Delicious in Dungeon, Vol. 12 | By Ryoko Kui| Yen Press – And here we are at the apocalypse. Marcille is being sweet-talked by the lion/book into essentially becoming God, and the dungeon is now everything above ground as well, which is a bit of a problem for non-dungeon crawlers. The solution—kill Marcille—is one that is obvious to everyone but the main characters, who spend most of the book trying to talk Marcille down and figure out a way to walk this back, which is ludicrously impossible right now. This is not the sort of series that will have an unhappy ending, you can tell, but it will be very interesting to see HOW they can manage to work everything out here and not have the protagonists in jail for the rest of their lives. Very highly recommended. – Sean Gaffney
Gabriel Dropout, Vol. 12 | By Ukami | Yen Press – I’ve joked before about the yuri fandom of this series, but this volume brings it to the fore more than any other. There’s a chapter devoted to the internet art meme of “put two characters in a room and they can’t escape unless they kiss.” (It’s not “kiss,” but this is a family manga, so we get the PG version.) Raphiel is, of course, 100% down for this, and unfortunately is hit with a massive attack of nerves when it comes to following through, which is funny in and of itself. The other problem is that Satanya not only seems uninterested, but may actually be ace, which is bad news for yuri fans but good news for comedy fans. The rest of the volume is also fun, but we know why I’m here. – Sean Gaffney
Komi Can’t Communicate, Vol. 25 | By Tomohito Oda | Viz Media – I get the basic idea the author had here, which is that Komi has, in her second year, been surrounded by friends she made who know her well, and is living her best life. So it makes sense to put her (deliberately, as it turns out) into a class where no one knows her and she has to start all over again. Fortunately, Tadano is there as well. Unfortunately, so is Najimi, who is no Yamai but I still don’t like them. And then we get the rest of the new cast, who explode at us in a flurry of names and eccentricities, and who mean nearly nothing to me. The bulk of the book is a battle royale using nerf guns, to promote class unity or what have you, but again: this cast has gotten way too big. – Sean Gaffney
Murcielago, Vol. 21 | By Yoshimurakana | Yen Press – Last time I mentioned that Kuroko was spending far more time solving murders and far less time going down on hot women with her long tongue of doom. Good news! We’ve hit the end of the arc, so Kuroko gets to hit one of the surviving women in the arc, and by hit I mean “have sex with.” As for the arc itself, it involves a lot of misdirection, family trauma, and very bad things happening to the series’ punching bag who very bad things always seem to happen to—though this time around the trauma is physical rather than mental. Kuroko and Hinako are both very eccentric women who do not care about a single thing, and if that bothers you steer well clear of this. But for its genre (lesbian splattercore), it’s terrific. – Sean Gaffney
An Observation Log of My Fiancée Who Calls Herself a Villainess, Vol. 1 | By Shiki and Natsume Hasumi | AlphaPolis (digital only) – This may be the first villainess title where the male love interest actually interests me more. It’s not just because the series is from his POV. It’s that the villainess herself, Bertia, is very difficult to take seriously, even in comparison to Katarina and other goofy villainesses. Cecil, meanwhile, is a budding shoujo boyfriend, which is to say he’s an asshole who spends his life mostly being bored because he’s good at everything, and finds his fiancée/”toy” interesting. I will also note that AlphaPolis basically just sticks chapters together and calls it a volume, so expect no extras you’d normally find in a volume. For villainess fans. – Sean Gaffney
Snow White with the Red Hair, Vol. 25 | By Sorata Akiduki | Viz Media – I get my wish, as we are indeed starting a new arc. We also wrap up this last arc, getting answers and discovering that most everyone involved was either evil or being blackmailed by someone to be evil. Well, there’s also the “this evil was happening in my dominion, so it’s my responsibility” thing as well. In the meantime, we get to see Obi be cool, Shirayuki be cool, and Ryu is cool and also not dead. A lot of this arc was devoted to Ryu’s growth (which we’re also starting to see physically), and it did a good job, even if I felt that this went on a bit too long. That said, anyone expecting Zen and Shirayuki’s reunion to be anything but fleeting is fooling themselves. – Sean Gaffney