indigozeal: (weird)
2016-02-03 11:08 pm
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Very brief notes from browsing doujinshi shops when I should be working

- Akari Funato has a new 20-page digital manga up in her Booth shop. Entitled "Peko no Suke," it appears to have something to do with traditional Japanese cuisine. I haven't attempted to order it yet, so I don't know if customers outside Japan can just roll up & plunk money down without additional rigmarole, but I figured I'd spread the news in case someone out there had the time to check it out before me.

- Speaking of Booth, I just discovered the very similar Chamela, which also specializes in selling doujin goods. The site's older and kind of a mess, though - the search engine is largely useless, and you're better off using Google and "url:chamela.com" etc. Granted, I haven't found much - a Baten Kaitos binsen, a couple Silent Hill 4 11121 doujin, a horror doujin compilation that includes stuff on Rule of Rose, of all things - but, hey; maybe you want to window shop for your favorite franchise.

- Suruga-ya's online shop has gotten in just a ton of old game magazines. Oh, dear.
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indigozeal: (ghaldain)
2015-10-11 10:29 pm
Entry tags:

Tag & icon not entirely appropriate yet.

Akari Funato's Booth shop; nothing of interest in stock as of this writing. (The excellent 201108A doujinshi is listed as part of a two-pack but is out of stock right now.) Funato says that she plans to put her PDFs up on Booth eventually, so stay tuned.

ETA: Funato has a Twitter and Tumblr, apparently, but outside of a pic of the covers of what were apparently her first Lunar doujin (with just a little sketch of Lemina), the accounts don't have much but a) pics of that goddamn Chain Chronicle iPhone game and b) a "don't scan ANY of these comic panels!" notice Funato put in her Under the Rose books that she retweeted like 10 different times.
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indigozeal: (Daniella)
2015-09-03 10:29 am

Looking at booth.pm

Sorry I declared my return a bit early - I'm concentrating on translation projects, plus my dog's health is acting up - but I wanted to drop by to post on my belated discovery of Pixiv's doujinshi market, Booth.pm, where Pixiv artists can sell their doujinshi items directly. It's a real intriguing concept, but there's not much to report, at least for the series I like: a sold-out 20th anniversary Lunar 2 doujin from Garden Garden (which is still at it, and which hasn't improved artistically); a few scattered Angelique tchotchkes, mostly of an Oscar/Lumi nature (and it goes to show how unaccustomed I am to that new Lumiale design, because I was looking at that charm and thinking: "who's that chick with Oscar; is she from another game?"); and...some picture (not a doujin; a picture) of Alis Landale and some other warrior chica biting a catgirl's ears. The most curious discovery was of a bunch of Clock Tower doujinshi, but I don't think I'll bite; it's predominantly Jennifer/Edward, with both characters drawn - well, I was going to say "very young," but the characters' physical ages during the game are 15 and 10 respectively. Yes, I know that Edward is an age-old demon, and hints of that dynamic are an effective creep factor in the novel, but...well, try explaining to that to customs, at the very least. Someone did make replicas of Yu/Alyssa's amulets, though, which is remarkable.

(I also came across this remarkable artist while searching for 999 stuff - which is nil, apparently. There are some very odd omissions in Booth's stock, though - no FF4, and no Ib, which was a cottage industry on Pixiv last time I looked.)

(Also, I feel obliged to mention that if you like FF6, you might enjoy these fan artbooks. For Chrono Trigger, have a Magus postcard set.)

(I must also link this.)

Of course, most of the series I enjoy have been around for a few years and are unlikely to see the release of many new books or items; you might have better luck yourself searching for the titles you enjoy. You'll have to use Tenso or another forwarding service if you decide to bite, of course.
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indigozeal: (weird)
2015-08-21 11:33 am
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Akari Funato doujinshi alert, but probably not for anything in which you're interested.

I don't know what Chain Chronicle is - Googling reveals that it's an iPhone RPG from Sega but little more - but Akari Funato apparently liked it enough to do a couple doujinshi for it at the latest Comiket that you can buy at Otaku Republic. Weird.

She also did a mini Atelier Meruru doujin a few years ago, apparently. Huh.
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indigozeal: (Daniella)
2015-07-05 03:26 pm
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I hope you wanted to read 13,000+ words on a Lunar doujinshi series. (Part one.)

Enclosed please find a synopsis of that Ama no Kairou (Heaven's Corridor) series of Lunar: Vheen Hikuusen Monogatari fan doujinshi that I bought a few months ago. To recap, they were written, intriguingly, from someone whose first exposure to Lunar was the Vheen Hikuusen Monogatari/Tales of the Vane Airship Ghaleon backstory manga, and the original characters of the manga feature prominently.

(Note: I use the Japanese names of the characters when I'm discussing Lunar stuff of Japanese origin; I'm sure that'll tick someone off. Also, apparently, this post is too large for LiveJournal, so I have to cut it into two parts.)Cut )
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indigozeal: (Daniella)
2015-06-15 11:21 pm

Return of the doujinshi

I'm on the verge of finishing three longstanding projects, one of them the synopsis of that four-book Vheen Hikuusen doujin series I keep promising. I did, however, recently order another bunch of doujinshi, and while I've been putting this off because I feel guilty making the post without a VHM doujin synopsis up and running, I am about nothing if not taking on new business before old business is squared away. Therefore, first impressions after flipping through the following:

Phantasy Star ALL! 7 & 23: These books are part of what apparently is a yearly PS anthology doujinshi series spearheaded by one artist, and I had some trepidations about the art: the covers aren't that impressive, and doujin for lesser-known RPG series (for which, nowadays, PS would sadly qualify) don't typically attract strong artists. These books really exceeded my expectations, though: the art's actually pretty nice, and there's real effort put into the stories - #23 and its adorable cover feature mainly a comedy about the PS1 group meeting Hapsby & Dr. Luveno, while #7 consists mainly of quite a long story (40 pages) about the Laya-Orakio War. These are quality PS doujin from someone who really loves the universe, and I'll be going back for more eventually.

Bakuen Tengoku (Explosion Heaven): A lot of classic PS shorts in front, then a longer PSO-related (or maybe it's PS0-related; I can't tell them apart) story where Alis is hanging out & observing the proceedings. Chaotic but good-natured, with art that, depending on the contributor, is cute and/or dynamic. Worth picking up, like the PS ALL!! books.

The Strongest Queen Legend: A Baten Kaitos doujinshi, the only other one I could find. Art just OK, story not really standing out yet.

Koyoi, Dansu o Odorimashou (Come, Let Us Dance Tonight): Starting in on the Lunar doujinshi, this is another joint from Garden Garden, which is definitely the most prolific Lunar doujinshi circle, but also, probably, the most mediocre. Since Suruga-Ya had so much of their work, though, and since I was ordering a bunch of doujinshi anyway, I thought, hey, why not, and I chose the book with the most attractive & interesting cover. And I wasn't disappointed, for once! Jean's carnival troupe is putting on a musical about Mel's romance with the princess of Meribia, but the male lead hurts his leg; Jean, remembering Leo's turn as Mystere, tries to get him to sub in. As I've said, I've just flipped through it, but it's a Jean-Leo romance with lots of soft humor as he prepares for the role; it seems to take its time and be kind of soft & sweet.

Silver Star Fan Book: The SSS counterpart to EB anthology Garden Garden put out that I have, these Fan Books are part doujin collection, part fan survey. The doujin stories are of a bit better quality artwise and storywise than in the EB book (whose stories are all blech), but the real story is the fan survey, which boasts a couple interesting discoveries.
First (and this finding is backed up by the EB poll as well, where there's a huge voting disparity), Ghaleon is more popular with male fans in Japan than he is with female fans there. That's odd, given that he is, rather famously, "Lunar's only bishounen." From reading comments in both books, it seems that Ghaleon's major attraction for Japanese fans is that he has a "cool death" (in both instances, actually - someone in the SSS survey voiced admiration that he died for his principles: "that's a man's death"). That seems consistent with certain traditional beliefs regarding death in Japanese culture.
Second, the most popular character in Silver Star among Japanese fans in Arhes/Alex. The one character who doesn't speak. (Ghaleon is second.) But: among male fans, the most popular character is Nall. And yet almost no female fans voted for Nall. I can't parse that.
Kyle ended up the second most-popular when voting was restricted to male characters only. God almighty.

Love Parade: I ordered one of those "generic Lucia romance"-looking doujin out of curiosity, and it turned out to be largely an excuse to dress Lucia up in as many different outfits as possible. (Maid, swimsuit, PJs, & eyepatch, if you're wondering.) Also: Lucia discovers condoms.

Tsuki no Oukoku (Kingdom of the Moon): I picked this up because it seemed to be a book from a circle from which I'd previously ordered (through a deputy shipper) long ago when they were still up & running. The circle (which, confusingly, is also named "Tsuki no Oukoku") was not only the sole Lunar circle at the time still offering its doujin for sale but had also created a three-book, largely text-based series focusing on teenage Dyne and (not-teenage) Ghaleon. Anyhow: I initially thought the book I recently ordered was a previously-unknown Lunar doujin this circle had produced, but it's actually the "full" version of the first book in the teen-Dyne series - by the time I encountered the circle Way Back When, they'd sold out of this edition and were offering only the "copy book" version, with the text of the fanfic chapter only, minus the illustrations. I'm glad I got this, though, because the illustrations are nice. (Here and here are two of them, though there are better illustrations of TnK Ghaleon in the book - and it's heartwarming for me to see that character illustrated well.) I haven't read through the story completely yet, but someday. There's a scene near the end where Ghaleon heals a cut on Dyne's face by giving his cheek an almost unknowing caress that's stuck with me.
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indigozeal: (weird)
2015-03-10 10:42 pm
Entry tags:

Well, that's *one* Lunar doujinshi covered, anyway.

A look at the more...unusual of the Lunar doujinshi I got. That synopsis of the Vheen Hikuusen doujinshi is going to be a bit in coming; I'm not even through the first book yet. (And the author is very invested in her Ghaleon-Niea romance, which makes things a bit odd going in places.)
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indigozeal: (Daniella)
2015-02-25 02:21 pm

Doujinshi update gaiden

I got the Akari Funato 201108B doujinshi today, just to check to see if there were any Lunar pieces in it. There weren't - besides a nice portrait of Angelique Collet & Victor from a short Victorian AU Angelique manga she did and a sweet scene of Sailor Moon's Haruka & Michiru relaxing together, it was basically all stuff with which I'm not overly familiar: Rayearth, Madoka, Tokimeki Memorial, Tales of the Abyss, Densha de GO!! (of all things), etc. So was the 201108A doujin, but those pieces were so high-quality that they were stunners even if you weren't familiar with the source material. The 201108B pieces seem to be incidental art from Funato's blog, and they're nice (well, except for a page of semi-explicit loli sex doodles), but they're more for pre-existing fans of the works involved. The doujinshi has a darling scrapbook theme to showcase these smaller pieces, but I can't recommend the book unequivocally like I can the 201108A doujin.

I did order this book from Mandarake, which has an English-language site (though you'll get the best results if you enter your search terms in Japanese) and ships directly to U.S. addresses. Shipping was by EMS, again, and relatively affordable; Mandarake does, though, add a 500-yen surcharge if your order is under 5000 yen. The doujin came shipped in a box automatically - unlike Buyee, where you have to upgrade your shipping explicitly - but the inside packing was a bit sparser & cheaper than the previous two, excellent transactions. That puts Mandarake in third place in terms of doujinshi purveyors - but I'd still purchase from them again, albeit after checking other outlets first.

(In other news: Synopsis of Vheen Hikuusen doujinshi series coming, eventually.)
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indigozeal: (ghaldain)
2015-02-20 11:53 pm

Doujinshi update #2

My package from Suruga-Ya by way of Buyee arrived today. Everything was in good shape, thanks to the ridiculously extravagant packaging I somewhat inadvertently ordered. When I checked out, I was given the option of "protective shipping" for 500 yen more, but when I selected it - the lackadaisical packaging from my Tenso order fresh in my mind - I was told that the 500 yen was only a service charge; I'd be informed later on of the additional postage charges the extra packaging had incurred. And, oh - no backsies. The protective shipping ultimately bumped by order up by only about 12 bucks, though, and it was protective: the five slim doujinshi were packed in the middle of a big cardboard box, wrapped in plastic, and cushioned by bags of packing peanuts. For my next purchase, I think I'll just go with the regular shipping, but it's nice to know the more secure option is available.

(Comparison shopping: Buying the five doujinshi from Suruga-Ya through Buyee cost the equivalent of $45, which is much less than the $76 for four from Otaku Republic. Both were professional experiences, though, and I wouldn't hesitate to do business with either again.)

The Baten Kaitos doujinshi from Suruga-Ya is OK artwise but has kind of odd humor; the first Baten doujin I got was a bit farcical for me but at least had some amusing images. No one is doing finger guns in this one. There's not much to recommend the purchase.

The main event, though, was the Vheen Hikuusen doujinshi, which cannot be faulted for their scope. There are scenes from adult Niea's time as a Guildmistress; there are scenes with Mia five years after Ghaleon's death dealing with his passing; there are scenes with Ghaleon & Niea before "Kokuhaku Suru Kioku"; there are scenes with Dain & Remilia that seem to be taking place during SSS; there are scenes with Four Heroes Dain & Ghaleon meeting an older Morris, who informs Ghaleon that Tagak has died, attacks for reasons as-yet unknown to me*, and is subsequently killed by Dain & Ghaleon, to Ghaleon's great distress. (There's also a scene just before that with Ghaleon typing on a computer, which gets a thumbs-up from me.) Plus, each of the four volumes is a pretty lengthy 40 pages.

There's a problem, though: this artist cannot draw. Well, let me correct that: they can obviously, based, on the covers, draw to a certain extent, but for the inside art, it didn't seem that they bothered:



I appreciate, though, that they had a song in their heart that they persisted through 160 pages to realize. I think it's best to treat the books as a lengthy fanfic with rough staging illustrations. I have to respect anyone who shows such extensive love of Vheen Hikuusen.

That's the end of the doujinshi stuff for now (save for one lone package, the other half of the mini-artbooks Funato released in 2011; have to check for Lunar pieces in there). The highlight of the purchases was the Funato stuff, but there were a number of disappointments: the second Baten Kaitos doujin...and the first...and the Mystic Ark doujin...and that disturbing Lunar doujin that I still have to post about. Everything except the Funato and the Vheen Hikuusen books was a disappointment, actually. (And the Vheen Hikuusen doujins were a disappointment to a certain extent, but, unlike the other problem books, I still would've gone through with the purchase had I known the content beforehand.) I think my taste for doujinshi has been sated for now: it's an interesting trip to find fan books for underappreciated things you love, but you are rolling the dice a good deal, and it can be a bit of an expensive gamble.

(*ETA not really but I'm not going to alter the structure of this post to compensate: OK, Morris is alluding to events that apparently happened earlier in the proceedings (the four comics are all one long story), so I can't quite make everything out in medias res, but evidently, in the doujin story, Morris is tinkering with old Magic Empire technology, and he says that Tagak was killed in what I believe was a bombing by religious fanatics devoted to Althena (which is remarkable, that devotees of Althena can be branded as extremists in the first place - that's not territory the game would ever broach). Dain pipes up that not everyone is filled with hate, with which Ghaleon agrees, citing the airship as an example of what can happen when humans & mazoku collaborate - to which Morris says, "The airship?... Yes...that memory is without a doubt etched forever in my mind" - and throws Latona's ring in Ghaleon's face, which is a pretty good scene. More details as events warrant.)
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indigozeal: (gerhard)
2015-02-17 08:39 pm

Doujinshi update #1

The doujinshi I ordered from Otaku Republic arrived today! It was delivered pretty quickly: the package was sent early Thursday and arrived today, even given the mail holiday. (Note, though, that I had free express shipping thanks to a $50+ order.) The items were wrapped securely and were in great condition. While their prices were a bit steep, I wouldn't hesitate to order again if I saw something I really liked.

And speaing of which:

- The Akari Funato doujinshi, which I was initially going to write off as an extravagant novelty with no material in which I was really interested, was easily the highlight of the lot. I recall in one of her sets of Vheen Hikuusen notes how she lamented that no one ever asked her to put together an artbook. Well, these are her artbooks, apparently. Oversize format, artbook-quality glossy paper for every page, utterly lavish and deep, deep use of color on every full-page piece. Even the works where I'm completely unfamiliar with the source material are just spellbinding due to how gorgeous they are. Plus, there's a two-page spread of an image from that Lunar 2 Lemina novel of child Lemina in the garden of the broken-down guild, and the image totally deserves those two pages, because the color and detail of the garden is just sumptuous. (It's also more proof that Funato's "everything I've done for Lunar is in the PDFs" assertion is bunk.) In other news, I've gotta get that book with the Phantasy Star III piece now.

- The Baten Kaitos doujinshi is well-drawn but deals in a rather broad kind of humor: seeing the cast in goofy character-printed underwear, etc. Not for me. It does, however, boast a short manga set after the ice-statue incident in Wazn (where, if Kalas is a jerk to an ice sculptor - and when isn't Kalas a jerk, really - the sculptor will create an ice statue of him in an unflattering pose) where the other party members are goofing off and showing how they'd pose if they had statues, and Savyna is doing finger guns in her pose, which atones for many sins.

- The Mystic Ark doujin features a bunch of disconnected vignettes and art that's one step above "meh." (It's also kind of short - less than 20 pages, with a good portion in the back dedicated to the artist thank-yous & ads & whatnot.) It pairs Remeer & Felys romantically, which doesn't sit right, because they're an either/or choice of protagonist in the game (whose scenario doesn't really accommodate both of them existing at once) and brother & sister in the manga. It's not done particularly well, but you're surprised to find it done at all, etc. etc.

- ...Which brings us to that Lunar doujinshi. The one where I said it didn't seem the artist was mentally well? ...Yeahhhh. That's gonna deserve its own post. He seems to go back and forth between several styles? Like that guy who drew all those manic cat paintings that're always used to illustrate the progression of schizophrenia? But a few of his styles are actually pretty good, but his main style is kind of inexplicably incompetent? Like, he tries to draw pin-ups of the girls, but he has no idea how to draw breasts? They come out misshapen and kind of clumpy in parts? And everything is sporadically interrupted out of nowhere by these ghoulish demonic faces, because the artist is fighting a losing battle with his personal demons? Also, he seems to be a really big fan of Chō Aniki, because then there's this: Cut for beauty )
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indigozeal: (ghaldain)
2015-02-09 03:28 pm

Local woman falls down Lunar doujinshi hole

So I spent a bit on doujinshi this weekend. I forgot what I was originally searching for that led to the discovery, but I happened across the Otaku Republic shop, which stocks a relative wealth of Akari Funato and Lunar doujinshi. (Not all the entries under the "LUNAR" tag are related to the franchise, of course, but enough are.) I didn't end up getting most of the Lunar doujins, though, because a) they're $18 a pop, and b) most of them were made by this one artist whose stuff looks a bit rough and not always...mentally well. The cover of one of his alleged Lunar books is a photo of a sweaty, bleeding bespectacled man with the words "DIE DIE DIE" scrawled down the side. (I do see belatedly, though, that he did a doujinshi for the DS Lunar, which I would've snapped up for sheer novelty had it not taken me a while to recognize the characters, much less pick them out from the Zardoz-like entity in the background threatening to eat them.) Anyhow, I got a book from this artist with Mia on the cover, so we'll see how that goes.

As for the Funato doujin, I see that she has, despite being busy commercially with Under the Rose, put out a couple end-of-year anthology doujin recently. The work inside, though, doesn't seem to be of recent vintage; the books seem to be anthologies of older promo pieces for a variety of games. I see the second book has a Phantasy Star III piece, which almost motivated me to buy it, but looking at the preview images, I don't think it'd get through customs. I opted to get an anthology book from her for 2011, which was close to the release of Harmony, so maybe (*maybe*) there'll be some Lunar stuff in there. (Funato insists that absolutely all her Lunar work is in her PDFs, but that is, as previously discussed, not accurate. She seems to have cut her ties completely with the franchise, though, which is a shame; I would've liked to have seen some Vheen Hikuusen anniversary art or something.)

Anyhow, after buying those two books plus a Baten Kaitos and a Mystic Ark doujinshi, I started hunting around for other doujin shops, with the intention of checking them out later. (I had already, as you've gathered, spent a good amount of time at Otaku Republic.) I did, though, pop in on this From Japan place that claimed to offer a multi-store search engine, and I wasn't expecting to find much (I've looked on Yahoo Auctions and Rakuten for doujin for years with nearly no results), but lo and behold:

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Vheen Hikuusen doujinshi. They're from a store called Suruga-Ya from their Yahoo Shopping (not Auctions) outlet, and they're apparently a part of a four-issue series (the other two feature Mia on the cover, though). I ended up getting the whole series (plus a spare Baten Kaitos doujin) through the Buyee proxy - Buyee's owned by Tenso, which I've used before, so I thought it was the safest choice. Upon surfing, though, I've learned that Suruga-Ya doesn't always follow through on its orders with the utmost diligence, so I'm still on shaky ground here - but it was just a joy to see a doujin with a smiling & happy TnK Dyne & Ghaleon on the cover. Fingers crossed that these arrive safely.

Incidentally, I did feel that I'd wasted a bit of my money with my initial Otaku Republic trip - three of the doujinshi on which I'd spent $18 at Otaku Republic were available at Suruga-Ya for the equivalent of a couple bucks a pop. That's not figuring in shipping, though (both from the store to the proxy and from the proxy to me), which is always the absolute killer. (Shipping is already included in Otaku Republic's prices.) I'll expect I'll have wasted some money at Otaku Republic (provided Suruga-Ya actually delivers its order), but not that much, in the long run. Of course, "wasted" is a relative term here, considering that I'll have spent triple digits on a handful of comic books in any event.

Misc. notes:

- If anyone heads over to Otaku Republic looking for Lunar manga, a word of warning: this book mainly contains a Magical School Lunar fanfic. I don't think there are any actual comics or art in it.

- Suruga-Ya has a good deal of other Lunar doujins, but they appear to consist mainly of blandly-drawn Lucia romances, which, from my limited experience with Lunar doujin, seem to be the predominant genre in the field. I like Lucia, and she's a good character, but she's an easy character to get wrong, and many artists use her unfamiliarity with the way the human world works to cast her as vapid & dumb.

- After searching through the stuff that was tagged with Funato's name outright, I also took a look through stuff that was tagged with what Otaku Republic claimed was the name of the doujin circle to which she belonged before she became an "official" game artist, so to speak. It turned up a lot of results that I don't think are entirely accurate - the styles are so disparate that it'd have to be a very big circle with a constant turnover in membership to have produced all the books. I did, however, come across this Ocarina of Time doujin, and I'm trying to figure out if it the cover was produced by Funato or not. Yeah, it says "Orie Asato only" on the cover, but that does really look like Funato's early style & coloring. And yet there's enough of a difference where I can't be sure. Hmm.
(Additional note: oh, God dammit. I knew the name of Funato's early doujin circle was billed in certain manga as "Fight & Magic," so I put that into the search engine, and it returned all sorts of books. They're all out-of-stock, though.)
(Additional additional note: I have that "Kingdom of Bugs" Fight & Magic doujin - the one with the girl in pigtail braids & an orange dress on the cover - and it's an anthology doujin she did with another artist with illustrations & real short (like two-page) comics on a variety of 8-bit & 16-bit RPGs - FF4, FF5, Lagrange Point, some Dragon Quests, etc. It's a pleasant little distraction but not a top-priority purchase.)

- I've seen that Octopus Tentacle doujin of Funato's everywhere, but I don't know what it's about. I think I ran across a quick explanation from Funato somewhere (her website probably) that branded it as covering some RPG series I didn't care for, but I can't recall exactly which series it was at the moment. (The book's not what you think a doujin named "Octopus Tentacle" would be about, let's put it that way.)

- Looking for Phantasy Star is a tricky prospect, as you're inundated with PSO stuff (and I'm not sure what the point of PSO doujin is; it always details the adventures of the artist's MMO characters, which really isn't for the amusement of anyone but the artist). I have found what appears to be an annual anthology series of PS doujin that seems to center on the original, main line of games, and while I admire the effort, the art - the cover art, at least - seems kind of uneven throughout the series, and the books look a bit cheaply made. I'll probably bite on one eventually, but I held off for now.
In other PS doujin news, the cover of this one seems interesting, from what I can make out from the blurry scan, but it's unfortunately out of stock.

- I'm not sure, but I think that this might be a paper version of that Neo Angelique Nyx doujin I mentioned earlier.

- Angelique Collet by way of Claire Redfield.

- It's pitiful that I checked, but there seems to be nothing - absolutely nothing - out there in the Japanese fan world, doujinshi, fanart, or otherwise, for Vay.
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