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Due to the coronavirus, over 450 manga volumes are now free to read online

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By Casey Baseel, SoraNews24

In response to the coronavirus outbreak, many schools in Japan are closed and a number of companies have instituted telecommuting policies. Major entertainment events, including concerts and anime conventions, have been cancelled, in keeping with health officials’ recommendation to avoid spending time in crowded places.

Of course, “crowded places” describes a lot of Japan’s urban and suburban communities in general, and the overall result of combining “don’t go to school/work” with “don’t go out” is a sort of strange combination between a vacation and house arrest. Thankfully, to help people keep their spirits up and combat boredom, a large number of Japan’s manga publishers are making their comics available to read online for free.

The current free-to-read anthology selection includes back issues from the last few months, for a total of 78 free editions currently available (access app/website in parentheses):

● Weekly Shonen Jump (Shonen Jump +)

● Weekly Shonen Sunday (Sunday Webly)

● Kokoro Comic, Kokoro Ichiban (Kokoro Online)

● Betsu Comi, Sho-Comi, Cheese!, Ciao Deluxe, Petit Comic, Monthly Flowers (Shogakukan e-Comic Store)

● Ribbon, Bessatsu Margaret, Koko Hana, The Margaret (Margaret Bookstore)

● Weekly Shonen Champion (Manga Cross)

● Hana to Yume, The Hana to Yume Shin, LaLa, LaLaDX

What’s arguably even better, though, is that a number of publishers are making the entirety of historically best-selling individual series available, giving fans the chance to revisit/finish off long-running series. Shogakukan’s Sunday Webly, for example, will be making every single volume free-to-read for 11 titles, starting with "Hayate the Combat Butler," "Kenichi: The Mightiest Disciple" and "Kekkaishi." On March 8, "Ranma 1/2," "Major" and "Psyche Mata Shitemo" got added to the list, with "The Law of Ueki," "Ghost Sweeper Mikami" and "Miyuki" coming on the 15th and "Ushio" and "Tora" and "Libero Revolution" on the 22nd. In total that’s 392 volumes of free manga (and to reiterate, that’s volumes, with each containing multiple chapters).

If that’s still not enough to satisfy your reading needs, the apps Comic Days, Dragon Zakura Note, Manga Mee, and Book Walker are currently offering chapters from "Space Brothers," "Hozuki’s Coolheadedness," "The Gentlemen’s Alliance Cross," "Mei-chan no Shitsuji," "Sensei Kunshu," "Dragon Zakura" and "Crayon Shin-chan."

Obviously, everyone in Japan is hoping for the coronavirus situation to be under control as soon as possible, so that people can go back to their regular lives. But if you are going to be stuck at home, it’s definitely more pleasant to be able to think of it as a manga retreat than a quarantine.

Source: Twitter/@livedoornews via Hachima Kiko

Read more stories from SoraNews24.

-- Weekly Shonen Jump teams up with Georgia to bring us limited-edition manga-printed coffee cans

-- Japan officially declared coronavirus-infected nation by Micronesia, travel restrictions enacted

-- Kyoto tourist crowds disappearing due to coronavirus outbreak, creating travel crisis/opportunity

© SoraNews24

©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.

1 Comment
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Wow!

JT just posted an article about Japan extending the policy of online piracy to manga and anime.

Now they just released all the manga online for free.

Talk about irony!

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