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Discussion, Resources, Roundtables, & Reviews

Sean Gaffney

The Labyrinth of Marielle Clarac

March 26, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Haruka Momo and Maro. Released in Japan as “Marielle Clarac no Yakusoku” by Ichijinsha Bunko Iris NEO. Released in North America by J-Novel Club. Translated by Jasmin Thairintr.

We’re going to Italy! Or at least its fantasy equivalent, as Marielle is finally leaving her home country and traveling to another one. Unfortunately, her fame precedes her, and by now everyone simply assumes that if she breathes out she will stumble upon a fresh new adventure, similar to Jessica Fletcher. This made me worry that Marielle might have to spend the entire book sidelined, forced by those around her to not go gallivanting around stumbling over sinister plots. I mean, she doesn’t even dress up in a disguise this book! Not to worry, though, because I assure you that she will still be accused of murder here, and there’s at least one kidnapping as well. Because where Marielle goes, trouble follows, and I think even Simeon has learned that if he can’t stop that from happening, the least that he can do is to weaponize it.

It’s time for the wedding of Liberto and Henriette, and the wedding party has arrived in the country of Lavia for that purpose. Unfortunately, the prince’s mother has a huge hate on for him marrying anyone from Lagrange, and has decided to emotionally abuse everyone in the party. Even worse, she and a Viscount are assisting the country’s mafia in destabilizing things, which Liberto is trying hard to stop. All this means that Henriette and Marielle have to put up with poor accommodations, grumpy servants, and a mother-in-law who borders on cartoonishly evil. But worst of all, Liberto really doesn’t seem to care enough about what this is doing to his future wife – this is all part of one of his schemes, of course, and he’s got it in the bag, but whether he’ll be able to show the rest of the cast that he’s a normal person is another matter.

This series has always swung between thriller and comedic scenes, and I appreciated that it combined them towards the end, as a tense confrontation with guns where Marielle and the young Prince Luigi are about to be killed has Marielle break the mood in the best Spy Classroom style by asking how long she has to put up with this farce before she’s rescued. The actual intrigue part of the book goes down pretty well, to be honest. More interesting is the character work, as always. Prince Luigi has to deal with a mother who’s always angry and a brother who has no idea how to show affection to anyone, and worst of all, he’s a teenager, so you can imagine how all this is affecting him. I did appreciate that there was no big, dramatic scene where the prince suddenly realizes that he can be outwardly demonstrative towards his wife after all and he starts to be honest with her, because nope, that’s not how people word. Luigi and Henriette are going to have to try hard to turn this guy into a real human being. I hope they manage it.

It appears this series is going to continue as long as there are fresh new mysteries. I’ll keep going. Oh, right, Lutin’s in this as well. Hi, Lutin!

Filed Under: marielle clarac, REVIEWS

How a Realist Hero Rebuilt the Kingdom, Vol. 19

March 25, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Dojyomaru and Fuyuyuki. Released in Japan as “Genjitsu Shugi Yuusha no Oukoku Saikenki” by Overlap Bunko. Released in North America by J-Novel Club. Translated by Sean McCann.

There are certain long-running light novel series that I review that I consider “grandfathered in”. What that means is I’ve been reading them for years, and I know that they’re not really all that good any more, but I set a lower bar just because… well, I’ve been reading them for years. Now, obviously, sometimes a series doesn’t even clear that low bar, and I drop it some 15-20 volumes in. In Another World with My Smartphone was blessed with an obvious “please stop reading here” volume, whereas The Irregular at Magic High School decided to shove its homophobic right-wing protagonist in my face one too many times. Realist Hero has not hit that low bar. It’s still readable, I feel no desire to stop one volume before the end. That said,. there is a moment here where our heroes are fighting the villain, and get mad at him for still being single and not having married like everyone else in this series, where I wondered if this was written by the ghost of Shinzo Abe.

We left off with Souma having revealed that there’s a whole new world of adventure to be had in the North, thus impacting the morale of all of Fuuga’s troops, as well as Fuuga himself. Unfortunately, that’s not quite enough to stop the battle that’s going to be happening today, and now Fuuga knows he has to deal with everything right now or he’ll lose. What follows is a lot of battle, and Fuuga loses. (I don’t regard this as a spoiler because you have read the previous 18 volumes. Did you think Souma would be killed?) Souma manages to swing the battle in such a way that Fuuga is able to retreat with honor (persuaded to do so by, you guessed it, a pregnant wife), but his dreams are dashed. Unfortunately, he is smarter than some of his generals, who have a “war or nothing” mentality. The fragile peace can’t last forever…

This series, for the most part, does not kill people off, something I joked about last time, when it killed off the two oldest men in the cast who had already lived full lives and didn’t have young wives and children. This penultimate volume can’t QUITE do that, but it does manage to avoid killing off any of the named supporting cast on Souma’s side. The same cannot be said of the enemy, and I spent most of the book wondering if the author actually had the moxie to legitimately kill Fuuga off. (The answer is that they leave it vague, but I’m pretty sure the 20th volume will answer “no, he did not”). That said, Yuriga’s family definitely suffers some deaths, as they’re divided between two warring states, and some of them are simply battle hungry. Of all the “it’s better to have a family” hammers that get dropped on our head by the book, the best is Aisha’s fight with Nata, where she declares him boring because his battle style has nothing he cares about behind it but his own bloodlust. She kills him as an afterthought. That was some actual good writing.

Most of this, though, is Realist Hero writing. It’s ending in the next volume, which the author already says will be “epilogues” about all the characters. It’s long overdue, but I’ll read it when we get it. (And hopefully it won’t come back with After stories. Looking at you, Arifureta.)

Filed Under: how a realist hero rebuilt the kingdom, REVIEWS

Pick of the Week: Gods, Ghosts and Teenagers

March 24, 2025 by Sean Gaffney, Katherine Dacey, Michelle Smith, Anna N and Ash Brown Leave a Comment

SEAN: There are a couple of debuts I’m very interested in. But my pick is the final volume of Teasing Master Takagi-san, a series I’ve loved since it began. I doubt it sells well enough to justify the spinoff starring their child getting licensed, but I can dream…

KATE: A new installment of The Summer Hikaru Dies is reason to rejoice, so I’m making it my pick of the week.

MICHELLE: I’m also intrigued by The Summer Hikaru Died, but my pick goes to GOGOGOGO-GO-GHOST!, which looks like a lot of fun.

ANNA: I’m curious about The Failure at God School, as I’m always intrigued by paranormal shoujo series.

ASH: I’ll be joining Anna in picking The Failure at God School as the debut that intrigues me the most this week, though everyone’s picks for ongoing series are all solid choices, too.

Filed Under: PICK OF THE WEEK

Otherside Picnic, Vol. 9

March 24, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Iori Miyazawa and shirakaba. Released in Japan as “Urasekai Picnic” by Hayakawa Bunko JA. Released in North America by J-Novel Club. Translated by Sean McCann.

It’s been about nineteen months since THAT volume of Otherside Picnic came out over here, and let’s be honest, the wait was excruciating. We all wanted to know what would happen next? What we got, as usual with the series, was three interconnected chapters tat also function as short stories. The “horror” part comes at the start and near the end, and it does a pretty good job, even though I’m never going to be one of those folks reading this series for the horror. The actual plot comes in the second half, where we bring Runa back into the series as more than just a cameo, and reintroduce the eccentric Tsuji, who I am suspecting might be the next major antagonist but I could be wrong. The rest of the volume is very strong. But yeah, I’m going to be talking about the middle chapter, which left me grinning like an idiot and jumping up and down in happiness.

But first, a recap. In the first chapter of this volume, Toriko and Sorawo go to the Otherside (its only appearance in this volume) to check on Todate and Hana, as after Sorawo’s Toriko-infested Otherside experience from the last book she’s worried about them. She’s right to be worried – this is the really scary part of the book, though not without its heartwarming, in a weird way. I the second story, Sorawo and Toriko head over to Kozakura’s mansion to inform her that they’re now a couple, and Sorawo struggles with the fact that everyone wants her relationship to be more romantic than she’s comfortable with. In the final, longest chapter, Migawa asks Sorawo and Toriko to help instruct soldiers from their facility on how to deal with Otherside terror, and they bring along Runa (who they are trying to figure out what to do with) and Tsuji (who is now Runa’s minder). Runa has a knack for interior decorating that is kind of cute, and then less cute.

So, let’s talk about that second story. First of all, everyone who enjoyed watching Sorawo struggle with what her relationship with Toriko is will be happy to note that even after they defined it together, Sorawo still hates talking about it with anyone else, as she always senses them making it more normal and ordinary. This fits in really well with Sorawo’s mindset. (The funniest parts of the book are where folks have to explain to Sorawo when she’s seducing people, and Sorawo’s “wut?” reaction to this.) The best part of the book for me, though, was Kozakura. They arrive at her mansion and find it brightly lit, and this worries them. But what it actually means is that she’s moved on and is now in control of her life again. She’s adopted Kasumi which is why the house is bright), and she’s using her degree to make the Otherside safer to think about and study. I wanted to shout “woo hoo!” when I saw this. I’m so happy for her.

Now, is Runa going to be able to have the same journey? Can Sorawo come to terms with the fact that everyone is going to interpret her relationship with Toriko differently? And can Toriko stop all these thirsty women macking on her nue so that she can get in some quality cuddling time? That will have to wait for Book 10, in all likelihood. I loved this book, though.

Filed Under: otherside picnic, REVIEWS

The Countess Is a Coward No More! This Reincarnated Witch Just Wants a Break, Vol. 2

March 23, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Ageha Sakura and TCB. Released in Japan as “Tensei Saki ga Kiyowa Sugiru Hakushaku Fujin datta” by Overlap Novels f. Released in North America by J-Novel Heart. Translated by Bérénice Vourdon.

This is not an isekai title, and it’s not QUITE a reincarnation title, even though it features that, mostly as they’re not reincarnated from Japan. Everyone in this fantasy world seems to have been born in it at some point. But it is one of those titles, like Reborn to Master the Blade or A Tale of the Secret Saint, where our protagonist was an incredibly powerful and influential person in the past, and now that they’ve reincarnated into the future, they find that their past is not so easy to get rid of. This is more literally true for Lam than others in this genre, as not only was she forcibly reincarnated via a spell, but all of her disciples are there as well. And unfortunately, this gets to one of the parts of the title that I wish weren’t the case… all of her disciples are, to one degree or another, yanderes. Fortunately, she has minimal interest in anyone but Char… who gets SLIGHTLY more than minimal.

Things start off fairly normally, as Lam decides she wants to attend a tea party for nobility, which goes about as well as you’d expect, given that she’s still assumed to be an introverted coward by those who haven’t met her new self. After that, though, we get the real plot, as Lam is asked to go to the country of Levres, whose prince wants to meet her. Naturally, Char comes along, and they take Canon as well. It turns out that the prince is the reincarnation of her second disciple, Glacial, who was reincarnated properly with his memories from the start, unlike Lam’s broken reincarnation. Now Prince Fleche, he wants Lam to marry him and live with him forever – much to Char’s displeasure. Unfortunately, the hatred of mages has also followed them to this kingdom, helped along by the Church.

This series has a very big problem for me, which is not a deal breaker so far but the ice is getting thinner. The problem is that while I like the basic situation, I usually want to sympathize with… anyone. Lam is fairly emotionally stunted, quick to deal with “insects” when she’s annoyed, and, while she’s not aromantic per se, she might as well be given her inability to get anyone’s point. The men in her life are all various shades of obsessed with/in love with her, and Char is possibly the only one who actually cares about what SHE thinks about this… and the implication is that if he finds out she was actually Aurora, he won’t care about her own feelings either. The bad guys are also mostly immature brats with far too much power and a tendency to not care about anyone or anything. And given they all have magic, even the people trying to prejudice the world against magic, that’s not a good thing. You want to smack them.

This ends with a cliffhanger, so we’ll see how all these men decide to resolve who gets to marry and have sex with a woman who really doesn’t want to be married to anyone but Char, and who still tends to blush and have a look of horror if sex is mentioned. I’ll keep going, but buyer beware.

Filed Under: countess is a coward no more, REVIEWS

Did You Think My Yuri Was Just for Show?

March 20, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Neru Asakura and Minori Chigusa. Released in Japan as “Watashi no Yuri mo, Eigyou da to Omotta?” by Dengeki Bunko. Released in North America by Yen On. Translated by Janny McKeon.

I wasn’t really sure what this was going to be when I first saw it. The author hasn’t had other titles licensed for the West (though they apparently wrote another, “spicier” yuri title previously). It’s also a one-shot. That said, I ended up enjoying it a lot more than I thought I would, although not necessarily for the yuri aspect of it. It’s an excellent look at the voice acting industry and how it can be very boom or bust at any time, told to us through the viewpoint of one of its bigger stars (though she would deny that). It also gets into the terror of idol fandom, both “trying to start a scandal for clicks” fandom and also what you do when you’re confronted with your celebrity crush in real life and you want to keep that sort of thing separate. Mostly, though, I enjoyed this because of its main character, Suzune, who is fantastic.

Suzune is, for once in this sort of series, NOT an up-and-coming wannabe voice actress. Instead, our narrator is well-established in the industry, not a top star but getting several roles a season, with usually one or two major titles. She’s also ‘yuri for real’ (gay and lesbian are not used, as the novel leans very deliberately into the ‘yuri’ label), something she’s hiding from most people except her friend at work who is the same. That said, Suzune hasn’t really experienced actual love per se. Sure, she’s a massive fan of Karin Shotsuki, the former leader of idol group DIAGONAL who mysteriously retired a few months ago. But being an ‘oshi’ for an idol is not the same thing as love, right? Then, of course, she’s introduced to the new kid on the block at the agency the next day… the same Karin.

Suzune is a type I always like, which is modest and realistic, a bit self-deprecating, but not overly so, and VERY good at what she does. Her professionalism throughout (well, mostly, I’ll get to it) was fantastic, and I even appreciated the scenes she had with the evil villain washed-up voice actress, which she was handling well enough but which Karin, out of necessity, had to take over. Speaking of Karin, she’s fine, and I liked her, but a bit less. I do think that Suzune was missing some very obvious signs that Karin was massively in love with her from the start, but given that Suzune was asking what love really is anyway, that can be expected. The one weak part of the book is the final scene, which not only feels very unrealistic (both in terms of what Suzune does, and the lack of consequences), but also feels abrupt as heck, as if the author was told to stop as they had a page limit.

Still, that’s 90% of a really great book. And it’s a one-shot, so you’re not investing much. For fans of voice actors and fans of yuri.

Filed Under: did you think my yuri was just for show?, REVIEWS

Manga the Week of 3/26/25

March 20, 2025 by Sean Gaffney, Anna N, Michelle Smith and Ash Brown Leave a Comment

SEAN: The end of March, so let’s calm down and be less windy, shall we?

ASH: It has been a little ridiculous at times.

SEAN: Airship has print volumes for Classroom of the Elite: Year 2 10 and Heroine? Saint? No, I’m an All-Works Maid (And Proud of It)! 2.

ASH: I don’t know, that sounds pretty heroic and saintly to me!

SEAN: For early digital we have Reincarnated Into a Game as the Hero’s Friend 4 and The Strange Adventure of a Broke Mercenary 11.

Dark Horse has the 9th volume of its Hellsing re-release.

Ghost Ship debuts 12 Dirty Deeds to Unite the Princess and Her Heroine (Hime to Onna Yuusha ga Musubareru Tame no 12 no Hijiri Koui), a seinen title from Comic Fuz. The princess and the heroine have always said they’ll be together, and now the heroine has defeated the demon lord. Alas, she’s now cursed, and to break it, she needs to do increasingly perverse things. I’d call this yuri but come on, the audience is 100% male.

ASH: That’s quite the curse.

SEAN: We also see Survival in Another World with My Mistress! 7 and The Witches of Adamas 10.

So, immediately after saying I’d start to include Ize Press titles here, I forgot last week to include them. Apologies. So these are already out as you read this. There are no debuts, but we see Dark Moon: The Blood Altar 6, Finding Camellia 3, I Tamed My Ex-Husband’s Mad Dog 2, Men of the Harem 2, My Secretly Hot Husband 2, Omniscient Reader’s Viewpoint 6, Semantic Error 2, Tomb Raider King 10, and The Uncanny Counter 5 (the final volume).

No debuts for J-Novel Club, but plenty of ongoing series. For light novels we see Backstabbed in a Backwater Dungeon 10, Black Summoner 20, Earl and Fairy 10, Hell Mode 9, How a Realist Hero Rebuilt the Kingdom 19, I Want to Escape from Princess Lessons 3, Knight’s & Magic 6, The Labyrinth of Marielle Clarac (the 12th in the series), My Quiet Blacksmith Life in Another World 10, Nia Liston: The Merciless Maiden 6, Now I’m a Demon Lord! Happily Ever After with Monster Girls in My Dungeon 12, and Otherside Picnic 9.

ASH: I’d somehow forgotten Otherside Picnic was still ongoing.

SEAN: And for manga J-NC has Only I Know That This World Is a Game 7, Private Tutor to the Duke’s Daughter 3, Tearmoon Empire 7, and A Wild Last Boss Appeared! 5.

From Kodansha Books we get a 6th volume of Am I Actually the Strongest?.

And Kodansha Manga has a print debut. The Ayakashi Hunter’s Tainted Bride (Kizumono no Hanayome), a Shonen Sirius manga. A young girl was kidnapped and had a demon mark placed on her. Now back with her family, she’s shunned and hated by all and forced to wear a mask. Then she meets a handsome young man after her mask falls off. Cinderella story with a lot of bullying. Odd seeing it in Shonen Sirius.

ASH: Curious, indeed.

SEAN: Also in print: A Condition Called Love 12, FAIRY TAIL: 100 Years Quest 17, Gazing at the Star Next Door 5, Honeko Akabane’s Bodyguards 2, I Can’t Say No to the Lonely Girl 6 (the final volume), Shimazaki in the Land of Peace 3, and Spoil Me Plzzz, Hinamori-san! 3 (the final volume).

Digitally we see A Couple of Cuckoos 22, Gamaran: Shura 30, and WIND BREAKER 19.

One Peace Books has Tales of the Tendo Family 5.

MICHELLE: I should read this.

ASH: I’ve liked what I’ve read, so far!

SEAN: Debuting from Seven Seas is You Are My Alpha (Kimi wa Alpha), a one-shot omegaverse title from Asuka Ciel. Two friends attend a school for only alphas, and are working on a drug to try to fix the whole A/B/O thing. Then one of them… sigh… becomes an omega! Now they have to keep it a secret.

For ongoing titles, they have Breakfast with My Two-Tailed Cat 3, Dungeon Friends Forever 4, HIKARI-MAN 3-4, His Majesty the Demon King’s Housekeeper 9, Kageki Shojo!! 13, The Legend of Dororo and Hyakkimaru 9, The Masterful Cat Is Depressed Again Today 9, Reborn as a Space Mercenary 8, Tokyo Revengers 29-31 (the final omnibus), and Yakuza Reincarnation 12.

MICHELLE: Every time I see HIKARI-MAN, my brain at first interprets it as Hataraki Man and I have this surge of hope that is immediately deflated.

ASH: Mine does the same thing. :(

SEAN: And for danmei we get The Disabled Tyrant’s Beloved Pet Fish 4 (the final volume, and it also has a special edition) and You’ve Got Mail: The Perils of Pigeon Post 3.

MICHELLE: Woo.

SEAN: Steamship has a 3rd volume of Before You Discard Me, I Shall Have My Way With You.

Tokyopop debuts Touch Within the Abyss (Kimi no Yoru ni Fureru), another from RED title, and a one-shot. A hitman who lost his brother as he was unable to pull the trigger reunites with the witness … who is blind. This is BL, so you can imagine what happens next.

ANNA: They start a small business doing artisanal crafts?

ASH: Sounds pretty typical.

SEAN: Viz Media gives us #DRCL midnight children 4, JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure: Part 6–Stone Ocean 9 (the final volume of this arc), and The Liminal Zone 2.

ASH: Oh! A solid Viz week for me.

SEAN: Yen On debuts a one-shot, Miri Lives in the Cat’s Eyes (Miri wa Neko no Hitomi no Naka ni Sundeiru), the story of a boy who can see the past, a girl who can see the future, and how they try to stop a murder. This is an award-winner, but I’ll lay you even odds it ends with one of the two dead.

MICHELLE: That sounds potentially interesting!

ASH: I am likewise intrigued.

SEAN: We also get A Certain Magical Index NT 4 and Days with My Stepsister 5.

And here’s all the Yen Press we didn’t get last week. Debuts first. The Boy Who Ruled the Monsters (Kaibutsu-tachi wo Suberu Mono) is a shonen title from Isekai Comic, and the light novel it’s based on comes out from J-Novel Club. It’s a “weakest is really the strongest” title.

The Failure at God School (Kami-sama Gakkou no Ochikobore) is a shoujo title from Hana to Yume, based on a light novel by the creator of The Apothecary Diaries. Gods these days go to school and have to make the grade… so what happens when a shrine that needs a deity has to expand its search?

ANNA: Sounds interesting!

ASH: Count me interested.

SEAN: If It’s You, I Might Try Falling in Love (Kimi to Nara Koi wo Shite Mite mo) is a oneshot BL title from Manga Park. A jaded boy who hates opening up after a typical middle school experience meets a ball of sunshine.

ASH: Awww, that’s cute.

SEAN: In the Heavenly Prison, the Devil Enchants Me (Tengoku de Akuma ga Boku wo Miwaku Suru) is a seinen series from Dra-Dra-Sharp#. A boy who wants to become a man among men goes to school on a remote island only to find it’s filled with succubuses. Be warned, this is 18+ rated.

ASH: Oh, my.

SEAN: Speaking of 18+ rated series, It’s All Your Fault (Zenbu Kimi no Seida) is a seinen title from Ultra Jump, about an otaku who wants to be a famous cosplayer, and her rival, who already is. This one is also in the “yuri for guys” category.

Nomi x Shiba is a BL title from Kimikoi about a guy who finds himself falling for his roommate. How can this be? He’s not gay, right?

ANNA: I’m sure he isn’t!!!!

ASH: I mean, what are the odds?

SEAN: Sacrificial Princess and the King of Beasts Heir: White Rabbit and the Prince of Beasts (Shiro Usagi to Kemono no Ouji: Niehime to Kemono no Ou Spin-off) is a sequel to Sacrificial Princess and the King of Beasts, of course, and also ran in Hana to Yume. This stars Leonhart and Sariphi’s son.

Super Ball Girls shows what happens when the writer of Blue Lock and the artist of Prison School are allowed to write anything they want. This Big Comic Superior title is about a young man who finds a bouncing super ball holding a beautiful woman. Every time I try to see what this title is about I get angry incels complaining, and not in the good way.

ASH: Huh.

Also from Yen Press: Cheeky Brat 13, The Do-Over Damsel Conquers the Dragon Emperor 5, The Fiancee Chosen by the Ring 6, Friday at the Atelier 3, GOGOGOGO-GO-GHOST! 3, Higurashi When They Cry: MEGURI 4, I Want to Be a Receptionist in This Magical World 6, In Another World, My Sister Stole My Name 2, Is It Wrong to Try to Pick Up Girls in a Dungeon? On the Side: Sword Oratoria 25, I’ll Become a Villainess Who Goes Down in History 2, Monthly in the Garden with My Landlord 4, A Reincarnated Witch Spells Doom 6, A Sinner of the Deep Sea 3 (the final volume), Sister and Giant 3, The Small-Animallike Lady Is Adored by the Ice Prince 2, Strategic Lovers 2, The Summer Hikaru Died 5, Teasing Master Takagi-san 20 (the final volume), The Tiger Won’t Eat the Dragon Yet 3, Unnamed Memory 6, and The Villainess Stans the Heroes 4.

MICHELLE: I would like to check out GOGOGOGO-GO-GHOST! at some point!

ASH: I really should, too, I think. I also need to pick up more of The Summer Hikaru Died.

SEAN: Ooof. Maybe we should get the wind back, to blow away all this manga. What are you buying?

Filed Under: FEATURES, manga the week of

Is It Wrong to Try to Pick Up Girls in a Dungeon? Minor Myths and Legends, Vol. 1

March 19, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Fujino Omori and nilitsu. Released in Japan as “Dungeon ni Deai o Motomeru no wa Machigatte Iru Darou ka? Shohenshu” by GA Bunko. Released in North America by Yen On. Translated by Jake Humphrey.

Oh goody, another short story collection, the first of two that have been given fancier names to disguise the fact that this is a collection of extra stories mostly written for bookstore exclusives, which means by definition that all of them, with one or two exceptions, not only cannot impact the ongoing narrative but cannot impact any of the character arcs. That said, I am always grateful that we get these anyway, as it’s nice to see the little content that Japanese readers got when they bought the volume at Toranoana, Animate, or Gamers. What’s more, fans of the harem aspect of this series, which usually takes a backseat in the main series to the ongoing “series of fights to the death” plot, will be eating well here. Everyone loves Bell and knows it (except Aiz), and Bell is clueless to everyone’s love but loves Aiz (who is clueless towards him). It’s in the title of the franchise!

Trying to summarize all of these would be impossible – most of them only run two pages or so. They take place over the course of Vol. 1-18 of the main series. Some of the ones that are longer than two pages include Eina and Bell’s first meeting, Hestia trying to be Bell’s supporter in the dungeon, a story taking place right after Bell first starts to become famous and shows off his growth as the smith who made his first knife asks if he can put it in his “hall of fame” section, after Vol. 6, Hestia tries another ball to try to dance with Bell, but it proves very difficult; Fels watches over Hestia Familia during the Xenos arc, and keeps a diary of what they are seeing – which quickly turns into a confessional of a sort, Cassandra makes another effort to get people to believe her right before the disaster that sends Bell and Lyu to the deep levels, Lyu and Bell are forced to drink slimes to survive in the dungeon, and three more that I’ll talk about below.

The three stories that work best here are the ones that actually *are* able to do something with character development. They all take place during the “Freya” arc of the series. Bell is going through enforced date training so he can go out with Syr, and as part of it rescues an Elf in Hermes Familia and tries to be suave as he was taught. It works far, far too well. In the second, we get the POV of Horn during the time when Bell is staying with Freya Familia and she’s manipulating everyone’s memories, which shows both Freya’s guilt and angst over her lot in love as well as her massive tsundere nature over Bell; and in the final, funniest story, Laurier does her own character poll of everyone in Orario, and runs into Horn, who is at loose ends after Freya’s fall. The cat fight they both get into, with Laurier praising Bell so much it makes you sick, and Horn tearing him down as much as possible, is simply fantastic.

That said, overall.. this is a short story collection. For fans only. Join us soon for Vol. 2, which has all the store giveaway stories for Sword Oratoria.

Filed Under: is it wrong to try to pick up girls in a dungeon?, REVIEWS

I Shall Survive Using Potions!, Vol. 10

March 17, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By FUNA and Sukima. Released in Japan as “Potion-danomi de Ikinobimasu!” by K Lanove Books. Released in North America by J-Novel Club. Translated by Hiroya Watanabe.

Due to a weird scheduling quirk, I think this is the first time that I have read all three of FUNA’s licensed series in the space of two weeks. Seven Seas’ Make My Abilities Average! came out last month, but its digital version was delayed two weeks for unknown reasons. Kodansha’s Saving 80,000 Gold in Another World also came out with a new volume. And now we have I Shall Survive Using Potions!, which may not be the best of the three (I don’t think I can really call one of these series the “best” easily), but it’s certainly the most interesting, mostly as Kaoru is still an atomic bomb of a protagonist (the word “heroine” seems grotesquely wrong), and as these books have shown, the world that she is in, especially after the time skip, is a toxic one filled with greedy nobles, murderous thugs, and temple priests who have no idea why they should not be rude to a 12-year-old. Kaoru is not thinking about wiping out kingdoms for no reason

Kaoru is currently masquerading as the “stray priestess” Edith, but after almost getting herself murdered by bandits, she decides to performatively hire some bodyguards to protect her as well as talk to the local lord to try to find out who may have hired said bandits so she can eradicate them. Fortunately, the dumb evil noble sends a bunch of disguised soldiers, bandits and goons to kidnap and/or kill her, and it’s only due to the presence of… her bodyguards. And half the town. And, um, the local lord and his own soldiers… that this is foiled. Huh. Funny, that. Anyway, she and her two co-conspirators, Reiko and Kyoko, have decided to open a new shop in the capitol. Kaoru, as “Edith”, heads over there… and is immediately almost kidnapped. And then almost kidnapped AGAIN. Fortunately, guardian angels keep showing up in the nick of time. Funny, that.

So yes, the big gag of the back half of this volume is that Kaoru’s masterful powers of trying to fix her own mistakes and remain “an anonymous priestess with a little bit of power” are hopelessly doomed from the start. Partly because she’s so incredibly bad at not being her real, evil… erm, good, sorry… self, but also because in spite of this series timeskipping 70 years into the future, everyone that she adventured with in the past is still alive, because of her ludicrous OP potions. Especially Francette, who is now a living legend, is famous for bitchslapping a goddess till she stopped threatening to destroy the world, and has mobilized all the other Kaoru worshippers of yore to make sure that everything goes PERFECTLY for her. Kaoru must be disappointed, how is she supposed to commit a little genocide or two if everyone’s so NICE to her?

All this plus more of the PTSD-ridden codependent orphans who develop facial tics if they’re not working themselves to death for more than ten seconds. Potion Girl remains AP FUNA, the kind of FUNA you only read if you’re advancing to higher learning. Like learning how to defuse a bomb.

Filed Under: i shall survive using potions!, REVIEWS

Pick of the Week: No, It’s Not About the Iditarod

March 17, 2025 by Ash Brown, Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Anna N and Katherine Dacey Leave a Comment

ASH: I’ll admit, I had no idea that Satoru Noda had created a hockey manga before Golden Kamuy. I am immensely curious about its relaunch, so Dogsred is my pick this week!

SEAN: My pick is Did You Think My Yuri Was Just for Show?, as I always appreciate yuri with adults not in high school. Plus it’s complete in one volume.

MICHELLE: I’m pulling for Dogsred this week!

ANNA: Me too! Dogsred sounds interesting!

KATE: Is it a hat trick if I also pick DOGSRED?

Filed Under: PICK OF THE WEEK

I Could Never Be a Succubus!, Vol. 6

March 16, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Nora Kohigashi and Wasabi. Released in Japan as “Watashi wa Succubus Ja Arimasen” by Hero Bunko. Released in North America by J-Novel Club. Translated by Roy Nukia.

When I finished this volume, I went to the Hero Bunko site to see its status, and discovered that this volume came out in 2023. I worried that it had been. y’know… (whispers) cancelled. Then I discovered that it was just Hero Bunko not bothering to update their site, the 7th volume came out in July of last year. Still, if the author had been told “can you write an ending that might pass if there aren’t any more of these?”, this would be close to what they might have come up with. We get to hear a lot about the war between Heaven and Hell years and years ago, and the hero’s sword (which, in case the last volume didn’t clue you in, is definitely Altina’s rather than Cain’s). We also get an explanation for Liz, and why she’s super powerful and super horny. We don’t get her memories back, but we get a WAY to get them back. This could be an “our fight has only just begun” Jump ending. Luckily, it isn’t.

Cain and Liz show up for a planned trip to the seaside… only to find that the entire rest of the cast bailed on them. On purpose. So they could date. Deciding to have fun anyway, Cain and Liz show off swimsuits, frolic in the surf, and then go back to their hotel… to find their friends got them a hotel room with a hot spring in the room, but only one bed. They’re not subtle. Unfortunately, it turns out that Liz has been having a massive attack of self-loathing that she’s been keeping from everyone, and when Cain tries to press his suit and say that he’s absolutely fine with loving her, she snaps and essentially becomes a weapon of mass destruction, throwing off holy powers and devil powers that no one knew she had before. can they stop her before the power burns her life away?

This was slightly less horny than previous books, but it makes up for the lack of pages with past Liz’s invention, Girl Time (in Darkness) Mk. I. and then, after Cain destroys it, Mk. II. Which is, not to put too fine a point on it, a robot covered in dildos and vibrators that is supposed to show guys how good anal is. I mention this mostly because I worry that my reviews may entice innocents into reading this series, and if they want to, please don’t. Other than that, this was very good, working Altina The Sword Catgirl into the regular cast and showing how good Cain and Liz’s chemistry is while also showing why Liz feels like she’s so weak compared to everyone else. We also get a new character here, who is Liz’s ancient ancestor, and she’s going to be mentoring Liz from now on, because though they know how to recover her memories it’s not going to be easy or fast.

So yes, Volume 7 is out in Japan! But not here yet, it hasn’t even started pre-pub. So we may have a bit of a wait. Fortunately, I’m sure Liz will send the Girl Time (in Darkness) Mk. IV to help everyone endure the wait. For fans of horny romantic comedy

Filed Under: i could never be a succubus!, REVIEWS

The Condemned Villainess Goes Back in Time and Aims to Become the Ultimate Villain, Vol. 4

March 14, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Bakufu Narayama and Ebisushi. Released in Japan as “Danzaisareta Akuyaku Reijō wa, Gyakkō-shite Kanpekina Akujo o Mezasu” by TO Books. Released in North America by Airship. Translated by Alyssa Niioka.

It’s been a while since the start of this series, and it’s become very hard to remember that Claudia had a life before this one. I mean, we hear about her life as a sex worker on a regular basis in the series, but that’s not what I mean. I mean the “Condemned Villainess” part of the title. And since we haven’t thought about that part as much, it can be hard to remember, not to put to fine a point on it, how gullible and naive Claudia was, and how easily she was led around by the nose. That’s not the Claudia we have here, who is the belle of everyone’s ball, the apple of everyone’s eye, and saving the world one yakuza organization at a time. Unfortunately, there are still shadowy people in the background who very much want things to go badly for the main cast. And as a result, since Claudia can’t be a condemned villainess, someone else is going to have to step to the plate.

We’re dealing with another country next door, and things are pretty bad there. At a masquerade ball, the delegation from Parte, a neighboring country whose citizens seems to hate Harland more and more by the day, have arrived, and they bring with them Niamilia, a noble woman who ends up being suggested as the prince’s fiancee in order to prevent a potential war. But what of Claudia? Well, another of the fiancee candidates, calls her out at the party (can’t have a villainess book without public call out), saying Claudia is an evil woman who uses her mob to traffic in slaves and also murdered a noble the other day. Claudia is, needless to say, above most of these accusations, but given that she IS the secret mob boss of a yakuza organization, she decides to investigate… and finds that someone has been impersonating her.

So yeah, my favorite scene in the book is right at the end – in fact, it’s one of the extra stories added for the book. Throughout the book, we get Wendy, who if she’s been in previous books I’ve never noticed, and she is horrible. She’s easily led, falls for an obvious loser who is luring her into a trap to do his bidding, ignores the advice of the maids who have her best interests at heart, and ends up literally orchestrating murder to prove that Claudia is SECRETLY EVIL. It’s a good look at how conspiracy theories can take hold in someone, and she is teeth-grindingly annoying throughout this book. But at the end, as Claudia leaves the prison where Wendy resides till her exile, she realizes, Oh, that was me. That was literally me in my last life. And thus it affects her more than it otherwise would, and therefore affects us more as well. Claudia gets a time travel get out of jail free card Wendy probably ain’t getting.

All this plus our horrible antagonist from last time, who isn’t in this book in person but who makes his presence felt throughout. These books are difficult but rewarding reads.

Filed Under: condemned villainess goes back in time, REVIEWS

Manga the Week of 3/19/25

March 13, 2025 by Sean Gaffney, Michelle Smith, Anna N and Ash Brown Leave a Comment

SEAN: March was just warming up, now it’s really getting down to business.

ASH: As it should.

SEAN: Yen On has one debut, a one-shot. Did You Think My Yuri Was Just for Show? (Watashi no Yuri mo, Eigyou da to Omotta?) stars an up-and-coming voice actress who finds that her favorite idol, who had retired, is now joining the same agency! I’ve heard this is better than it sounds.

ASH: We shall see!

SEAN: OK, there’s another debut, but it’s a spinoff. Is It Wrong to Try to Pick Up Girls in a Dungeon? Minor Myths and Legends (Dungeon ni Deai wo Motomeru no wa Machigatte Iru Darou ka: Shouhenshuu) is the first in a series of short story collections based around the popular fantasy series.

Also from Yen On: Death March to the Parallel World Rhapsody 23, The Other World’s Books Depend on the Bean Counter 3 (not a final volume, but the last since 2021), and The World Bows Down Before My Flames 2.

Viz Media (yes, that’s right, nothing from Yen Press, it all got shoved back a week) debuts Dogsred, a remake of a 6-volume (unlicensed) series the author wrote in 2011. A young figure skater ruins his career by throwing a violent tantrum and gets banned for life. He moves to Hokkaido, and tries to find a new love: ice hockey. This runs in Weekly Young Jump.

MICHELLE: I will probably check this out!

ANNA: This sounds like a reverse Cutting Edge. I’m curious.

ASH: I had no idea that this was a remake, but I’m looking forward to giving this one a try!

SEAN: Also from Viz: After God 3, Battle Royale: Enforcers 3, Fool Night 4, Haikyu!! 3-in-1 4, Insomniacs After School 9, One-Punch Man 30, Seraph of the End 32, Show-ha Shoten! 7, Trillion Game 4, and The Way of the Househusband 13.

ANNA: Need to catch up on Way of the Househusband!

ASH: Same!

SEAN: Tokyopop has a debut. Trapped By His Love: The Duke’s Unexpected Bride (Nariyuki de Konyaku wo Moushikonda Yowaki Binbou Reijou desuga, Nazeka Jiki Koushaku-sama ni Dekiai sarete Torawarete imasu) is a Comic Corona title based on an as-yet unlicensed light novel. A woman is about to be engaged… to her childhood bully. Desperate, she proposes to the first man she meets. Who is a Duke. And he immediately accepts. For those who like “obsessed” male love interests.

They also have the 2nd and final volume of Comic Party Wonder Love.

Steamship debuts At Your Service in Another World (Isekai Ohoushi Kiroku), a josei title based on an as yet unlicensed light novel. It ran in Pomme Comics. An OL was isekai’d to another world… and finds work as an OL, only in a fantasy world. Sadly, she’s now ordered to “service” a knight she hates. Except… he’s weak to her seduction!

ASH: Hmmm.

SEAN: Square Enix Manga gives is Always a Catch!: How I Punched My Way into Marrying a Prince 2 and Smoking Behind the Supermarket with You 4.

Seven Seas has three debuts. I’ll start with the danmei novel, Legend of Exorcism: Tianbao Fuyao Lu. This is in the same universe as Dinghai Fusheng Records, and stars a young man who comes to the big city to become an exorcist.

I’m in Love with the Older Girl Next Door (Tonari no Onee-san ga Suki) is a shonen series from Manga Cross. This is from the author of The Girl I Like Forgot Her Glasses, and stars a middle-school boy who’s in love with his next door neighbor, a high school girl.

The Last Elf (Saigo no Elf) is a seinen title from Comic Gardo. The world is gradually becoming less fantastic and more industrial. Can our elf help the forgotten spirits escape the country before they’re killed by the military?

ASH: I am intrigued.

SEAN: Also from Seven Seas: Dinosaur Sanctuary 6, Last Game 8, Made in Abyss 13, Magic Artisan Dahlia Wilts No More 7, and Who Made Me a Princess 9 (the final volume)

And for ongoing danmei we have The Husky and His White Cat Shizun: Erha He Ta De Bai Mao Shizun 8.

One Peace Books has the 6th light novel of The Death Mage.

KUMA suddenly has a pile of titles on the preorder schedule for March. The usual buyer beware regarding release dates, but they say next week we get Betrayers Love Song (Uragirimono no Love Song), a BL mafia title taking place in early 20th century Italy.

Kodansha Manga has no debuts. But in print, we see Am I Actually the Strongest? 9, Dra-Q 2, Kei X Yaku: Bound By Law 5, Ninja Vs. Gokudo 6, ORIGIN 9, Sheltering Eaves 3, and What Did You Eat Yesterday? 22.

MICHELLE: Wow, I’ve already managed to fall behind on Sheltering Eaves. I’m looking forward to that and What Did You Eat Yesterday?.

SEAN: And for digital we have Drops of God: Mariage 11, Hozuki’s Coolheadedness 25, Issak 12, MF Ghost 21, Pumpkin Scissors 24 (the first new volume in 5 years), and Quality Assurance in Another World 13.

ASH: I am still glad that Drops of God is still being made available somehow.

SEAN: A quiet week for J-Novel Club. For light novels, we get The Countess Is a Coward No More! 2 and I Parry Everything 8. For manga, we see Butareba -The Story of a Man Turned into a Pig- 5, Death’s Daughter and the Ebony Blade 4, and The Frontier Lord Begins with Zero Subjects 8.

Ghost Ship features Parallel Paradise 21, Peter Grill and the Philosopher’s Time 13, and Rise of the Outlaw Tamer and His S-Rank Cat Girl 5.

Dark Horse has the 42nd volume of Berserk, the first since the creator’s death. It’s being handled by his assistants.

ASH: I’ll be reading this, for sure, albeit with some amount of nervousness.

SEAN: In print, Airship has I’m the Evil Lord of an Intergalactic Empire! 8 and Mushoku Tensei: Redundant Reincarnation 2.

And digitally we see The Weakest Tamer Began a Journey to Pick Up Trash 9.

For a week where Yen Press punted, this is pretty long. What are you getting?

Filed Under: FEATURES, manga the week of

Private Tutor to the Duke’s Daughter: The Ice Wyrm That Slew Champions

March 12, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Riku Nanano and cura. Released in Japan as “Koujo Denka no Kateikyoushi” by Fujimi Fantasia Bunko. Released in North America by J-Novel Club. Translated by William Varteresian.

After spending a long time promising us that Tina would be playing a larger role in the narrative any day now, we finally get a book (well, arc, as I think she’ll be heavily featured in the next volume as well) where Tina plays a major role and gets to do things and be cool. And it sadly underlines the biggest fault of this series, which is that the title and premise promise that the series is about Tina, the Duke’s Daughter, but she’s the least interesting one in the cast. Now, this is not exactly a cast filled with depth – it’s a very McDonald’s sort of series that runs on harems and shonen battles. Despite that, the author continues to struggle to give Tina things to do beyond be jealous and childish and whip out her super ice powers. Heck, she can’t even have a “turn evil” arc, as both Lydia AND Stella have already covered that. (Still, better than Ellie, who was supposed to feature till Stella booted her out of the arc.) Weak heroine energy.

After the events of the last two books, you’d think that our heroes could catch a break. But the villains have been doing the “losing the battle but winning the war” thing for a number of volumes now, and it’s all coming to a head in the next country over, Lallanoy. This is where Felecia’s father was taken, and it’s where the villainous beastmen went, and basically it’s become the go-to place for anyone evil. And now Gondor is calling for aid, and Allen gets to go over there (because of course he’s the key to everything going on everywhere right now), along with Lily (as the diplomat), Tina and Stella (as the magical muscle), and… a random girl they met on the train, who seems to be young but is clearly hundreds of years old. Well, I guess we hadn’t broken out THAT cliche yet.

That summary covers only the first third of the book or so, but… look, much as I enjoy reading this series, and I do, I can usually sum it up by saying “a lot of fights happen, and things look bad for our heroes” as well as “all the girls fight over Allen while he ignores them”. Fans of The Apothecary Diaries anime adaptation who are frustrated at Maomao’s seeming obtuseness will find that she, like Allen, knows but chooses not to. That’s the trouble with being both the chosen one and someone that half the leaders of the country despise (the other half, of course, adore him) – he really can’t afford to notice any of this. That said, he’s in a bit of a pickle this time, though not a bad enough one that his living alarm clocks sets off in front of Girl #1. Yet. We see him having to use Tina as a living battery, and it still drains the hell out of him. Who can possibly come to the rescue?

The cover of the next book might hint. In the meantime, sorry, Tina. Your fights were pretty cool. Your heart is in the right place. But you’re still too damn young and childish to make me prefer you over the older girls.

Filed Under: private tutor to the duke's daughter, REVIEWS

Didn’t I Say to Make My Abilities Average in the Next Life?!, Vol. 19

March 11, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By FUNA and Itsuki Akata. Released in Japan as “Watashi, Nouryoku wa Heikinchi de tte Itta yo ne!” by SQEX Novels. Released in North America by Seven Seas. Translated by Tara Quinn. Adapted by Maggie Cooper.

Let’s address the elephant in the room first: I am reading the digital version of this title, and it has one very large (20+ pages) and one very small section of text that repeats itself verbatim. Fortunately, nothing seems to be missing as far as I can tell, and I assume it will be fixed soon. Leaving that aside, this is another FUNA book, and in particular a volume of Make My abilities Average, which has as its one goal showing a lot of teen and tween girls kicking ass, making their own careers, and deliberately not getting married or even thinking of getting married anytime soon. I’m not sure I can comfortably call it feminist, but at least you don’t have to worry too much about anything too uncomfortable getting in the way of the goofy overpowered antics. Even on another continent, the Crimson Vow and the Wonder Three are going to be ridiculous, and now they’re infecting the royalty.

We pick up right where we left off, in the fishing village, as they try to figure out, now that they have all this rare and expensive fish, how they can preserve it when they don’t have ice magic and they’re miles from anyone. (It involves to a degree, eating and then throwing up, because they’re somewhat devout about not wasting fish.) After departing (and leaving behind the selfish merchant, who ended up being far less important than I expected), they slowly make their way to the capital, where they finally meet up with the Wonder Trio. The two groups, now that they both have Mile to themselves to a degree, agree to team up, after the Wonder Trio manage to game the system and get promoted the same way the Crimson Vow did, and they all move into a big house together. It’s very cozy.

Once a volume, the series tries to remind you that the author does have this ongoing sci-fi plot involved, where we see Mile discussing the fate of the world with various robot dogs, birds, and assorted intelligences. But honestly, this volume seems to half-ass that, and happily gets back to cute girls doing cute things. That even affects the side stories, where we see the two princesses (who also have Mile’s OP cheats) saving their countries from famine/surplus, making a profit doing it, and getting revered as saints. By accident. In the other side story, the baron’s daughter in the Servants of the Goddess – the one who hits things very hard – is inundated with marriage proposals, up to and including the princes of the kingdom, and like every other girl in this series decides the answer is to run away and be a monster hunter. FUNA has a leitmotif, and dammit, we’re going to play it over and over again.

That said, this is fine, aside from the usual “oh no my breasts are small” shtick. As always, for fans of the series only, but they should be happy.

Filed Under: Didn't I Say to Make My Abilities Average in the Next Life?!, REVIEWS

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