfunded work. The lineup has changed over the years, too, but the current roster includes some big Yuri names. Galette has even held a few events of its own and artists have partnered with ANCHOR rainbow port Tokyo for events at the world’s only Yuri cafe, as well. In recent issues, Galette has included its readership to provide short 140-character stories.

Last year the folks at Galette launched a Kickstarter for an English language edition. Of course I backed the project, as I have backed the Japanese edition since the beginning. I’ve reviewed Issues 1-26 here on Okazu so far, with No. 27 queued up for review soon.. Kickstartr rewards are shipping globally as we speak. Mine arrived in time to celebrate a new year and it looks even better than I expected! ^_^

My rewards package included the Galette Issue 01, an adapted edition for the English-reading audience, featuring work by Miyuki Yorita, Milk Morinaga, Haru Yatosaki, Nekohariko22, Ringo Hamano, and Izumi Kitta and Momono Moto. The cover art by pen – whose work has graced every cover since – is the same as the Japanese edition and the size is the typical B5 of a Japanese manga magazine, which provides a great reading size for the 242 surprisingly thick pages of this issue. This has always been a stylish magazine, with excellent design work by blankie and chipco design. I did not get the autograph level, but those folks who did got a page with the creators’ autographs. Because the kickstarter made it to the third stretch goal, our volumes include color pages from every creator and extra cover art by pen, as well as an under jacket color book cover by pen. pen’s cover art has been one of my favorite things about the magazine, so I’m delighted to get more. ^_^

My reward level also includes a “mini” version of the first issue of the magazine in Japanese, at about the size of a standard collected manga volume, B6 size. If you did not get this level of reward, you can still get Issue No. 1 as a digital release. This issue includes works by Amano Shuninta, Otomo Megane, Takemiya Jin, and Yotsuhara Furiko (and, as a result, you can kind of see how this magazine was a result of the demise of Pure Yuri Anthology Hirari and Tsubomi magazines.)

Also included in this reward level is a “Galette Special Booklet” which is doujinshi sized at B5, featuring a very prismatic cover of art by Milk Morinaga, with more stories by Nekohariko22, Mera Hakamada, Mono Momoto, Haru Yatosaki, Miyuki Yorita and Ringo Hamano. Like the Galette Meets supplements, these are a bit more adult than the main magazine.  I also received an adorable little set of art cards from these artists.  The production team went with Red Strings Manga for translation, after a number of backers recommended them. They have worked with other Yuri manga kickstarters and shown themselves to be very solid in their grasp of spoken English and character voice.

So, as backers, we have received the same stylish magazine we know and love from Japan, with contributions from Yuri manga artists we know and love, and an excellent translation, for an authentic reading experience.

As a perfect example of perseverance of the Yuri genre, Galette Magazine 01, Special English Edition is everything I hoped it would be – with extras!

Ratings:

Overall – 10

The Kickstarter for the second volume of Galette magazine in English has launched, so you too can be part of this project to bring independent Yuri manga to English-language bookshelves.