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Massive: Gay Erotic Manga and the Men Who Make It; Miss Caretaker of Sunohara-sou; Miyuki-chan in Wonderland; Mobile Suit Gundam: The Witch from Mercury; Monthly in the Garden with My Landlord; Murciélago (manga) MW (manga) My Brother's Husband; My Lesbian Experience with Loneliness; My Love Mix-Up! My Oh My, Atami-kun
This is a list of some of the many webcomics featuring lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or otherwise LGBTQ content.. LGBTQ+ themes and characters were historically omitted intentionally from the content of comic strips and comic books, due to either censorship, the perception that LGBTQ+ representation was inappropriate for children, or the perception that comics as a medium were for children.
In anime and manga, the term "LGBTQ themes" includes lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender material. Outside Japan, anime generally refers to a specific Japanese-style of animation, but the word anime is used by the Japanese themselves to broadly describe all forms of animated media there.
List of animated series with LGBT characters: 2000–2004; List of animated series with LGBT characters: 2005–2009; List of animated series with LGBT characters: 2010–2014; List of animated series with LGBT characters: 2015–2019; List of animated series with LGBTQ characters; List of animated series with LGBTQ characters: 1990–1999
See also Category:LGBTQ-related anime and manga, for Japanese LGBT-related comics. Subcategories This category has the following 10 subcategories, out of 10 total.
The depiction of LGBT characters in animated series in the 2020s changed from the 2010s, accelerating, especially when it came to Western animation. In Western animation this included series such as The Owl House (2020–2023), [1] Kipo and the Age of Wonderbeasts (2020), [2] Helluva Boss (2020–present), [3] Star Trek: Lower Decks (2020–2024), [4] Adventure Time: Distant Lands (2020–2021 ...
23. The Thing About Harry (2020). Peter Paige‘s delicately radical Freeform original takes the comfort of Hallmark and Lifetime romance movies we love as the framework for a modern LGBTQ classic.
Yuka is one of Yatora Yaguchi's friends. They are the one who encouraged Yaguchi to join the art club. Yuka wears both male and female school uniforms. In the anime, they are the source of mockery of other students who misgender and deadnamed them, [116] [117] while in the manga no one seems to pay them any mind. [118]