The Manga Review: Robot Cat from the Future

The Manga Review: Robot Cat from the Future

When Toei Animation released its 2025 Business Outlook Report last week, fans immediately began translating the document. Twitter user @Venixys reported that Toei was planning to expand it use generative AI tools in several ways including “storyboard creation,” “coloring,” and “background creation” from photographs. While using AI to perform these kind of detail-oriented, labor-intensive tasks could streamline production, it most likely comes with a human cost, as this work has traditionally been performed by teams of animators. In her coverage of the story, CBR’s Renee Senzatimore noted that Toei and Kodansha had both invested in Preferred Networks, Inc., a startup firm in the generative AI field.

One additional note: if you’re headed to San Francisco this fall, be sure to check out the de Young Museum’s Art of Manga exhibition, which opens on September 27th and runs through January 25, 2026. You can save $5.00 per ticket by pre-ordering them and using the code KODANSHA when checking out. (The fine print: the offer is “valid online only for adult and senior tickets to see Art of Manga from September 27 though October 25, 2025, subject to availability. This offer expires at 11:59pm (PT) on July 1, 2025.”) I’m sorry I don’t have a reason to be in San Francisco this fall, as the show looks great. How could it not be when Deb Aoki and Shaenon Garrity are on the advisory committee?

NEWS ROUND-UP

In international publishing news, Kadakowa recently announced that it has acquired a 70% ownership stake in Edizioni BD, the largest Italian publisher of manga. As part of the deal, Edizioni BD will become a subsidiary of Kadakowa at a time when the Italian manga market is booming.  [Animeconomics]

ICv2 is offering readers a sneak peak at Infini-T Force, a forthcoming series about a high school student who has the power to summon Gatchaman when she’s in a bind. Hilarity ensues (or so I’m guessing from the jokey tone of the press release). [ICv2]

To mark its tenth anniversary, Shonen Jump+ has commissioned anime adaptations of series that ran on the platform. Matt Schely has the details. [Otaku USA]

ICYMI: Brigid Alverson investigates “the ongoing saga of the Diamond bankruptcy,” walking readers through mountains of legal documents to explain why this messy situation isn’t fully resolved. [The Comics Journal]

Your feel-good story of the week: the residents of Takaikamishima—population 11—decided to open a manga academy to put the island back on the map. The school is open in the summer, and caters to tweens and teens. [The Asahi Shimbun]

ESSAYS AND PODCASTS

If Helen Chazan’s writing hasn’t been on your radar, now is an excellent time to get acquainted with her work. TCJ just published her essay on Hunter x Hunter in which she characterizes Yoshihiru Togashi’s series as the “shōnen manga of a free man, every page crackling with hard-earned creative agency.” She elaborates: “The generic springboard of the Shōnen Jump manga premise is an opening for Togashi to draw whatever he pleases, in any style, setting or tone he wishes to explore.” I’ve never been particularly interested in Hunter x Hunter, but she’s persuaded me to give it a second chance. Go, read! [The Comics Journal]

David and Jordan debate the merits of Rash!!a short-lived series set in a prison infirmary. [Shonen Flop]

The Manga Machinations team has a full plate this week, with Look Back, The Legend of Kamui, and Silver Mountain on the menu. [Manga Machinations]

Gee and Ray dedicate their latest podcast to romantasy, focusing on Dawn of the Arcana and The King’s Beast[Read Right to Left]

Should you read War of the Adults? Rob offers his two cents as a parent and manga fan. [Dad Needs to Talk]

Petter and James tackle volume twenty-two of To Your Eternity[Umami Manga]

ICYMI: Xan revisits Kingyo Used Bookswhich documents the manga-reading habits of the store’s clientele. [Spiraken Manga Review]

And speaking of old school titles, Kory, Helen, and Apryll jump in the WABAC Machine for a look at The Legend of Chun Hyang, an early CLAMP classic  [Manga in Your Ears]

Over at The Outerhaven, Richard Heaton explains why Dungeon Friends Forever is begging for an anime adaptation. [The Outerhaven]

Jocelyne Allen—another writer you should be following—sings the praises of Crystal Dragon, an epic shojo fantasy steeped in Celtic folklore. “While pretty much every panel is a work of art,” Allen notes, creator Ashibe Yuho “pulls off some truly glorious moments of visual storytelling.” Don’t hold your breath for the license, however; the series has been unfolding in fits and starts for forty years and still isn’t finished. [Brain vs. Book]

REVIEWS

Kirkus Reviews gives solid marks to Eike Exner’s forthcoming Manga: A New History of Japanese Comics, which will be released in August… Kathryn Hemmann reviews She and Her Catan anthology of short stories inspired by Makoto Shinkai’s short film of the same name… Rebecca Silverman recommends The 13th Footprinta new mystery from the creator of Erased… and the latest recent installment of The Beat’s Bizarre Adventure focuses on A Drifting Life, Lucifer and the Biscuit Hammer, and Seduced by the Demon King: A Sensual Rebirth.

New and Noteworthy

Complete, OOP, and Ongoing Eries

 



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