#HAYASAKA ARE YOU GOOD???????? I AM VERY CONCERNED??????
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SPOILERS FOR DR96: CHIMAMIRE CHAPTER 5
"If Hayasaka thought Natsuki could stare daggers, then Saiki’s cold eyes directed at Kurumada could definitely kill." I had to draw this moment, I'm so sorry Saiki. XDDDDDDDDDD FINALLY MORE DR:96 ART YAAAAAAAASSSSSS!!!!!!! Chapter 5 has been crazy so far, I have no idea what's gonna happen in the upcoming trial. I am very scared. QWQ (Please do not repost my art!) Bonus Saiki-kun!
#my art#digital art#artists on tumblr#danganronpa 96#dr96#dr96 fanart#the disastrous life of saiki k.#saiki kusuo no psi nan#saiki kusuo#your turn to die#kimi ga shine#yttd#kurumada naomichi#kurumada yttd#hayasaka shunsuke#hayasaka yttd#HAYASAKA ARE YOU GOOD???????? I AM VERY CONCERNED??????
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I’ve been screaming about mtnn featuring a lot of neuyako!karma with @isahnas for the last 24hours:
Neuro and Yako keep the real nature of their relationship out of the public eye, so sometimes Fuwa makes theories about Yako's relationships with people and if she has a boyfriend or something. And karma just laughs his ass off
When Karma invites class-e to his house and Neuro and Yako are there and Karma is like: oh hi Mom hi dad. Fuwa nees to lie down
Karma knows a lot of random world trivia just bc his parents travel so muchALSO Fuwa probably notices that he has an eye for detail and one day says smth like "wow you'd make a great detective" and he kinda just... h e h e h
The fanboy from mtnn is Fuwa’s dad. They have a Yako shrine in their house and buy a cake every 10th of March to celebrate
The technology developed by Harukawa was then used by researchers and had a part in making Ritsu and when no one else is listening, Ritsu says "hello, child of the neurons" @ Karma
Karma: am i hallucinating? h a h a
Karma picks up his habit of putting his feet on his desk from both Neuro and Godai
Godai is the reason Karma knows how to twirl a knife in his hands without cutting himself lmao
At least he didn't learn about fashion sense from Neuro and Godai
When he was younger he liked to dress himself with his dads blue suit
Yako gets more and more badass the more she learns out in the worldlike she definitely learns self defense and some martial arts for her own sake, and the day neuro sees her flip three men twice her size and knock them out, he is (secretly) very impressed
Karma first word was dad and Neuro spend a lot of time making sure that his second one was louse
sometimes Karma lets it slip outside of home but people get used to it as a Karma-like term of friendship and camaraderie
Do you think Karma ever gets Okuda to make some kind of poison gas, or a volatile liquid that turns into poison gas when you open the bottleand takes it homeand gives it to Neuro, who's like "mmm good" while Yako is like "NO! NO POISON! HOw many time do I have to teLL YOU"
omg also: Hayasaka uncles
Neuro taught Karma his mother language or whatever combination of sounds demons use to communicate
He and Neuro will talk in code with the vocab he knows but then Yako probably picks up on it and little do they know... she k n o w s
Ok but Yako and Karma would also gang up on Neuro
-passes pet store- "Dad it's u"
Do you think Yako ever shows embarrassing Karma baby photos to his friends?Like toddler Karma swallowed whole by Neuro's suit bc he wanted to wear it
Neuro used to change a lot to his real form bc it made baby!karma laugh
LIKE PEEKABOO WITH A BABY EXCEPT ON A REALLY EXTREME LEVEL AAAHAHA
arma blurting "my dad is a bird" in preschool and Yako has to try and make up things to explain"I tell him his dad flies...because we travel a lot"
"sometimes my dad hangs my mom on the ceiling" *the school calls cps*
Teachers: severely concerned
Yako: "HE HAS QUITE THE IMAGINATION AS U SEE HE IS FINE OK"
Teachers call the police but then the police are like "o it's you"
Ishigaki is like: "im so done, LOOK AT THE NEW MERCH I BOUGHT"
ISHIGAKI IS THE REASON KARMA ACTUALLY LIKES THAT SERIES OF MOVIES THAT KOROSENSEI TOOK HIM AND NAGISA TO WATCH
Isn't Parent day a real thing in some schools? Where parents come spectate a class and are shown around the school and stuff lmaoJust IMAGINE"Dad please don't do the Internet hand to Ritsu. Like seriously. That's creepy."
Oooor neuro and yako going in disguise bc everything is a secret
Yako wearing Akane and Neuro with a red wig
Neuro smiles and all of Class E is like "ah...that must be Karma's dad"
and Fuwa is like: "I think I've saw them before"
"what? my parents? they're the most unfamous ppl of the world. Nobody knows them"
"Who's that threatening yakuza man in your car" "My uncle"
“... That explain things”
Yako and Neuro probably attend class E's cafe thing in disguise bc...food... Neuro slices the food with a demon tool and is like "mm intriguing ingredients" and Yako eats his order lmfao
karma has to ask them to only order five servings per person
when korosensei grabs karma and nagisa and flies away with them, karma's first thought is along the lines of "ok this is MUCH FASTER THAN DAD USUALLY GOES"
I can definitely see Nagisa turning to Karma like "Can you imagine telling your parents that you flew over the ocean with a Mach 20 octopus?"
and Karma just smiles like "haha yeah what a wild story"
later, at home) "I can go at Mach 20 if you really want me t—" "no thanks..."
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Bookshelf Briefs 9/11/19
Atsumori-kun’s Bride-to-Be, Vol. 1 | By Taamo | Kodansha Comics (digital only) – Nishiki loves to study, so when family acquaintance Atsumori suggests attending high school in Tokyo and finding love there as a way to get out of the engagement her father has arranged (to the boy her best friend is in love with), she goes for it. Seizing control of her own future is one facet of her motivation, but so far she seems mostly concerned with getting Atsumori to fall in love with her, since he pledged to take responsibility if she couldn’t find anyone else. Nishiki is okay as a character, but I really like Atsumori. He at first comes across as somewhat snooty and imperious (reminiscent of Naoki Irie), but soon shows a kinder side. I read a few volumes of Taamo’s House of the Sun, but it didn’t really stick with me. I suspect Atsumori-kun’s Bride-to-Be will fare much better at keeping my attention. – Michelle Smith
Blank Canvas: My So-Called Artist’s Journey, Vol. 2 | By Akiko Higashimura | Seven Seas – The second volume of Higashimura’s autobiographical manga Blank Canvas shows her as a young artist making the difficult transition from high school to art school. Granted, for a moment there, it looked like she might have completely failed her entrance exams. And she continues to struggle once she’s actually made it to art school, losing her confidence and creative drive. Blank Canvas comes across as a very honest work. Higashimura softens her story with humor, but there’s still a sense of sadness and regret expressed, especially when it comes to her community art teacher Hidaka. Even though she’s now at art school and she doesn’t see him much at all (and in many cases tries to actively avoid him), Hidaka and his support are still an incredibly important part of her life and of her development as an artist. It can be hard-hitting at times, but Blank Canvas‘ excellence continues. – Ash Brown
D-Frag!, Vol. 13 | By Tomoya Haruno | Seven Seas – So this is now officially a yearly release, I suppose. This is due to Japanese releases rather than low sales, though. The gags still come thick and fast, though, as the game clubs try to game even though it’s too hot and no one wants to leave the house, infiltrate the school to steal back a precious anime figurine, and play virtual-reality games so realistic that they turn intruders in the real world into enemies. And there’s also Takao, her massive crush, and her massive breasts, which as ever get the bulk of the gags. Unfortunately, the long time between volumes means it’s hard to remember anyone, something briefly lampshaded as the club recalls their faculty advisor, who we last saw… when? – Sean Gaffney
Dr. STONE, Vol. 7 | By Riichiro Inagaki and Boichi | Viz Media – I will admit, it’s refreshing to see Dr. STONE actually make you believe that they can create a smartphone in this technologically bereft village. Of course, finding someone to really test it may be a challenge. In the meantime, this very shonen series continues to have very shonen moments, as Senku and Chrome win over one of their former antagonists while spelunking in a cave for minerals. And of course there’s the ridiculous poses, which will make you cry out “YES! TUNGSTEN!” just like the rest of the cast. It’s pretty clear that all the humor that recently vacated One-Punch Man has ended up here, and it’s all the better for it, because honestly would you want this title to be serious? – Sean Gaffney
The Girl from the Other Side: Siúil a Rún, Vol. 7 | By Nagabe | Seven Seas – This series is bad for my heart. I just love Teacher and Shiva so much and bad things keep happening to them! Why can’t they just have adorable snowball fights forever? In this volume, the cursed soldiers have found them and, contrary to the Black Children who believe Teacher is one of them, suggest that Teacher might’ve once been a human doctor named Albert. He’s been clinging to the belief that he was once human this whole time, but once Shiva begins to show signs of the curse at long last, he immediately sheds all those pretenses and actively attempts to use Black Children powers to steal a new soul for her. “If it is for your sake, I will be as monstrous as I must.” It almost feels like a new beginning for the series, and I both dread and deeply anticipate seeing where things go from here. – Michelle Smith
Kaguya-sama: Love Is War, Vol. 10 | By Aka Akasaka | Viz Media – There’s some nice depth added here to Hayasaka, who is bossed around by Kaguya once too often and snaps a bit, though is eventually defeated by the power of Shirogane’s awful singing. We also—finally, after ten volumes of seeing her staring in horror as a background character—meet Maki Shijo, who turns out to be Kaguya’s third cousin twice removed or something, and just as mood swingy if not more than Kaguya is. But the tear-jerking and heartwarming chapters of the volume have Kaguya breaking her cell phone, so ancient she can’t get the pictures restored, and the others sending her new phone photos so she can start to create new memories. This is sweet and funny, as always. – Sean Gaffney
Kino’s Journey: The Beautiful World, Vol. 3 | By Iruka Shiomiya, based on the novels by Keiishi Sigsawa | Vertical Comics – Kino is a lot more active in this one than usual, for reasons that we don’t really figure out until midway through the book. Kino’s in a city where you fight for citizenship, and after discovering it can be lethal decides to join in, even though they’re moving on in three days. Kino’s final opponent, though, is also very invested in this battle—and also has a talking familiar, in this case a dog. As the cover shows, they compare very nicely, and are essentially distaff counterparts of each other. If you want to see some painful moral lessons with a dose of action and badassery, this is a very good volume for that. – Sean Gaffney
My Monster Secret, Vol. 17 | By Eiji Masuda | Seven Seas – This volume devotes most of its page time to Okada, one of “those three guys” and his somewhat half-assed, passive love for Mikan. I do appreciate how the nature of his “confession” is called out for what it is, and like the rest of this cast he has to go through a lot of emotional humiliating shouting before he can actually be redeemed. Of course, Mikan is still in love with Asahi, but let’s face it, that’s not going to be happening in the future. Actually, we’re still not QUITE sure what is going to be happening in the future. At least Akari won’t be immediately fired, though I still dislike this particular relationship. This was OK. – Sean Gaffney
Ran and the Gray World, Vol. 4 | By Aki Irie | VIZ Media – I am so torn about Ran and the Gray World. There are scenes I genuinely like, such as Sango using her thread magic and Ran practicing with her teacher (and new rival pupil) to control her powers. This volume also finally follows up on Otaro getting attacked by bugs and that huge door that Shizuka had been guarding. But it seems like this series’ main mandate is “Get Ran into teen mode and then get her clothes off, ASAP!” It’s not Otaro this time—in fact, he doesn’t avail himself of an opportunity to kiss her—but her tutor, with Irie-sensei putting them into sexy quasi-bondage poses as Tamao attempts to help Ran recognize the breadth of her powers. The action at the end is kind of neat, but do I care enough to finish the series? I’m undecided. – Michelle Smith
Reborn As a Polar Bear: The Legend of How I Became a Forest Guardian, Vol. 1 | By Houki Kusano and Chihiro Mishima | Yen Press – I have to say I thought it would be fine. Yes, it was a reincarnation isekai. Yes, there was a group of cute girls. Yes, the protagonists saves the girls from getting raped, the standard isekai introduction for this sort of character. But he’s a freaking Polar Bear! He doesn’t transform, we don’t see him as a human—he’s a big old bear, out to protect a group of werewolf girls. As such, the fact that they seem to be falling in love with him, and asking about having his children, is even more jarring than it would be if it were something like Bunny Drop or Daughter Demon Lord. HE’S A BEAR! Like Fozzie Bear, but… well, not very much like Fozzie Bear. In any case: no. – Sean Gaffney
Yowamushi Pedal, Vol. 12 | By Wataru Watanabe | Yen Press – There are manga that I enjoy more than this on a fannish level, or a shipping level, or on an overanalysis level. But pound for pound there are very few manga that I enjoy as I’m reading them like I do YowaPeda, which manages to turn a cycling race into the most dramatic thing ever. More manly sacrifices are made, more trash is talked, Okita continues to somehow keep up with everyone through the sheer power of being the lead character, and even Midousuji gets through the volume without being the most annoying person ever. The omnibuses also help a lot, as this race is STILL GOING, though all signs point to it ending in the next book. One of the best sports manga coming out here. – Sean Gaffney
By: Ash Brown
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