Anime 'Iya na Kao Sarenagara Opantsu Misete Moraitai' Gets Sequel
The series has four volumes of novel and one compiled volume of manga in print, with the latest fifth Okawari volume will be released on August 12. The first volume of a spin-off novel titled Iya na Kao sare nagara Kozukuri sasete Moraitai by Ryou Uehara was published on March 27. The first season began streaming via Nico Nico one episodes per week on July 14, and currently the fourth episode is available. All six episodes will be available on September 1. The Comiket edition of the Blu-ray is currently available at Toranoana Booth of Comiket 94 between 10th to 12th this month. The limited and regular editions will be regularly released on August 13.
Source: Official Twitter
20 of 71 Comments Recent Comments
Lmao get rekt desu.
Aug 26, 2018 9:07 PM by TsubasaFamily
Aside from Iya na Kao this is the only real thing they seem to have been the lead studio for.
https://myanimelist.net/anime/37280/Tenka_Touitsu_Koi_no_Ran__Shutsujin_Saika_4-nin_Shuu
That show only has 3 people here who have watched it and I doubt it was popular in Japan so I can see why they'd want to make another series of Iya na Kao.
This is the page of stuff they've worked on but most seem to be very minor involvement.
http://uwanpic.com/works/[/quote]
Wait if it wasn't that popular in Japan then how the heck it got a second season?
Aug 24, 2018 11:37 AM by TD_Max17
Unless the thing you want a sequel to was also made by UWAN Pictures this isn't affecting anything else. Most of the staff involved in making this have pretty much done nothing else and I can't imagine it cost much to make.
That's true this seems to be low budget to make, and rather not that hard. But really UWAN Pictures is making the sequel. This is their first anime project?
They have done other things but most of it is supporting other studios, like they did some 3DCGI support on Gamers for a few episodes (and only 1 person working on it I think.)
Aside from Iya na Kao this is the only real thing they seem to have been the lead studio for.
https://myanimelist.net/anime/37280/Tenka_Touitsu_Koi_no_Ran__Shutsujin_Saika_4-nin_Shuu
That show only has 3 people here who have watched it and I doubt it was popular in Japan so I can see why they'd want to make another series of Iya na Kao.
This is the page of stuff they've worked on but most seem to be very minor involvement.
http://uwanpic.com/works/
Aug 24, 2018 10:06 AM by Harry_Gateau
Well it's a business at the end of the day. Honestly I prefer if they made sequels to anime that truly deserve it. Such as Rakudai & BTOOOM!
However I don't dislike the show here, I mean its crappy but its meant to be crappy.
Those anime are funded by complete different companies tho That's no relation between
them
It confuses me how shows like this do get a sequel but not shows like Yona of the Dawn, Spice & Wolf, No Game No Life, Magi or Noragami.
Because all of those anime have complete different companies funding them along with different expectations as well. This getting a sequel don't mean anything if the committee isn't the same for all the others.
Well that is a bit dumb rule, it's a bit rigid how that works. However that is our sad reality.
Aug 22, 2018 8:00 AM by TD_Max17
Well it's a business at the end of the day. Honestly I prefer if they made sequels to anime that truly deserve it. Such as Rakudai & BTOOOM!
However I don't dislike the show here, I mean its crappy but its meant to be crappy.
Unless the thing you want a sequel to was also made by UWAN Pictures this isn't affecting anything else. Most of the staff involved in making this have pretty much done nothing else and I can't imagine it cost much to make.
That's true this seems to be low budget to make, and rather not that hard. But really UWAN Pictures is making the sequel. This is their first anime project?
Aug 22, 2018 7:57 AM by TD_Max17
Yes, companies on the committee usually make sequels based on how profitable are for them to make a sequel so this was for them
Well it's a business at the end of the day. Honestly I prefer if they made sequels to anime that truly deserve it. Such as Rakudai & BTOOOM!
However I don't dislike the show here, I mean its crappy but its meant to be crappy.
Those anime are funded by complete different companies tho That's no relation between
them
It confuses me how shows like this do get a sequel but not shows like Yona of the Dawn, Spice & Wolf, No Game No Life, Magi or Noragami.
Because all of those anime have complete different companies funding them along with different expectations as well. This getting a sequel don't mean anything if the committee isn't the same for all the others.
Aug 19, 2018 4:16 PM by brzzcode
you really don't understand what i'm saying, which is pretty straight forward. the japanese are not buying anime at the rates that the industry would like to so yes, the industry is in danger.
Yeah, it's been difficult for me to understand where you were coming from, because there is no logic in that reasoning. A business beginning within and historically dependent on its home market does not necessarily still need that market's support heading into the future. Of course it "would like" that support to continue, but a business can succeed even if not everything goes the way its leaders would like.
I was myself expecting the industry to shrink or collapse due to falling profits, until I read those articles I linked, written by a trustworthy veteran industry expert. (The idea of the industry collapsing didn't really bother me; I don't exactly need anime to keep being made.) Now, I'm concerned about other issues, like the workforce shortage, which is surely worsened by poor pay and conditions. And in the long term, if the balance continues to shift and the foreign market actually starts to dominate in importance, it seems inevitable that the very nature of anime will change. We've already seen anime producers bend over backward to avoid offending China:
http://www.crunchyroll.com/anime-news/2018/06/06/new-life-young-again-in-another-world-tv-anime-cancelled-due-to-novel-authors-discriminatory-tweets
Note, after finding out what that author said, I don't want to see his work either; but the backward-bending even extended to an innocent seiyuu who was unluckily cast in that project:
http://www.crunchyroll.com/anime-news/2018/06/16-1/voice-actresssinger-megumi-nakajima-cancels-her-concert-in-shanghai-on-june-24
EDIT: "Report: Anime Production Industry Reaches Record High Income With 200 Billion Yen." "The total income rose 39.6% year-on-year, continuing a three-year positive trend."
https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2018-08-17/report-anime-production-industry-reaches-record-high-income-with-200-billion-yen/.135523
._.
If you want to reply again please post on my profile, this has gone completely off topic.
Aug 17, 2018 7:44 PM by nDroae
@TomDay How did I give you the impression that I think the industry is driven by people "liking anime" rather than paying for it? From my first post in this thread I said that this anime is getting a sequel because it must be easily turning a profit. Not because people like it, unless that liking produces a purchase. I also haven't pretended that creators design anime to appeal to anyone other than the Japanese audience.
you really don't understand what i'm saying, which is pretty straight forward. japan can put out all the niche anime genres they'd like. the japanese are not buying anime at the rates that the industry would like to so yes, the industry is in danger.
it's an empire. all empires fall. and seeing how manga is falling every year and anime and manga are almost inseparable, yes, that's what i'm saying.
Aug 17, 2018 6:18 PM by TomDay
Aug 16, 2018 10:19 AM by Slarkero
You do believe the industry will run out of income and shrink or collapse, correct? Okay, cool.
Aug 15, 2018 10:14 PM by nDroae
You acknowledge that money, not artistic quality, is what drives the industry. Now please explain: how can the fact that "Business is booming in the anime industry right now. Streaming revenues from North America and China have more than offset declines in DVD/Blu-ray revenues" be irrelevant?
because i am talking about japan. you know, the place where it originates? what on earth is so hard for you to understand that?
culturally, but not industry wise. and as said before, no-one cares if people like anime, if they don't put money where their mouth is, it's irrelevant. and since anime is directed to the japanese public....
okay, you can go ahead and ignore the very source of where anime comes from and look at overseas sales as some sort of truth. i won't lol
Aug 15, 2018 9:42 PM by TomDay
If your definition of anime being saved requires that anime catering to this fetish not be produced, then sure, but that's a tautology. Otherwise, I see no correlation. Normally people criticizing the state of the industry would point to perennially dominant phenomena like moe (Love Live leading sales charts) or adaptations of pandering light novels. This series' success is minor compared to those.
they don't have much else going for them, whether it's hentai, moe or anything else tbh. the industry by itself doesn't want to be popular for the heck of it, it wants money (of course) but highly markets DVD sales or manga, which have fallen over the years even with niche marketing.
You acknowledge that money, not artistic quality, is what drives the industry. Now please explain: how can the fact that "Business is booming in the anime industry right now. Streaming revenues from North America and China have more than offset declines in DVD/Blu-ray revenues" be irrelevant? I do not understand why you would say that. This particular anime is very much domestic, but when discussing the industry as a whole, there can be no longer be any "talking about Japan" that ignores the foreign income sources Japan receives.
Aug 15, 2018 11:58 AM by nDroae
@TomDay Because you seemed to be saying that the industry is stuck in the mud relying on declining domestic sales, I shared a report that those sales are gradually decreasing in importance.
If you ask me, the #1 problem with the industry is the studios and workers not being paid enough. If anime you find worthwhile are few and far between, I'm jealous - I wish I had less to watch, so I could go back to my other interests like silent and foreign films.
well your assumption is wrong, i was talking about japan so yeah those links don't matter.
Aug 14, 2018 10:24 PM by TomDay
Aug 14, 2018 9:58 AM by Cevoy
If you ask me, the #1 problem with the industry is the studios and workers not being paid enough. If anime you find worthwhile are few and far between, I'm jealous - I wish I had less to watch, so I could go back to my other interests like silent and foreign films.
Can you please recommend shoujo ai anime
Welcome to MAL :) There's a forum for recommendations here: https://myanimelist.net/forum/?board=16
Some threads: https://myanimelist.net/forum/search?q=%22shoujo+ai%22&u=&uloc=1&loc=16
This new OVA comes highly recommended by a woman, which is somewhat unusual:
http://www.crunchyroll.com/anime-feature/2018/08/01/kase-san-and-morning-glories-is-a-uniquely-sweet-story-of-high-school-girls-in-love
https://myanimelist.net/anime/36214/Asagao_to_Kase-san
There's also this coming in October. I haven't read the manga, but it seems less triggering than Citrus.
http://www.crunchyroll.com/anime-news/2018/07/27/romance-begins-in-bloom-into-you-tv-anime-key-visual
https://myanimelist.net/anime/37786/Yagate_Kimi_ni_Naru
Aug 14, 2018 9:47 AM by nDroae
Aug 13, 2018 11:11 PM by shizuma65
"Japan's seemingly-inevitable tumble off the economic cliff in the next few decades is a constant concern for every Japanese business, especially one such as anime, which still depends heavily on the domestic market to make its money, and on domestic talent to get produced. The anime industry is trying to head this disaster off at the pass. Both the government and the major companies have invested a great amount of resources into expanding the international market, especially into China and into English speaking parts of the world. The last five years have seen an epoch-making shift in how much revenue comes in from places like Crunchyroll and Chinese streaming platforms, versus Japanese fans. I haven't seen recent numbers, but it's generally thought that overseas sales are now as important to a show's bottom line as domestic fans -- perhaps moreso." http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/answerman/2016-10-17/.107730
"Business is booming in the anime industry right now. Streaming revenues from North America and China have more than offset declines in DVD/Blu-ray revenues. However, this rise in cashflow is not trickling down to the actual anime production companies, who have spent decades cutting their costs to the bone in order to stay competitive. Rather than pay more for production, the producers on the Production Committees are using the money to make more shows." http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/answerman/2017-05-26/.116584
(From there, the argument usually goes that CR is helping make mediocre and subpar anime sustainable)
so you posted about overseas sales instead of japanese sales, which is what i was talking about? why?
Aug 13, 2018 10:35 PM by TomDay
@Hannamarya I guess that's so: "It's pretty much not happening. Sales for the DVD'S and Blu-ray's for season 2 weren't successful and Studio Bones hasn't mentioned anything about Noragami ever since 2016 when they released the OVA episodes." https://www.reddit.com/r/Noragami/comments/7o9knl/noragami_season_3/
the industry by itself doesn't want to be popular for the heck of it, it wants money (of course) but highly markets DVD sales or manga, which have fallen over the years even with niche marketing.
"Japan's seemingly-inevitable tumble off the economic cliff in the next few decades is a constant concern for every Japanese business, especially one such as anime, which still depends heavily on the domestic market to make its money, and on domestic talent to get produced. The anime industry is trying to head this disaster off at the pass. Both the government and the major companies have invested a great amount of resources into expanding the international market, especially into China and into English speaking parts of the world. The last five years have seen an epoch-making shift in how much revenue comes in from places like Crunchyroll and Chinese streaming platforms, versus Japanese fans. I haven't seen recent numbers, but it's generally thought that overseas sales are now as important to a show's bottom line as domestic fans -- perhaps moreso." http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/answerman/2016-10-17/.107730
"Business is booming in the anime industry right now. Streaming revenues from North America and China have more than offset declines in DVD/Blu-ray revenues. However, this rise in cashflow is not trickling down to the actual anime production companies, who have spent decades cutting their costs to the bone in order to stay competitive. Rather than pay more for production, the producers on the Production Committees are using the money to make more shows." http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/answerman/2017-05-26/.116584
(From there, the argument usually goes that CR is helping make mediocre and subpar anime sustainable)
Aug 13, 2018 2:37 PM by nDroae
Aug 13, 2018 11:09 AM by Krylten
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