Crunchyroll Manga Bestows Dozens Of Valentine’s Gifts

PopGeeks

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Demon Lord, Retry! caught my attention immediately because I actually watched the anime last year. Reading it in manga form feels different, but I like seeing the details that the animation sometimes skips. I am not a huge fan of too many villainess stories, but some of the ones on the list seem interesting, like “Forget Being the Villainess, I Want to Be an Adventurer.” The way Crunchyroll is adding so many new manga titles at once makes it easier to explore stuff I would never pick on my own. I also appreciate that they included J-Novel Club titles because some of those aren’t easy to find elsewhere. I’ve tried both the stand-alone app and the add-on version, and I think the add-on is nicer because everything is in one place.
 
Honestly, I don’t usually read manga on apps, but I gave Crunchyroll Manga a try because of the anime links. The thing that surprised me is how many different genres are included. There’s everything from comedy to fantasy, even romance. “I Love Yuri and I Got Bodyswapped With a Fujoshi” made me curious just because the title is bizarre, but I ended up enjoying it more than I thought. It’s also nice to have everything on mobile, so I can read on the train. Some of the older titles I missed when they first came out, so this service gives me a chance to catch up. Overall, I like that it doesn’t feel like a generic library.
 
Honestly, I don’t usually read manga on apps, but I gave Crunchyroll Manga a try because of the anime links. The thing that surprised me is how many different genres are included. There’s everything from comedy to fantasy, even romance. “I Love Yuri and I Got Bodyswapped With a Fujoshi” made me curious just because the title is bizarre, but I ended up enjoying it more than I thought. It’s also nice to have everything on mobile, so I can read on the train. Some of the older titles I missed when they first came out, so this service gives me a chance to catch up. Overall, I like that it doesn’t feel like a generic library.
 
I mostly stick to comedy and slice-of-life manga, so titles like “This Art Club Has a Problem!” immediately caught my eye. I like that Crunchyroll has heart marks for anime, because sometimes I want to watch after reading. The variety is impressive, from isekai to ordinary life stories. I’ve tried reading “My Quiet Blacksmith Life in Another World,” and the story is surprisingly relaxing. It doesn’t rush, and the pacing feels good for casual reading. I feel like Crunchyroll is finally giving people a good mix of genres, instead of focusing only on the biggest names. It makes me more willing to explore titles I would never try otherwise.
 
I love seeing Crunchyroll expand into manga more seriously. “A Cave King’s Road to Paradise: Climbing to the Top with My Almighty Mining Skills!” immediately grabbed my attention because I enjoy slow-building stories. I like how some of the titles are niche or have unique premises that you don’t see everywhere. The addition of J-Novel Club content is especially exciting because those stories are often hard to find. I’ve spent hours just scrolling through the library and picking small series to try. The mobile app works well enough, and the heart system makes it easy to spot anime tie-ins. For me, this kind of variety is exactly what makes a manga library worth using.
 

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