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NEWS: Daijiro Nonoue's The Last Saiyuki Manga Ends




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Sheleigha



Joined: 09 May 2008
Posts: 1673
PostPosted: Mon Aug 19, 2019 11:23 am Reply with quote
Ever since I started subbing to Shonen Jump, I've already seen 3 series end abruptly. This was the biggest surprise, since they JUST established a plot objective and then... "The End". I don't follow the surveys too much, but it's been something else following a story like that and start getting interesting, just to see it end. Was hoping to see more Higuma, but that ended already, too. Looks like around 20 chapters/3 collected volumes is the telling sign of cancellation if popularity is waning :/
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animeprince



Joined: 28 Jun 2007
Posts: 1
PostPosted: Mon Aug 19, 2019 11:35 am Reply with quote
Sheleigha wrote:
Ever since I started subbing to Shonen Jump, I've already seen 3 series end abruptly. This was the biggest surprise, since they JUST established a plot objective and then... "The End". I don't follow the surveys too much, but it's been something else following a story like that and start getting interesting, just to see it end. Was hoping to see more Higuma, but that ended already, too. Looks like around 20 chapters/3 collected volumes is the telling sign of cancellation if popularity is waning :/


I recommend keeping up with the table of contents, you can usually tell what series is popular or about to end based on that. Last Saiyuki has been in the bottom 4 with Beast Children, Double Taisei, and Tokyo Shinobi Squad. Good chance all three are going to end soon.
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Sheleigha



Joined: 09 May 2008
Posts: 1673
PostPosted: Mon Aug 19, 2019 1:07 pm Reply with quote
animeprince wrote:

I recommend keeping up with the table of contents, you can usually tell what series is popular or about to end based on that. Last Saiyuki has been in the bottom 4 with Beast Children, Double Taisei, and Tokyo Shinobi Squad. Good chance all three are going to end soon.


Wow, save for Chainsaw Man, Samurai 8, and Kamio Yuki, that's pretty much every new series lately, just not sticking.
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Gyt Kaliba



Joined: 25 Nov 2007
Posts: 712
Location: Arkansas
PostPosted: Mon Aug 19, 2019 2:07 pm Reply with quote
animeprince wrote:
Sheleigha wrote:
Ever since I started subbing to Shonen Jump, I've already seen 3 series end abruptly. This was the biggest surprise, since they JUST established a plot objective and then... "The End". I don't follow the surveys too much, but it's been something else following a story like that and start getting interesting, just to see it end. Was hoping to see more Higuma, but that ended already, too. Looks like around 20 chapters/3 collected volumes is the telling sign of cancellation if popularity is waning :/


I recommend keeping up with the table of contents, you can usually tell what series is popular or about to end based on that. Last Saiyuki has been in the bottom 4 with Beast Children, Double Taisei, and Tokyo Shinobi Squad. Good chance all three are going to end soon.


Where can we keep track of what order the series' are in via the Japanese magazine?

Also seconding the sadness at this one being over. It wasn't amazing but of the newer stuff, it was probably my favorite, so it's a little sad to see it going away so quick when it was really shaping up to be something interesting. Meanwhile, Jujutsu Kaisen which I've been growing less and less interested by with each passing chapter, is seemingly doing fine I guess? It's just a little sad, yeah.
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ErikaD.D



Joined: 09 Jun 2019
Posts: 659
PostPosted: Mon Aug 19, 2019 2:35 pm Reply with quote
My opinion about The Last Saiyuki: while it's not bad but one thing I don't like is another MC character, whose mother is dead but father is alive but a bad dad. How cliché. Unpopular opinion, dead mom trope is my least favorite trope and it's getting more annoying. It feels like it's becoming more like an overused cliché.
Sheleigha wrote:
Wow, save for Chainsaw Man, Samurai 8, and Kamio Yuki, that's pretty much every new series lately, just not sticking.

Chainsaw Man released in 2018 not this year. The Last Saiyuki now has less chapters than Teenage Reinassance David, who had 35 chapters. I hope it's enough to make TRD as an anime.
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lossthief
ANN Reviewer


Joined: 14 Dec 2012
Posts: 1399
PostPosted: Mon Aug 19, 2019 3:05 pm Reply with quote
Sheleigha wrote:

Wow, save for Chainsaw Man, Samurai 8, and Kamio Yuki, that's pretty much every new series lately, just not sticking.


Yeah, that's unfortunately the norm for most new JUMP titles. At most usually 1 or 2 new entries will stuck around past about half a year. And it used to be most series would get axed around 14 chapters instead of 20

The Last Saiyuki was far and away my favorite of the new series this year, but I knew as soon as it started dumping end-game reveals that it was on the way out. If nothing else this puts Daijiro Nonoue on my list of mangaka to look out for in the future.
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harminia



Joined: 24 Aug 2015
Posts: 2006
Location: australia
PostPosted: Mon Aug 19, 2019 4:28 pm Reply with quote
I don't generally read this sort of shonen action series (because I find them too generic) but I was enjoying this one. The bond between Ryunosuke and Koharu was really sweet, especially in the last few chapters. I really wanted to see Koharu start to live a normal life (I mean, normal + fighting monsters).
I'm not exactly surprised it got axed but I am disappointed.
I really hope the mangaka gets another chance because their art is really nice. I only started reading it because the key art when it was announced looked really nice.
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Sheleigha



Joined: 09 May 2008
Posts: 1673
PostPosted: Mon Aug 19, 2019 4:40 pm Reply with quote
ErikaD.D wrote:


Sheleigha wrote:
Wow, save for Chainsaw Man, Samurai 8, and Kamio Yuki, that's pretty much every new series lately, just not sticking.


Chainsaw Man released in 2018 not this year. The Last Saiyuki now has less chapters than Teenage Reinassance David, who had 35 chapters. I hope it's enough to make TRD as an anime.


Oh I meant "newer" as when I started the initial cheap SJ sub back in Dec. Ne0;lation and Chainsaw Man were the 2 new titles, and only one survived. Almost everything made after that just have not been sticking... Been fun checking out a ton of new series (especially when you get to catch them from the beginning, not having 500+ chapters to go through), but sad when they just start piquing interest, and then they get canned. Ne0 I ended up liking less and less, but I really could've seen Saiyuki and Higuma at least going on for a whole story-length. Even if they didn't get a ton of volumes made out of it, reading an entire storyline is worth it.
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Dian Z





PostPosted: Mon Aug 19, 2019 6:41 pm Reply with quote
Gyt Kaliba wrote:
Where can we keep track of what order the series' are in via the Japanese magazine?


I don't know about Viz's releases, but if you read on Shueisha's official Manga plus app or web when the shounen jump titles are released roughly weekly, it's organized in the order of Table of Contents. Some notes: first title to appear doesn't count since it's the 'cover title' which normally have color page treatment (Promised Neverland in this week's example). And new titles up to their 8th chapter are not ranked, but scattered throughout in-between the other titles based on the editor's decision (no such titles at the moment, since all the new titles have gona past chapter 8). So for this week, first place is Kimetsu no Yaiba, and last place is Double Taisei.
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Sheleigha



Joined: 09 May 2008
Posts: 1673
PostPosted: Mon Aug 19, 2019 6:53 pm Reply with quote
Dian Z wrote:
Gyt Kaliba wrote:
Where can we keep track of what order the series' are in via the Japanese magazine?


So for this week, first place is Kimetsu no Yaiba, and last place is Double Taisei.


Interesting... Of course it's going to be based on the Japanese audience, rather than the global results. Double Taisei I can see not lasting too long, honestly. It feels like it's trying to be kinda like Hikaru no Go (even with a similar art style to Obata's) but just with Shogi.
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Shay Guy



Joined: 03 Jul 2009
Posts: 2137
PostPosted: Mon Aug 19, 2019 7:19 pm Reply with quote
Sheleigha wrote:
Ever since I started subbing to Shonen Jump, I've already seen 3 series end abruptly. This was the biggest surprise, since they JUST established a plot objective and then... "The End".


The writing was on the wall, really. Aside from the listing near the bottom of the TOC -- not necessarily meaning it's last in the polls, but definitely meaning it's doing very poorly -- there was the pacing becoming rushed, and apparently the preorder sales figures for volume 1 were abysmal.

Yui Kamio Lets Loose was also stuck in the bottom two slots, but the editors seem to have been willing to give that one a chance to reinvent itself a la Medaka Box.

Gyt Kaliba wrote:
Where can we keep track of what order the series' are in via the Japanese magazine?


The Crunchyroll forums have an ongoing thread where the tables of contents get listed. That's where I've generally checked.

lossthief wrote:
Yeah, that's unfortunately the norm for most new JUMP titles. At most usually 1 or 2 new entries will stuck around past about half a year.


If you look at Wikipedia's list of Jump series and do the math, around 75% of Jump manga end within the first year. IIRC, that's been pretty consistent for quite a while.

If anyone's interested in why this particular manga failed, this Twitter thread has a fair argument:

Quote:
To begin the explanation on a somewhat low note, Japanese computer literacy is quite low (about a quarter of students have never even touched a computer), but mobile usage is incredibly high. That sounds a bit random, but it's important to consider because it shows that the internet is a relatively recent thing when it comes to discussing manga. This is relevant because it's one of the major reasons why Jump manga is much faster nowadays; retention time.

You may have read studies which state that the attention span of young people has been going down over time. There's varying validity to these studies, but it's directly relevant to the way new series are consumed because the discussion is far, far more connected in the present than in the past. Back in the 2000s, "word of mouth" was literal, most discussion was built on what one person said to their IRL friends about series they read in the latest issue, conversation is now shared almost instantly among hundreds of people in mere hours after the issue drops. The conversation is faster, hence, to gain interest, thou must be faster.

If I had to give the exact cutoff when a manga's fate is determined, that would simply be when the chapters making up Volume 1 are done, as that is when Jump starts properly judging them. Vol 1 will be, in the long term, the first impression, after all.

So, with that in mind, what happens in Vol 1 of The Last Saiyuki?

...Not all that much, honestly. There's some establishing for the emotions of the characters, a few encounters with monster, a whole lot of exposition, and then, in the last 25 pages, a confrontation with an actual villain which isn't even finished. There isn't really much in the way of things which can warrant discussion or attention, not even many fights. This is made even more glaring by the little detail that not ONCE does the action leave Ryunosuke's house, the static location makes it feel like the manga is spinning its wheels.

By comparison, let's look at what I consider the perfect Vol 1 for the Modern Era, Jujutsu Kaisen. In the first volume of that series, we establish the main trio of characters, have the main conceit established, set-up for multiple plot threads, and then a major plot turn in the main cast being utterly annihilated on a mission, Itadori being forced to bring out Sukuna, and the knowledge that one of them isn't going to make it.

This works. It works, because, along with being good, it answers the feedback loop. The information level is high, but it's coherent and promotes discussion. It creates a fandom through pure interaction.

Saiyuki doesn't have that. It doesn't have that, and it fails because of that, even though it accomplishes the purpose of being a high-quality manga.
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kgw



Joined: 22 Jul 2004
Posts: 1075
Location: Spain, EU
PostPosted: Wed Aug 21, 2019 5:56 am Reply with quote
Well, from what I've seen in Manga+, Saiyuki was ending since a couple of weeks or more. They have just had time to close the story more or less fitingly than "We will keep on fighting". Manga world is a harsh one, specially since the readers' numbers are falling down in Japan.

And as they say, Tokyo Shinobi, Beast Children and Futari no Sei probably will follow soon.
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