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Akatsuki no Yona review
I rarely write review, especially for a shoujo manga cos majority of them are lame, but this manga melts my heart so much that I am compelled to write a glowing review on it hoping that this manga may be known by more people.
For once, I am surprised that there is a reverse harem that does not suck and actually has a good story. If you're a fan of romance who's been dissapointed with so many junk out there, then give Akatsuki no Yona is a shot. The best part about this manga is the character interactions between all of them, it has the right amount of humor, romance, and sadness that make my heart ache when I read it. I love how the characters are not one dimensional, each have their own motivations behind their actions, and the "bad guy" imho are not the one dimensionally bad guy since things are not completely black and white here, and I personally can empathize with team SooWon more than team Yona. Compared to a more hard core seinen that I prefer, the story here is quite PG-rated and the events fall together a little too convenient sometimes, but in comparison to all other shojo manga and especially reverse harem that focus on mindless self indulgence romance, this one is on its own league. Every chapter on the manga moves the story forward and gives more background on the character that makes you care more and more about each one of them. I binge watched the entire 24 episodes of the anime and continue binge reading the manga right after and cannot wait for more chapters to show up!
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Beck review
At the first I watch Beck's anime by chance and when I loved the anime and when it's come to end I quickly jumped to manga and read it with an enthusiasm cuz it was an overwhelming joyable story.This manga is one of my favourites and here's my review...
Story: This story centered about Tanaka Yukio(Koyuki) and the band named Beck(Mongolian Chop Squad).The story starts slowly with main characters acrossed each other and slowly developed but strong friendships and not too much but enjoyable love parts.Even if it's a manga about music life and even it's music's part was great/awesome/amazing the relation parts was the most effectives on me and I enjoyed it till the end. Characters: Every character in this manga have it's own attractiveness about it(main/supporting doesn't matter).I love this manga cuz you can find a character to bond yourself to him/her.This is important cuz if you cant bond your toughts to an anime/manga you can't enjoy it fullfilly(atleast that's what I think). Drawing: The drawing was good and fit for manga's reading age gap.Atleast I can say Sakuishi Harold did a great job in this manga's drawings.(I wrote but I don't find right for writting about drawings cuz every people has his/her own taste so it doesn't matter how it's drow) Enjoyment: There is nothing much to say I already say over and over this manga full of enjoy ;D In The End: It's a manga worthy of reading(i didn't mean when u bored you can read this,this manga will be your best enjoy treasure when u read it ^^)and I know if you read this manga because of me you will thank me(don't think bad :D)cuz when my friend lend me this manga and after I finished it I was really thankful to that guy for letting me enjoy this kind of pleasure...
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Uchi no Musume ni Te wo Dasuna!: Oyako Heroine Funtousu review
Normally I wouldn't think to give something a score this low, you might think "seriously a 1?" for me personally it was that bad. To summarize a bit, Don't Meddle With My Daughter (or in Japanese, Don't Meddle In My Daughter) is an apparently western-comic/superhero inspired Manga, featuring mind-numbing amounts of fan service to the point where it can't even be called that anymore.
The characters have zero going for them, their personalities are almost non-existent as they exist solely to be raped by the villains or their creations. The main "plot" is simply this goddess had a child on earth and her child is taking over her job as being a superhero. They basically both have the same powers as Superman, and I already didin't like Superman. Every chapter is them getting into another kerfuffle that ends with tons of nudity and a lot of the time sex to. It's essentially a soft core Hentai with a plot worse than most Hentai. Nothing has any substance in it whatsoever, and I'm shocked the creator claims this was a passion project for him and that he really wanted to make a strong leading female character. People might scream "feminist" if I decide to mention this, and I know Anime/Manga isin't always the best for portraying strong female characters, but this brings it down to another level I did not expect. As mentioned earlier, it's the equivalent to a Hentai in how much value the author has put into his characters. The females are nothing but objects, with barely any personality to back them up other than "I'm a super hero I want to save the day". Every villain is just as bland and forgettable and usually involve either getting naked themselves or turning our main characters naked as well. I don't have much else to say since it was so unpleasant and bland, however I'll end it by mentioning that the art also does the series zero justice. It's very average, and at some times bad even. It looks like fan-art throughout, essentially something akin to Deviantart. I'm shocked the creator has done something popular before this, and I have never checked out Dance in the Vampire Bund, but if this series is anything to go by, I want nothing to do with the creator or any of his work. Downright trash. 1/10 Overall.
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Japan review
(Spoiler warning) This is a book that could have been so much more than a lecture about how the Japanese are number 1 and are taking advantage of their status to further their own agenda and how when the time comes every nation on Earth would turn on the Japanese and enslave them. I liked the magical dystopian event to this but shouldn't the old dude have called them back to present-day wherever they were after they defeated the European enslavers? Man, I expected so much more from the person behind Berserk than this bull. Also what's up with the huge dude lecturing ex-Japanese about
not respecting their identity as a Japanese person? Dude, you are in a post-apocalyptic world where Japanese are killed because of their nationality, of course, people are going to be disillusioned about holding on to their national identity. This manga is so dumb but it is entertaining.
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Choudouryoku Mouko Daishuurai review
The artwork is pretty sketched out/rough throughout, which works somewhat in its favor, also the main storyline sort of fades out and merges into something completely out of "HAND." *buh dum tss*
As it progresses-- things seem to get more and more wicked and it had me questioning why I was reading it, only downside I saw to this manga was how potato people were in reality. All I can say for sure is this ending took a turn in my head, and I can never unsee what happened in this manga; assess yourself if you can handle such a deep and disturbing manga like this..
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Aisuru Hito review
If you're looking for a serious romance, keep looking.
I expected a serious and predictable story from the start, but was taken for surprise when it was far from it, so if you're up for twists, this is your story. The art is enjoyable and appropriate for most scenes, and the storyline is pure comedy with some disturbing implications. The story doesn't revolve around romance, for the most part, but intertwines the basics of attraction and lust with comedy and other interesting elements the mangaka has come up with. The characters are a pleasant jumble too, giving you mixed feelings for everyone. Everyone has a major flaw that makes you dislike them, yet root for them when their at their highest for some strange reason. Very entertaining, but I wouldn't qualify it as your everyday shoujo, if shoujo at all. It's very mature and sometimes it's even mocking so choose to read this with caution.
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Netsutai no Citron review
Tropical Citron opens with a great page, charting the descent of a few bombs into a jungle below and transitioning to the bubbly insides of a glass of water in front of a TV showing a mushroom cloud explosion.
There are many great transitions like this in the story. The composition is superb. There is that trademark Matsumoto black humour flowing throughout as we go from one panel to another, the comedic flourishes juxtaposing perfectly. The story is surreal to the point where the suited dude with the horse's head from another Matsumoto manga makes a cameo appearance here and you don’t blink. Soma, our plucky photographer, is hell-bent on getting to Vietnam because that’s where all the action is but instead ends up Through the Looking Glass as it were, thanks to a literary reference, but more due to vast quantities of Rabbit Juice. This addictive soda pop is all the rage, or to quote a random character "popular among lunatics and the young" and is turning people into junkies frothing at the mouth or slack-jawed zombies. Its other affect is to distort reality and send characters through wacky adventures with psychopaths chasing them with sharp pointy objects. Tropical Citron does eventually regain a semblance of a plot that drives it towards a satisfying climax and genuinely touching resolution. It’s got a pretty laughable premise holding it together, involving witchcraft and aliens, but in the grand scheme of things it’s not very important at all; just a device to keep things in motion. What’s important in this manga is the journey. The characteristic art, the world and specific culture its set in, the quirky humour, the brazen 'wtf' factor; it’s a slapstick adventure with a cast of humorous misfits and many hilarious scenes, panels and payoffs. Mako. The professor. Sorceresses. Rabbit Juice. Dimensional pockets. Jabberwocky. The old man. Soldiers. The Rabbit. Trash. Tempura. The Leica. Slaves. The Horse. A perfect world. Silver bullets. Revolution. Witches. The Hunter. Vietnam. Kittens. Read Tropical Citron to find out.
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Tokyo Mew Mew review
This is my first manga I ever read with knowing it was a manga. I had a lot of fun reading it when I was younger and I still love it to this day. It may have a lot of tropes that we all know, but it dose it well. If you are someone who is older I wouldn't recommend it. But if you know someone who is around 6-10 I would recommend it. I feel like it is a good icebreaker manga to help younger viewers get in to the community. I love how it wants to help the environment too. My only problem
is that I would like to see more of the other characters is the spotlight. For instance I would have loved to see more of Zakuro and pudding.
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Kenja wa Nemuru: Shinjou Mimei no Houseki Jikenbo review
Story (8): I really liked the plot for this story, although I was rather skeptical at first. It seems like a very familiar scene as Miharu (our young and innocent protagonist) is left with an enormous debt by her dirt-bag father and has no way to pay it back. From there, however, things were surprisingly refreshing. Miharu meets Rintaro, who appears to be a rather spineless and absent-minded young man, and he saves her from the debt. The rest of the story is filled with the two of them solving mysteries surrounding jewels, and often results in Miharu learning more about herself. Oh, I almost
forgot! I particularly enjoyed the gruesome depictions of spirits and such that were put in. It's not every day that you get to read shoujo with horror in it!
Art (9): I actually really like older looking drawing styles and A Wise Man Sleeps is no exception. Takeuchi did a beautiful job of drawing the main characters and really giving them life. Miharu's expressions widely varied and were fairly easy to differentiate (unlike some mangas where the character's face never changes from three defaults >.
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