Kei Urana Explodes Against Toxic Gachiakuta Fans Over Shipping
The manga creator demanded respect after being constantly harassed for pairing her characters.

The sense of belonging of the modern fanatic reaches alarming levels when they try to force the author to rewrite their own work to satisfy a romantic fantasy. This Friday, during a live broadcast, the mangaka Kei Urana directly addressed the harassment about her popular action shonen, Gachiakuta. The level of toxicity from the readers forced the artist to draw an unbreakable line between the official material and the loving delusions of her community.

The tantrum over the Janka ship
Patience ran out due to the massive insistence on validating the pairing between the characters Jabber Wonger and Zanka Nijiku. After receiving an avalanche of pressures about this ship baptized by the internet as Janka, the creator rejected the idea without hesitation. The artist pointed out that her frustration does not stem from the existence of these theories in forums, but from the childish attitude of users who throw tantrums when the canon rejects their visual whims.
Pure action, zero romance
The author reminded her audience that she maintains absolute control of the narrative. Publicly discarding these pairings is a common-sense maneuver to avoid confusions in the real plot. The work follows the fall of the protagonist Rudo into a giant landfill and his raw struggle for survival. The central premise of the manga breathes dizzying action, street fights, and social criticism. Youthful romance simply has no place in this hostile ecosystem.

The limit of creative authority
Although the illustrator tolerates her fandom enjoying creating parallel stories for fun, she demanded respect for her editorial position. Repeatedly pressuring an author with unofficial demands crosses the thin line between admiration and harassment. The work team hopes that this public confrontation will reduce the stress on the artist so she can continue structuring the next chapters without enduring irrelevant interrogations.
Seeing the aggressiveness of some modern readers, do you think mangakas should completely ignore their community or is it necessary to have these public confrontations more often?
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