I just want to quietly draw manga Chapter 120
Added 2025-05-13 17:58:56 +0000 UTCHaruka sat behind the wheel, stealing glances at Haruki as they drove through Tokyo. Her expression was a blend of amusement and curiosity.
âYou were different today,â she said at last. There wasnât a trace of criticism in her toneâjust interest.
Some people strike back immediately when provoked. Others wait, letting grudges simmer. Haruka didnât care which kind a person wasâso long as they werenât spineless.
What Haruki had done tonight wasnât just gutsy. It was a challenge, plain and public.
Heâd drawn a clear line in the sand against Kiyoshi. And someone like Kiyoshiâwell-connected, respected, and ruthlessâwasnât the type to take something like that lying down. The moment he saw an opening, heâd go for the kill.
But Haruki? He looked completely unfazed.
âDonât worry about it,â he said. âItâs January. New Yearâs is coming up. I said ânext yearââthat could mean two years from now. You really think I wonât catch up by then?â
He leaned back in the seat, calm and confident. âIâve only been in the industry a little over a year, and Iâve already come this far. If I canât surpass someone like Kiyoshi in two more, then maybe I donât belong in this business.â
He let out a slow breath. After everything today, it felt good to say it out loud.
Haruka gave him a long look. âSo? You hiding something? A new project strong enough to make you this confident?â
Sheâd been suspicious ever since he mentioned the idea of serializing two works at once. And after his boldness tonight, she was almost certain he had something.
But Haruki just shook his head. "Not yet", he thought. 'I havenât even used that A-rank draw. What if I get something too niche? Or a genre totally out of sync with the market?'
He wasnât about to make promises blindly. If the draw gave him something too sentimental, or a theme that wouldn't fly with readers, heâd rather leave the reward untouched than force it into publication.
Haruka narrowed her eyes. âReally?â
âReally,â he said, firm.
ââŠFine,â she muttered. âBut knowing you, if you're hiding something, you wonât be able to sit on it for long.â
Haruki just smiled.
She dropped him off at his apartment. âIâll be watching,â she said simply, then pulled away into the night.
â
That night, clips from Harukiâs interview began quietly trending online.
The part where he openly said heâd surpass Kiyoshi lit up discussion threads.
Predictably, fans from both sides clashed in the comments. But Kiyoshiâs fanbase was much bigger, and Mizushiroâs supporters quickly got drowned out in a wave of mockery.
Haruki noticed the backlash, but didnât engage. He quietly disabled comments on his Fend.
He wasnât bothered by personal criticismâbut seeing his fans overwhelmed and ridiculed did leave a bad taste.
To Kiyoshiâs followers, it looked like he was backing down. Running from the heat.
But Haruki didnât care how it looked.
Let them talk.
Once his next project droppedâand the results spoke for themselvesâthereâd be nothing left to say.
But Mizushiroâs closing shot at Tatsuya still lingered online, stirring the pot.
Even those who werenât Tatsuya fans thought it was a bit much. Mocking someone after a win? That didnât sit well.
When the clip made the rounds, Tatsuya didnât respond.
Mizushiroâs meteoric rise had earned him a reputation as a creative force. But that didnât give you a free pass to bulldoze through the industry.
Disputes between artists usually happened behind the scenes. After all, this was a small worldâTokyo might be big, but the manga industry was tight-knit. Public rivalries were rare. And burning bridges could come back to bite you.
But Mizushiro didnât seem to care.
Where did all this confidence come from?
Plenty of promising series had flopped before. He hadnât even hit his peak yet, and here he was, talking about surpassing Kiyoshi in two years?
â
A few days later, New Yearâs Eve arrived.
Haruki gave year-end bonuses to Kenta and Naoya, then sent them home for the holiday.
As for himselfâno family nearby, no plans to travelâhe stayed in Tokyo. It didnât matter where he spent the New Year. Home was wherever his desk was.
Theyâd finished their drafts for the holiday weeks ago. There was nothing pressing left to do.
He ordered a full New Yearâs Eve meal from a local place and had it delivered.
Sitting alone in front of the TV, watching the New Yearâs special and picking at his food, he felt a bit like a retired old man.
The thought made him laugh.
Anyone on the outside would probably think he was some kind of shut-in. But heâd grown used to this rhythmâand honestly, he liked it.
No pressure, no obligations. Just the work he loved, on his own schedule.
The only thing that nagged at him was how fully his life revolved around manga. He was drawing almost every single day.
âWell, whatever,â he muttered, brushing the thought aside. âNo need to overthink it.â
A half-decent show came on, and he leaned back to enjoy the rest of the night.
â
While Haruki rang in the New Year quietly, the team at Kazanami Animation was running on fumes.
They got two days offâthen were called back to work on January 5th.
Yes, the overtime pay was generous. But frustration still lingered, until Kazuya, the project lead, promised everyone rotating holidays once the schedule calmed down. That helped⊠a little.
Anime production had long since evolved past the rigid seasonal model. Unlike the parallel worldâs old core broadcasting blocks, most shows here launched online, with only top hits landing on TV.
Streaming was king.
Anohana, Mizushiroâs upcoming anime adaptation, was set to premiere on a Wednesday night in mid-February. It would stream on every major platform at onceâsomething only a heavyweight like Kazanami could pull off.
But as the launch approached, Kazuyaâs anxiety grew.
Twenty-two new anime series were debuting in February. Of those, seven were based on manga, ten adapted from novels, and five were original works.
One of the biggest threats was a sequel to an original anime that had exploded in popularity the previous summer.
Kazanamiâs hope was to release Anohana early enough to go head-to-head with it.
Another major contender: Divine Sandbox, a dark fantasy based on a hit web novel.
The story followed Kane, a man who discovers his world is a fabricated illusion crafted by a dying false god. This god, once human, had stolen divine power and now spent his final years building a literal sandbox universeâshrinking civilizations down to miniatures and watching them rise and fall for his own twisted amusement.
Kane learns the god will reset everything in a year. The stakes? Total annihilation.
The novel had sold over a million copies and was known for its weighty themes. If the anime landed right, it could be a game-changer.
Then there was Iâm Living Off My Sisterâs Fame in Another World, a much lighter (and frankly absurd) isekai series. A teenage boy and his genius sister are transported to a fantasy realm, where she becomes the continentâs strongest magisterâand he, well, coasts on her reputation.
The competition was fierce.
For Anohana, it was shaping up to be a tough season.
Comments
From a fan POV it sounds nice but from a mangaka POV that is a disaster. You see if any mangakas debut work hits manga records then it will drain the mangaka emotionally and creative aspects. Gradual growth is always important.
Banana19
2025-05-23 18:19:06 +0000 UTCI really wish for one of the big three to be the next manga but I know you said that's not in the story đą đą đą
Hersh Jobanputra
2025-05-14 11:25:07 +0000 UTC