Four New Manga Titles Now Available in English on the emaqi Digital Platform
From Napoleonic conquests to heartwarming family tales, these fresh additions offer something for every manga reader

If you have been waiting for fresh manga to sink your teeth into, February has quietly delivered a small but varied harvest. Four new titles have landed on the digital bookstore emaqi, each one translated into English and ready to pull you into worlds that range from brutal street brawls to the gentle hum of domestic life. Whether you crave adrenaline or tenderness, there is a door here with your name on it.
Street Grit and New Beginnings: Out
You may already know the name Tatsuya Iguchi — the so-called "Mad Dog of Komae" who carved his reputation across earlier stories in the delinquent manga universe. In Out, written by Tatsuya Iguchi and illustrated by Makoto Mizuta, the character is now 17 years old, leaving his hometown behind like a snake shedding old skin. What follows is an intense narrative built around new companions and the kind of raw, unfiltered energy that delinquent manga fans live for. If you enjoy stories where loyalty is forged in fire, this one deserves a spot on your reading list.
Quiet Days, Deep Bonds: Kurashi no Izumi
On the opposite end of the emotional spectrum, Fumiko Tanikawa offers you Kurashi no Izumi, a collection of heartwarming family stories that explores the many shapes a marriage — and a life — can take. Childhood friends who become spouses, an older wife paired with a younger husband, a May-December romance, even a marriage of convenience: each scenario is a small window into how everyday tenderness quietly holds people together. The stories are designed to let happiness wash over you like warm water, and honestly, in a world saturated with high-stakes action, sometimes that gentle touch is exactly what you need to feel something real.
A Commander's Origin: Napoleon — Era of the Lion
History buffs and strategy lovers, this one is your battlefield. Tetsuya Hasegawa brings Napoleon Bonaparte to life in Napoleon: Era of the Lion, a manga that opens with the brilliant military artistry of the Battle of Austerlitz before rewinding the clock to the emperor's childhood. It is a narrative that works like a map unfolding in reverse — you see the legend first, then trace the roads that built him. Napoleon remains one of history's most studied figures, with scholars estimating that over 80,000 books have been written about him, and yet manga offers a uniquely visual and visceral way to experience his rise. Volume 1 sets the stage with both spectacle and intimacy.
Survival at the Top: King of the Ants
Finally, King of the Ants — crafted by Nagahisa Tsukawaki (story) and Ryu Itou (art) — throws you headfirst into a no-holds-barred survival battle. The premise is a powder keg: the moment Kisaburo Rikudo, head of a conglomerate that controls all of Japan, dies, his illegitimate son, a country delinquent named Shiro Aguri, finds his world flipped upside down. Knives, crossbows, Japanese swords, and guns become the vocabulary of a brutal contest where a street-level outsider faces the crushing machinery of state power. It is the kind of story where every chapter feels like a held breath, and the stakes never let you look away.
All four titles are available now on the emaqi e-bookstore, giving you a surprisingly diverse menu for a single drop. I remember the days when finding legally translated manga in English meant waiting months — sometimes years — so having this kind of access feels like a small luxury worth appreciating. Whether you reach for the quiet comfort of Kurashi no Izumi or the sharp edge of King of the Ants, each title is a reminder that manga's range is as wide as the stories we choose to tell.
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