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A.I. Love You (A・I が止まらない!, A.I. ga Tomaranai! ) is a Japanese manga series by author Ken Akamatsu . The story follows Hitoshi Kōbe, a high school boy who isn't good at anything but programming .
Poison Control (少女地獄のドクムス〆, Shōjo Jigoku no Doku Musume) is an action role-playing video game developed and published by Nippon Ichi Software, by the same development team as Penny-Punching Princess and The Princess Guide. It released in Japan on June 25, 2020, and in North America on April 13, 2021, and in Europe on April ...
A Condition Called Love (Japanese: 花野井くんと恋の病, Hepburn: Hananoi-kun to Koi no Yamai, lit. "Love's Sickness with Hananoi") is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Megumi Morino. It started serialization in Kodansha's magazine Dessert in December 2017.
It's a nice take on the romance genre, which so often relies on lust turning to love than beginning with an emotional bond." Amy McNulty gave the volume a 3.5 out of 5, concluding "there's no particular story that's likely to stick with the reader long after, but each makes an impact in its own way and there really isn't any major overlap in ...
I Want to Love You Till Your Dying Day (Japanese: きみが死ぬまで恋をしたい, Hepburn: Kimi ga Shinu made Koi wo Shitai) is a Japanese yuri manga written and illustrated by Aono Nachi. It was serialized in Ichijinsha 's Comic Yuri Hime from August 2018 to January 2020, after which is was moved to online serialized in Yurihime@pixiv.
A.I. Love You was first serialized through Weekly Shōnen Magazine in 1994, but later moved to Magazine Special where it ended in 1997. The series was collected into nine manga volumes that were also released by Kodansha between 1994 and 1997. Two re-releases followed; however, each time a volume was deducted.
The manga was officially announced by Shueisha on April 11, 2022, [4] and began its weekly serialization for free on the Shōnen Jump+ mobile app and website on the 20th of the same month. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] Shueisha also simultaneously publishes the series in English for free on the online platform and mobile app Manga Plus .
The series was adapted into a live-action film that premiered in Japan in May 2015, [7] as well as a stage play that ran at the New National Theatre, Tokyo, in March 2020, both directed by Yūichi Satō [8] [9] and officially titled Poison Berry in My Brain in English.