Showing posts with label Hayate x Blade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hayate x Blade. Show all posts

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Best Yuri Manga of 2010

I've decided to do a "Best of 2010" list for yuri manga, after all. I was gun-shy about compiling one earlier because I still haven't read a few titles that sound like strong list candidates. But I'll do it anyway.

Top Yuri Manga of 2010:


In English:

 3. Yen Press' release of K-ON! by kakifly:
The only yuri is in Mugi's head, but it's good enough for me to list it. This is a fun, funny slice-of-life series that makes a great pick-me-up.

2. Dark Horse's release of Cardcaptor Sakura by CLAMP:
A wonderfully re-translated, re-released classic with one of the earliest yuri characters known to English-speaking manga and anime fans.

1. Seven Seas' release of Hayate x Blade by Hayashiya Shizuru:
Because it's a great action-comedy with a liberal infusion of yuri by one of my favorite mangaka.

In Japanese:

7. Fu~Fu by Minamoto Hisanari: Don't pelt me with tomatoes. > < This adorable story about two women who are living (and identifying themselves as) wife and wife (or 婦婦, pronounced "fufu") is a heart-warming love letter to love, but it hasn't been published in tankoubon form yet. Now that it's survived Yuri Hime's absorption of Yuri Hime S, I'm anticipating much, much more of Kina and Suu pointing out the obvious for the clueless and making everyone with a beating heart go, "Awww."

6. Sasameki Koto by Ikeda Takashi:
I love how Ikeda Takashi mixes silly, goofy comedy with issues that real queer teens face (like internal and external homophobia, coming out), without it feeling jarring. The characters are loveable and I can't wait to see how things turn out for Sumika and Ushio.

5. Octave by Akiyama Haru:
Octave is hardly the first realistic story about an adult yuri couple we've gotten, but it's the first to last as long as it has. It also brought mature josei-style yuri to a lot of folks who probably don't usually read josei yuri.

4. Gunjo by Nakamura Ching:
There isn't really anything else like this, especially in yuri. Gunjo has romance without being romantic and tragedy without quite feeling hopeless. The characters are complex and the art is...well, look at the picture above. This is a title that I would hand to folks who aren't normally interested in manga, if it were licensed in English.

Am I cheating by making the next two titles a tie?

Girl Friends by Morinaga Milk:
Girl Friends has been Morinaga Milk's baby these past few years and no matter how much of a hard-ass I've been in critiquing it (consider it tough love), I've been following it closely (and for most of its serialization, anxiously) throughout its entire run. Now it's over. Wow.

Renai Joshika by Morishima Akiko:
This yummy, fizzy treat of a story about a group of women who find love working at a bridal planning company overflows with how much fun Morishima is having drawing exactly the kind of story she wants- it's infectious!

And my choice for #1... (Which will absolutely shock you.)

1. Aoi Hana by Shimura Takako:
This is my favorite manga running right now. After years of build up, Fumi and Ah-chan have finally started dating, and I'm on pins and needles waiting to see where it goes from there.

Friday, December 31, 2010

Happy New Year! 新年おめでとうございます!

Happy 2011!!! ^___^  This past year really flew by. We haven't gotten as much yuri anime as in 2009, but there are still some gems. (And fun crap.) Here are...

My Top 10 Yuri Anime of 2010:

English Releases:

5. Media Blasters' Ikki Tousen Dragon Destiny:
Because there isn't much to choose from and this craptastic, service-drenched series about well-endowed women fighting under the pretense of re-enacting the Romance of the Three Kingdoms is more fun than it should be. This season also introduces my favorite pairing.

4. Section 23's Taisho Baseball Girls Complete Collection:
I'm starting to re-watch this. Baseball normally makes my eyes glaze over, but this is a fun "We can build a winning team!" series set in the 1920's, with a strong feminist bent and a little yuri.

3. Funimation's Rin: Daughters of Mnemosyne:
This is trash, but it's entertaining sci-fi trash. The yuri isn't very meaningful, but there's a lot of it.

2. Section 23's CANAAN Complete Collection:
Girls with guns! And some yuri. This show is not only a lot of fun, it's visually impressive enough to warrant a Blu Ray purchase from me.

1. RightStuf's season 4 box set of Maria Watches Over Us:
Because Marimite is one of the best shows ever ever ever and I love watching Yumi choose her petite souer even when I know who it'll be.

Airing in Japan:

5. So-Ra-No-Wo-To:
Not really yuri, but there were enough crumbs for me to list it, for whatever that's worth. lol I just enjoyed looking at the pretty scenery, listening to Kalafina's music, and piecing together the bucolic post-apocalyptic world the characters live in.

4. To Aru Kagaku no Railgun:
Kuroko's love might be one-sided, but she's a great major character in a fun sci-fi anime that ended with a bang. I'm looking forward to Funimation's DVD release.

3. Ikki Tousen Xtreme Xecutor:
For bringing the über-cool Kanu (my favorite!) and Ryuubi tantalizingly close to being a solid couple at the end. And again, for being more fun than it should be.

2. Shin Koihime Musou Otome Tairan:
Shocking, isn't it. I'm usually lukewarm towards Koihime Musou, but the one episode of the third season that focused on the one solid yuri couple (out of a number of canon yuri characters) in the show presented them as an adorable long-term married (as close as we're getting in anime without actually hearing "married" or "wife") couple. Pretty good for a seinen eroge adaptation.

1. Heartcatch Precure:
I've never really paid attention to Precure before, but I decided to check Heartcatch out after hearing the yuri buzz about it on Okazu. It's a cute, consistently entertaining show, and it makes me happy to think of a new generation of young whippersnappers enjoying Precure the way that I obsessed over Sailor Moon as a little otaku. For Tsubomi/Itsuki, Moonlight/Dark, and giving us a new shoujo series of yuri interest, I choose Heartcatch Precure. I'll review it after it ends.

Even though I didn't do a manga list, I'll name Aoi Hana as my favorite that hasn't been licensed in English from this past year and Hayate x Blade as my favorite English-licensed yuri title.

And that's it. I hope you all have a happy, healthy 2011!!

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Manga Review: Hayate x Blade Omnibus Collection 1 (Volumes 1-3)


 Guts! Glory! Idiots!

Hayashiya Shizuru's Hayate x Blade is filled chock to the brim with all of these, and it is awesome.

Hayate x Blade is a strong example of genre entertainment done correctly. It has all of the bells and whistles of its tournament story-type (excluding any service involving its almost entirely female cast, which makes me want to send flowers to Hayashiya and her editor, given that this is a seinen series- imagine, gym uniforms that look like gym uniforms!) executed with a sharp eye for humor, Hayashiya's trademark screwball goofiness and eau de yuri, and a well-defined, ass-kicking panoply of characters.

Kurogane Hayate's twin sister Nagi has been accepted to the prestigious Tenchi Academy, where young women sword-fight each other in pairs (called "sisters-in-arms") to win points from each other in battles called hoshitori. Each pair is divided into two roles, the earth sword (defensive) and the heaven sword (offensive), and they need to strike the stars worn by their opponents to win the battles, gain points and, after enough wins, move up a rank. (Which means more money per win.) Nagi signed up to be a sword-bearer, but since she's been hospitalized Hayate needs to pretend to be Nagi to keep her place at Tenchi. Since Hayate isn't the brightest bulb on the Christmas tree, she outs herself pretty quickly. ("I, Kurogane Hayate-sama, will never let that happen!! Never EVER!!! I'll make sure you never forget the name of Kurogane Hayate!!")

Hayate finds motivation to compete seriously in the hoshitori after the orphanage she and Nagi lived in before they were adopted, Dandelion Garden, is vandalized by a yakuza group that the orphanage's owner owes one million yen to. Hayate makes the yakuza ease off by promising to pay the loan herself, and through sheer idiocy and tenacity she partners up with Mudou Ayana, a seemingly unbeatable student who refuses to take a sister-in-arms (and as such, can't win points even though other people can win points from her) because of the incident that caused her to break up with her previous sister-in-arms and has left her guilt-ridden.

This first three volumes' worth of material (may we see many more published in English) covers Hayate and Ayana's first fight with a girl who nurses a petty grudge against Ayana, but who Ayana doesn't even remember, Hayate and Ayana's match against nine other pairs at once (Hayate set it up so they could move up the ranks more quickly, unbeknownst to Ayana), Hayate's unpaired roommate Moka fighting to save the girl who she wants as a sister-in-arms from an abusive partner (Hayate: "Moka-chan is trying to rescue her true love from an evil villain. This duel is in a week, so I'm helping her out!" Ayana: "You know, that explanation makes no sense whatsoever."), the delightful creepiness that is Isuzu finally getting the partner she wants, another girl befriending Hayate so she can manipulate her sympathy to make her willingly lose when they fight each other (and giving her "energy drinks" before earlier matches to make her fall asleep during them, to Ayana's vexation), and the first truly serious story arc that, as all good action stories do, leaves us with a cliffhanger.

This is good stuff. The jokes are actually funny (like Ayana's solution to Hayate falling asleep during a match, Hayate's reaction to Ayana's dating sims, Hayate and Ayana's stint as Famina-Kamen and Lawson-Kamen, everything about Hitsugi), the characters are a loveable group of idiots (Hayashiya even self-referentially points out her penchant for tsukkomi-boke style humor), and there is yuri subtext aplenty, as well as canon yuri, often played for comedy. You have Hayate and Ayana's roommate Jun fangirling over Ayana, Tatewaki's jealously over Shizuku and Hitsugi, Akira and Sae's butch-femme dynamic, Yukari acting like a snippy ex towards Ayana, etc. The art is good from the beginning, but the linework becomes more clean and confident as the story itself finds its stride. The physical comedy shines and the action scenes are suitably energetic, never lasting longer than they should.

As expected from Seven Seas, the translation is very good. No complaints about honorifics or cultural references being cut, or anything. There aren't any extras, although there is a preview of Inukami in the back, which I don't care about. This volume isn't physically cumbersome to read in one sitting, which is vital for a good omnibus.

Highly recommended if you like comedy or action- or both, whipped together into a delicious blend.

Story: Starts at B+, ascends to an A (In her postscript at the end, Hayashiya writes, "It'll get better soon, I promise!" It will, but it's already great.)
Art: Starts at B+, ends at A-. I love Hayashiya's comic timing. (I'm coming across as such a Hayashiya fangirl in this review.)
Overall: See Story.

Not that it really matters, but I didn't use a photo above this time because my computer isn't importing my camera's photos, for some reason. (My word processor froze and quit twice when I was finishing my final seminar paper earlier this week- it feels like technology's out to get me right now.) And I didn't make my deadline for re-posting on the 23rd. (Apologies for the late post.)

Anyway, yay Christmas! Whether you're done with finals, looking forward to taking a break from your job for an extra long weekend, or anything else, I hope you have a great holiday weekend. ^___^

Thursday, April 8, 2010

StoPani and Hayate x Blade Manga News from Seven Seas

I wouldn't normally buy an omnibus if it's for a series that I already own, but...since Seven Seas' newly (but not conspicuously) announced Strawberry Panic! omnibus will contain "two all-new previously unreleased chapters" along with the rest of the series, I'm sold. -___-;;It's coming out in October 2010. A Hayate x Blade omnibus (collecting volumes 1-3) is due for release the following month. (It isn't coming with any "extras", as far as I know, so I probably won't get it. Although it feels...wrong to have SP! in a larger size, and not Hayate...and seeing Tenchi Gakuen's sword-slinging action in a larger format...damn it. *resists*)

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Wintery Yuri Fun

"Won't have as much time for posts from now until winter break begins on December 23."

Biggest understatement ever. ^^;; Sorry about the lack of posts recently. Only 3 more days of class! And then final exams will be taken, papers will be handed in, a few people might drink themselves silly to celebrate, and all will go somewhere for winter break. After finals have finished extracting what little soul I have left, my hebetudinous flesh-husk will migrate back to Florida and bask in the (relative) warmth of the subtropics. ;) (The snow here is really pretty, though.❤)

On that note, since we're in the middle of the holiday season, I'm posting a batch of Christmas/winter-themed fan art for yuri/yuri-subtext anime and manga.

From Aoi Hana (*squeal*):
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From Azumanga Daioh (the third pic's my favorite ^^):
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From Cardcaptor Sakura:

X

From Choir!:
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From Ga-Rei -Zero- (featuring appropriately-colored lettering :) ):

X

From Girl Friends (cute! Oh...and the latest chapter of Girl Friends was ❤. Finally, progress!!):

X

From Hayate x Blade (reminding me once again why I love Ayana):


From Ichigo Mashimaro (episode 12 of Ichigo Mashimaro ranks as one of the funniest Christmas episodes broadcast anywhere, ever; I must re-watch it during winter break XD):

X

From Kannazuki no Miko:

X 

From K-ON! (another Christmas episode I'll have to re-watch; there's also the Aoi Hana finale... *begins planning yuri Christmas-special marathon for winter break*):

 X
 
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From Lucky Star:
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From Mahou Shoujo Lyrical Nanoha (more motivation for me to watch StrikerS. XD I've gotten farther through season 1, and it has been getting better):

 X
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From Mai-HiME (a クリスマス デート):


From Maria-sama ga Miteru (can't have too much Sei this holiday season):

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From Negima:
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From Noir (love Santa Kirika and Chloe, even though Mireille's head makes her look a little bit like a Martian):
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From Saki:
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From To Aru Kagaku no Railgun (Kuroko's having a very merry Christmas, indeed; aughh, I want to see episode 11, now!!!):
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And since I probably won't publish another post by then, a Happy First Night of Hannukah to everybody who will begin celebrating it tomorrow!! :)

 BGM- "Itsuka no Merry Christmas" by B'z