
Magus Bride
My first encounter with Ancient Magus’ Bride was when the manga first came overseas. I was reading through manga reviews and spotted its beautiful cover, which went accompanied with a perfect 10/10 score. I bought the first volume when I got the opportunity to and enjoyed it a great deal. Even so, I kept feeling something akin to buyer’s remorse, and one glance at my shelves betrayed exactly why I felt that way.Series. So many series. Sure, some of them are complete, but others I stopped collecting for various reasons and many others are still ongoing.
Berserk, Spice & Wolf, Witchcraft Works, Delicious in Dungeon, all of them are as-of-yet unfinished and all of them I kind of regretted starting on. The introduction of Titania was such an amazing scene in the anime that it makes the manga variant look drab by comparison.A lot of manga release in magazines and try to keep their story going so long as the work is popular enough not to risk cancelation, a process that was parodied excellently in Romeo Tanaka’s Humanity Has Declined. While we ultimately want well-paced stories with daring subject matter and surprising twists, authors are encouraged to pander and play it safe, just to make sure their work stays popular enough with as many people to avoid a more forceful conclusion to its story.And I have been at the losing end of that deal too many times. I have allowed myself to get seriously invested in manga that would end up canceled, I have had series that kept going for so long that I lost interest or it had changed so much it didn’t feel like the same story anymore, and I have started buying new series that would then get an anime adaptation that I liked better.The little bonus comic at the end of Ancient Magus’ Bride’s first volume hammered the point home nicely. In it, author Kore Yamazaki expresses her excitement at the series being popular and remarks that she doesn’t fully know yet how long the series will go on for and where it might go. An understandable stance from the perspective of an author who makes her living on the continued popularity of this beloved series, but it helped me realize I just don’t like getting myself involved with projects that are still uncertain.I liked volume 1, but would I still be into it if the series ended up being 30 volumes?
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What if it would only get 3? What if some big plot-twist completely changed the course of the story and a large part of the fanbase called it quits?
If I am going to dedicate myself to reading a longer series or buying its physical volumes, I like being able to research this stuff ahead of time.was a big commitment for me, but since it was finished there was a lot of information I could find that encouraged me to give it a try anyway. I could see what other people scored it in the end, I could read up on how it topped popularity charts only to be denied an anime adaptation, and AniList tags like “Tragedy” and “Anti-hero” clued me in that the story would be bigger than its comedic first volume implied. Helck is one of my all-time favorite manga series now and I could read it all in one go, whereas a series like Witchcraft Works is also fantastic, save for the fact that I have to wait months for each new volume to come out. Please read HelckI don’t begrudge Ancient Magus’ Bride for this. If anything, this realization ended up being a good thing that improved my enjoyment of the manga I buy. It also pushed me to clear out some of my old stuff and donate a lot of the series I had stopped buying to a non-profit manga library.
However, the allure of new series is never entirely gone. I don’t live in a vacuum and online hype for manga like does make me wish I could join in on the fun.What kind of reader are you? Do you follow ongoing series or do you get them in bulk when they are finished? Do you even still do printed media? If not, what the hell are you doing with the vast emptiness in your shelves? I collect a lot of ongoing manga series and, generally, I enjoy the anticipation of waiting for a new volume of my favourite series to come out. Sure, sometimes a series will change directions in a way I don’t like and I’ll wind up dropping it or a title will be canceled and I’ll have an unfinished series sitting on my shelves that I keep around in the vain hope that it will eventually get picked up again, but I also have a lot of series that I’ve collected for years and have enjoyed every step of the way.One downside I do find to buying ongoing manga is that, with longer series that I acquire over the period of many years, I find that I will forget a lot of stuff that happens in the middle of a series.
I’ve recently been trying to go back and reread some of my older, completed titles and being able to binge read them is a very satisfying experience.Liked. I got back into reading manga late 2018 after six years so I was behind on the times.
Skyrim location of nightgate inn. The only method to get to it is to start the main quest and to travel through Alftand ruins (sector 2, number 19). Location type: ruinsAccessibility: You can't visit the embassy until you've started main quest and found an alternative path leading to it.Comments: Accessing the tower from the surface is not possible the first time you arrive in this location. Unlocking an elevator found inside the Mazrk tower will result in making it a fully accessible area. You will eventually have to enter an underground cavern called the Blackreach and get to the tower from there.
Last year I went through a manga frenzy and discovering the community again. Quickly how much it has involved is just crazy haha. I have a rather small collection and have been slowly adding but I started visiting my library again where I was amazed they have most newer titles. Indepensable resource at your fingertips saved me much money. Digital manga is becoming popular quickly but I seem to only like reading shoujo and light novel digital. Spending my money on digital data is still weird to me.
But not everything gets a print.I’ve been collecting anime for 10 years, I still buy all printed, I’m a printed person. But I’ve become very picky about what I collect.
My collection only consists of what I know I’ll reread and rewatch. I get where your coming from, it’s an expensive hobby but I don’t believe it has to be if you moderate yourself. I intend to do a post covering this from my own experience.Liked. Having survived off libraries for most of my manga intake, I spend most of my time trying to get to new libraries (or less frequently visited libraries) which may end up netting me a new volume of something, whether it be days or years old. In the past few years as I’ve gained regular access to manga I can purchase, I’ve been snapping up volumes of series I like too. Thus, I am a reader of ongoing series, but unless they appear via certain outlets which allow for being up-to-date, I’m fine with being behind so long as I can still understand the storyline.I’m a print person at heart but will read digital if that’s the only way to access the series (e.g. Some Shonen Jump series from the past few years).
I’m very skeptical of who owns my card details, so that rules out a lot of ebooks and digital-only series by default. My collection is still small enough that I wouldn’t give away any of it unless I was neutral on or disliked anything from it, but that’s mostly on the anime side so far (I do have some unread volumes which I have to get around to, so it might change in the future).Liked.
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Here are ten anime to watch if you loved The Ancient Magus' Bride and miss watching it. Iroduku: The World in Colors is an original time-travel based anime developed and created by P.A.
It takes place in the year 2078 in which time-travel is possible. Hitomi Tsukishiro comes from a family of witches who seem to go colorblind as they lose the people they love.RELATED:Hitomi's grandmother, Kohaku Tsukihiro, decides to send her granddaughter to the past to meet her when she was a teenager herself where Hitomi also meets Yuito Aoi, a boy who she falls in loves with in the past. Yona of the Dawn is a manga series written and illustrated by Mizuho Kusanagi. As the sole princess of the Kingdom of Kouka's king, Yona has a blessed life. This all comes crashing down when her cousin and first love Su-Won kills her father and drives her out of her kingdom.Along with her childhood friend and bodyguard Son Hak, she sets off on a journey to find the descendants of the legendary Four Dragon Warriors and take back her kingdom from Su-Won and her enemies. 7 Kakuriyo -Bed & Breakfast For Spirits.
Brianna Albert is an author, writer, reader, and seasonal anime watcher. She has been watching anime since before Naruto became Hokage and trying to figure out how to bend air since she was in kindergarten.
She now works for Valnet, Inc, writing anime lists on Comic Book Resources and writing about television on Screenrant. In her spare time, she writes romance novels, works as a freelance Japanese translator, and binge watches K-Dramas. You can follow her and her witty tweets at @bagariellebook.