HWFWM Vol. 4 isn’t a homecoming. It’s a new game+. A deep-dive review of Jason’s return to Earth, the Nirvanic trade, and the wonders he came back to show.
HWFWM Vol. 4 isn’t a homecoming. It’s a new game+. A deep-dive review of Jason’s return to Earth, the Nirvanic trade, and the wonders he came back to show.
A close read of HWFWM Vol. 3: how Jason turns stolen moments into permanent self, refuses the star seed, and emerges Resolute against a Great Astral Being.
Book 2 of He Who Fights with Monsters is a book about scholarships. Rufus, Gary, and Farrah lifted Jason in Book 1. Book 2 is Jason paying that forward—to Sophie, to Belinda, to the team that builds itself around him—while a Great Astral Being's conspiracy hollows out the city he's just started to call home.
A deep dive into HWFWM Vol. 1 by Shirtaloon — the Essence system, Jason Asano's divisive brilliance, Heath Miller's narration, and why this is the One Piece of LitRPG.
Season 2 of Netflix’s One Piece isn’t just a good adaptation. It’s becoming its own essential version of the story. A full-spoiler review covering the Garp-Roger brotherhood, the Nika dance’s connection to Elbaf’s theology, the Nami-Vivi masterclass, the full Season 2 cast breakdown, and a thesis about flags, fathers, and good faith that continues next week in “Flags and Fathers.”
Doujinshi are magical. There's a breadth of things that can happen in the span of however many pages in a book, and the nature of being self-published means that an author can just let their mind soar. Isaki Uta's Leaper is a one-shot story that premiered ten years ago in Monthly Afternoon Magazine, jump-starting their career as a professional mangaka after winning an honorable mention. Previously, I was fortunate enough to cover Uta-sensei's Mine-kun is Asexual, and Mermaid in the Bottle--both being much more recent works that display their refined sense of storyboarding and art. Going back to any artist's roots means being able to notice details and purposeful actions or habits that turn into quirks and hallmarks of their style. I'm happy to report that plenty of things I really appreciated from Uta-sensei's other work is also present in their first published work!
Today, I'm very proud to bring to you my thoughts and impressions on not just one, but two doujinshi created by Isaki Uta, thanks to Irodori Comics!
Based on the works of: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Storyboards by: Ryosuke Takeuchi Art by: Hikaru Miyoshi Translation: (´・∀・`)サア? Touch-Up Art and Lettering: Annaliese "Ace" Christman Design: Joy Zhang Editor: Marlene First Among the many things I read, there are some genres I dip my toes less and less into, over time. One of them … Continue reading Moriarty the Patriot, Vol. 1 | REVIEW
Author: Hajime Kanzaka Illustrator: Rui Araizumi Translator: Elizabeth Ellis Editor: Megan DentonA cursory Google search can tell you that it's been roughly 50 years since the advent of tabletop role-playing games. Originally an offshoot of war-games and strategy games like chess, they gradually evolved to become storytelling devices, with character writing, elaborate settings, and individualism at the … Continue reading Slayers Vol. 1 | REVIEW
It's been a bit over half a year since the announcement of J-Novel Club's new imprint, J-Novel Heart, back at AnimeNYC 2019. I've bought and read most of the titles that have since been released under that label, and figured it's time to collect my thoughts in a blog post rather than just scattered tweets … Continue reading My thoughts on J-Novel Heart’s current series lineup | REVIEW