Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Devil's Trill (manhwa) Won Son-yeon: Net Comics: Die, Please! Euntae: Manta [1] Do Re Mi Fa So La Ti Do (manhwa) Guiyeoni: Daytime Star: Chaeun, Godago: Do Whatever You Want (manhwa) Na Ye-ri: Net Comics: Dragon Devouring Mage [18] 람우 tapas: Surviving the Game as a Barbarian Jung Yoon-kang (Story), Midnight Studio (Art) Webtoon
Life with an Ordinary Guy Who Reincarnated into a Total Fantasy Knockout (異世界 ( ファンタジー ) 美少女受肉おじさんと, Fantajī Bishōjo Juniku Ojisan to, "With a Fogie Reincarnated as a Pretty Fantasy Girl"), abbreviated as Fabiniku (ファ美肉) [3] is a Japanese manga series written by Yū Tsurusaki and illustrated by Shin Ikezawa.
The Condemned Villainess Goes Back in Time and Aims to Become the Ultimate Villain (断罪された悪役令嬢は、逆行して完璧な悪女を目指す, Danzai sareta Akuyaku Reijō wa, Gyakkō-shite Kanpeki na Akujo o Mezasu) is a Japanese light novel series written by Bakufu Narayama and illustrated by Ebisushi.
No Longer Allowed in Another World (Japanese: 異世界失格, Hepburn: Isekai Shikkaku) is a Japanese manga series written by Hiroshi Noda and illustrated by Takahiro Wakamatsu. It has been serialized on Shogakukan's Yawaraka Spirits website since October 2019.
Noblesse (Korean: 노블레스; RR: Nobeulleseu) is a South Korean manhwa released as a webtoon, written by Son Je-ho and illustrated by Lee Kwangsu. Noblesse was first posted on Naver Corporation's webtoon platform, Naver Webtoon, in December 2007 and concluded in January 2019.
This is a list of novels, light novels, manga, manhwa, anime, films and video games according to the role isekai (portal fantasy) plays in them. Novels and light novels [ edit ]
Freezing (Japanese: フリージング, Hepburn: Furījingu) is a Japanese manga written by Dall-Young Lim and illustrated by Kwang-Hyun Kim. The series revolves around the invasion of Earth by an interdimensional force called the Nova, and a special military group of genetically engineered young women called Pandoras.
Manga (漫画, IPA: ⓘ) are comics created in Japan, or by Japanese creators in the Japanese language, conforming to a style developed in Japan in the late 19th century. [1] The term is also now used for a variety of other works in the style of or influenced by the Japanese comics.