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It is a post-apocalyptic world where civilization has collapsed. Chito and Yuri, now alone, wander aimlessly through the vast ruins on their beloved Kettenkrad.
They continue to move from place to place in search of food and fuel, and their days are filled with neither dreams nor hopes. But even this "everyday life" seems somehow enjoyable when the two of them are together.
Drinking a cup of soup with care, tinkering with machines that can still be used, and so on… This is a heartwarming dysto...
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(4.32/5)This is a solid beginner manga - the words are pretty easy, grammar is not too complicated and there's little slang (DeepL could translate everything I encountered). However, be warned that there is no furigana (at least not the version linked here). Wasn't a big issue though as the WaniKani vocab sheet had pretty good coverage. Interestingly, I felt the language was easier in the beginning and slowly got more difficult.
As for the story, it's a bit bizarre but held my interest. The narrative i
- Note: Reread this as a discussion group Watch here
While Girl Last Tour might not have furigana, it only has like 100 words at most per chapter. Not only that, but the majority of the vocab is very basic. I personally, only had about 20-30 words a chapter I didn’t know back when I read this, and that was back when I was extremely bad at reading kanji.
**The grammar of this book is also quite simple, and it t
Fantastic atmospheric manga, not text dense
This series is really fun to read, and there's not a lot of text to get through so you can feel like you're progressing quickly. The art style is really neat and lends itself perfectly to the surreal post-apocalyptic setting. It's one of those series I can recommend to basically anyone.