Mangasplaining roars into Season 4 with a heartwarming tale of a boy, his chainsaw demon dog and his quest to get a decent meal and get laid before he gets killed by demons. This and much more ahead!
I don't have to particular insight into why Chainsaw Man moved to Jump+ specifically rather than one of Shueisha's seinen magazines, but if I had to hazard a guess I think Fujimoto's relationship with his editor, Shihei Lin, is probably a factor. They've been working together since at least Fire Punch and possibly before that, and Lin is both the editor on a bunch of Jump+ titles and, according to some interviews I've read, specifically works in Jump+'s editorial department. I don't know if that's the only reason, but I can imagine it was an important factor to why he's there instead of in Weekly Young Jump or one of the other seinen magazines.
(On Fujimoto's side, Jump+ seems to be a lot more willing to let it's authors skip weeks compared to Shueisha's print magazines and I'm sure not having to stick to the weekly manga production grind looks really appealing from the author side of things.)
6 episodes of the Golden Boy anime is up on Crunchyroll. It's very horny. I wasn't expecting just how horny. One scene in particular was...shocking.
FYI- I e-mailed Denpa and they said an ebook version of Under Ninja will be out next week or so. So Episode 88 will have a digital option.
Thanks
I don't have to particular insight into why Chainsaw Man moved to Jump+ specifically rather than one of Shueisha's seinen magazines, but if I had to hazard a guess I think Fujimoto's relationship with his editor, Shihei Lin, is probably a factor. They've been working together since at least Fire Punch and possibly before that, and Lin is both the editor on a bunch of Jump+ titles and, according to some interviews I've read, specifically works in Jump+'s editorial department. I don't know if that's the only reason, but I can imagine it was an important factor to why he's there instead of in Weekly Young Jump or one of the other seinen magazines.
(On Fujimoto's side, Jump+ seems to be a lot more willing to let it's authors skip weeks compared to Shueisha's print magazines and I'm sure not having to stick to the weekly manga production grind looks really appealing from the author side of things.)