[ Home ] [ wiz / dep / hob / lounge / jp / meta / games / music ] [ all ] [  Rules ] [  FAQ ] [  Search /  History ]

/jp/ - Japan/Anime

Japanese Culture and Media
Email
Comment
File
Embed
Password (For file deletion.)

  [Go to bottom]   [Catalog]   [Return]   [Archive]

File: 1751153092075.png (444.05 KB, 542x847, 542:847, ClipboardImage.png) ImgOps iqdb

 No.43549

Ive been reading hundreds of isekai harem ecchi and op protag mangas and manhwas and been wondering if theres a manga that suits my selfdefeatist psychology. The mc has like a cute succubus thats kinda likes him for being op and he just abandons her and then the manga shows how much the succubus suffers and how unbothered and asexual and wizardly mc is. And basically that on repeat. also bonus points if its an isekai doe.
manga im reading rn is I'm a Curse Crafter, and I Don't Need an S-Rank Party! btw

 No.43550

Or wouldn't a manga be cool where the theme is "lost opportunity". The mc is constantly dogding social opportunities granted to him by his ability.

 No.43553

Uncle from another world fits what you are looking for.

 No.43554

>>43553
right I completiily forgot about that one. it would still be nice to see this concept in other settings i guess but thanks

 No.43555

also I would prefer it if the mc would actively avoid the succubi and make it so they never appear anymore for the rest of the manga

 No.43557

>>43556
Domesticated Yapoo: The Human Cattle
Technically an adaptation based on a novel written by a veteran of both the Manchurian Occupation and the Imperial Japanese Navy. The adaptation was largely done by Shotaro Ishinomori, a man more famous for having created Kamen Rider and the Super Sentai than for his manga works.
You can feel the early to mid 20th century flavor to the horror seeping through the whole manga. The book seems to have been something of an underground classic in Japan, kind of like the works of The Marquis de Sade or von Sacher-Masoch in much of the European continent. So far as I know the book is untranslated, but the manga have English versions thanks largely to Ishinomori's fame.

Fair warning, if you found something on the level of Superconductive Brains Parataxis distasteful then you should stay far, far away from this one.

 No.43558

>>43557
It is worth emphasizing that the books were considered pillars of literature. Yukio Mishima praised them as the greatest literature Japan had produced since 1945. They're still subject to serious academic analysis, including by westoids such as this:
https://www.academia.edu/5347860/Empire_through_the_Eyes_of_a_Yapoo_Male_Abjection_in_the_Cult_Classic_Beast_Yapoo
But all of the social issues they comment on are very distinctly 20th century, and the manner of their most scathing commentaries take the form of sexual brutalities that generally are not receivable when used in a visual medium such as manga. So none of the manga adaptations have gained the cultural ground held by the books, and there will hopefully never be an anime adaptation despite the prestige names incl. Mishima associated at various points in history.



[Go to top] [Catalog] [Return][Post a Reply]
Delete Post [ ]
[ Home ] [ wiz / dep / hob / lounge / jp / meta / games / music ] [ all ] [  Rules ] [  FAQ ] [  Search /  History ]