What’s Weekly Shonen Jump’s Next Big Manga? – This Week in Anime
Some of Shonen Jump‘s biggest manga hits are approaching their end. Does the magazine have new heavy-hitters lined up to take up the mantle?
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed by the participants in this chatlog are not the views of Anime News Network.
Spoiler Warning for discussion of the series ahead.
Most of these manga series are available to read digitally on Viz‘s Shonen Jump app.
Hi Nick! Hope you’re doing well! People sure did have a lot to say about our last joint column covering this season’s slate of isekai. Plus, Chris and Steve’s exploration of queerbating in Sound! Euphonium was both illuminating and entertaining. I don’t know how we’re going to top ourselves this week without resorting to gross exaggerations and clickbait-style openings…
WEEKLY SHONEN JUMP IS DYING AND IF YOU’RE NOT SCARED YOU’RE NOT PAYING ATTENTION!!!
Oh nooooooo. Another god damned exorcist battle series ended in under 30 chapters. What a tragedy. I’m sure another one won’t show up in five minutes to replace i—
📣 NEW SERIES ALERT! 📣
Kyokuto Necromance by Fusai Naba joins the Shonen Jump lineup on Sunday!
A young man’s life takes a shocking turn when he learns there are deadly spirits all around us! Read it FREE from the official source! https://t.co/43cx2Jcf2P pic.twitter.com/om0WYt9wKe
— Shonen Jump (@shonenjump) April 18, 2024
Oh good. Crisis averted. See everybody again in about five months.
The answer is that it’d be super forgettable and have a name that I’ll misremember/mispronounce.
Before we get into any particular series, I want to address the idea at the core of this discussion: the idea that, with some of its biggest established series inching towards their endings, the lineup of Weekly Shonen Jump is in for a big shakeup. It’s a topic I’ve seen brought up several times through the years, and while I know you’re joking, I also know some people who think that Jump’s days are numbered.
While Weekly Shonen Jump is an institution in the manga industry, it will be weird to see it try to find its footing without some of the biggest current IP in anime and manga bolstering it anymore, especially since many of the new manga it has published lately are niche at best and derivative at worst.
Oh my god, hearing an optimistic voice in this discourse is so refreshing! Why do you think Jump is in a strong position, with two of its most well-known releases winding down simultaneously? Also, as you’ve highlighted the cyclical nature of this discourse, do you think the Shonen Jump app’s fairly ubiquitous presence today has exacerbated these current conversations?
Also, for what it’s worth, Chainsaw Man and, bizarrely, Robot X Laserbeam are the series that made me realize there was more to Jump than just people punching each other really hard.
Oh man, I’m sensing a future TWIA convo in the making, “If Shonen Jump is running a non-shonen series, what even is shonen anymore?” But we can save my rant for how unhelpful it is to define the genre by targeted age and gender demographics for a different chat.
Editor’s Note: Go for it.
Anyway, my point is that the landscape of manga readership has changed a lot, and while the current bench for Jump certainly looks odd compared to past years, it’s got a lot of promise—both from a sales perspective and in terms of being cool manga that I like reading.
Editor’s Note: You can’t just tell them that.
I agree with you, though I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention that Jump has always been more eclectic than I think people give it credit for. Yu-Gi-Oh! is a card game horror series that’s technically one of the most profitable IPs to appear in Jump. Also, Death Note is an accidental gay camp that I still can’t believe ran simultaneously with titles like Naruto and Prince of Tennis.
Sure, and to be clear, it’s not like any of the titles above are some avant-garde genre experiments. You can find other titles like them in tons of other magazines. I just think their presence indicates that Jump is expanding the kinds of stories it tells to allow it more room to grow even as its big titles call it a career. You don’t have to worry about finding the next MHA or JJK when you’re casting a wider net. However, that hasn’t stopped them from, well, trying to find the next MHA or JJK. I wasn’t joking about feeling like we get a new exorcist manga every six months.
That is to say, through pretty consistent and aggressive cancellations.
If anything, this system of approval and routine cancellations makes me deeply curious about what the pitching and approval process over at Jump’s owner, Shueisha, is like.
Do you think there’s any chance that folks will start looking to other manga publications to get their battle fix now that Jump seems to be finding their most successful new series outside of that genre? I know other magazines are more inconsistent about officially translating releases than Jump, but it’s still easier than ever to read most major releases nowadays.
So, I guess the actual answer for Jump was to start a second magazine to produce even more hits.
Hmmm, would “The Manga That Got Us Through The Trump Years” be better as a TWIA column, or as a collab blog??? The ball’s in your court once again, Lynzee!
I’m going to pull seniority and veto that one unless I can invoice my alcohol intake to get through it.
But I see where you’re coming from. The distinctions between publications have never felt more superfluous now that genres/target demos have broken down. Though, in my limited purview, it does seem like new releases that are Frankensteins of ideas that worked better in other series tend to land in Weekly Shonen Jump.
That probably comes down to editorial oversight. While the playing field has expanded, the main magazine still carries a built-in readership and a lot of prestige. So, I imagine editors are more conservative about what they allow in. While there have been successes, other series that pushed the boundaries have failed hard and fast. Plus, I’ll be the first to tell you I haven’t been impressed with too many new series in the past year.
But I wasn’t trying to crap on anything in particular. Rather, I wanted to emphasize that Jump’s model is a marathon, not a sprint. Sometimes, you get consecutive batches of stuff that seem like total fodder, and sometimes, you get multiple bangers across a single year. It’s a pattern consistent in the long run but can seem erratic or volatile in the short term.
And sorry, I didn’t mean to sound accusatory there. I was debating if I wanted to bring up any of the many series that can be summarized with the passage, “A high school boy discovers he’s a demon/gets a demon familiar/is the specialist boy in all the land and has to do battle monsters that look like they’re from a horror manga,” but thought that in poor taste, haha.
It’s cool. I’m glad you’re here with me on this, actually, because I’m pretty sure you’re the only other person on staff who gets football metaphors.
I swear I’m going somewhere with this.
Ooooh~ You talking about when Mahomes/Reid totally mismanaged the clock like five yards from the endzone???
Two years later, the Chiefs are back-to-back champs and have become the unanimous Final Boss of the NFL. All that talk about them being washed seems totally crazy and off the mark, yet at the time, it was taken seriously in many spaces.
Aw, that is a perfect metaphor for the state of Jump! There’s no such thing as a dynasty that doesn’t take on at least a couple of losses each season, but so long as they stay on top when it counts, it doesn’t matter.
As an audience, we are also prone to running with dramatic narratives. Big Thing Continues To Be Big And Succesful isn’t an exciting story for anyone but shareholders. We want the drama of an institution faltering and teetering on the edge. We crave the speculative chaos of it. It’s fun! Yet, it rarely pans out that way. Pat Mahomes has three Lombardi trophies, Taylor Swift makes more money than God, and Jump probably won’t fall off after a couple of popular series finishes.
Doomerism does bring in clicks, and, at the end of the day, we should keep in mind that we’re talking about a magazine/division of a giant publishing company. It’s fun to speculate about Jump’s future, and it is important to be mindful of how Shueisha affects the artistic industry, but you shouldn’t make a brand a major part of your identity. If Weekly Shonen Jump did suddenly go away, that would be weird and kind of suck as there’d be one fewer paying outlet in the manga industry, but the art form would live on, and the industry would figure out how to profit from a now underserved readership.
It’s off to a strong start, but I remain skeptical. So I suppose we’ll call it the CJ Stroud of Jump and see how it does in its second season as a starter. We’ll save the rest for the next segment of our 30-part series “Explaining Sports To Weebs.”
Aw yeah! We’ll bait ’em in with Chargers schedule announcement videos and keep ’em around with arguments that are even more pedantic than what they’re used to!
Have you heard of power scaling? We’ll get ready to figure out who you should draft in round 8 of a fantasy football league!
Source link
#Whats #Weekly #Shonen #Jumps #Big #Manga #Week #Anime