Fate/stay night
Takenashi Eri's comedy TYPE-MOON spoof set in the world of Tsukihime, MELTY BLOOD, and Fate/Stay Night. This manga is most famously the source-material for Carnival Phantasm.
Dotsuki Manzai (type of Japanese comedy) is a collection of stories from the universes of Tsukihime, Melty Blood, and Fate/stay night.
Koha-Ace stars Kohaku and features characters from various TYPE-MOON series. It is drawn in a super deformed style, and it is a self-aware series that constantly breaks the fourth wall.
Hana no Miyako is a Tsukihime and Melty Blood spin-off about Shiki Toono's cousin, Miyako Arima. Shiki Nanaya is really troubled now. As the weakest member of the Aikido club, she was charged to recruit one more member. Unfortunately, her potential prey, Miyako Arima, is uninterested in joining. A chance encounter put her in the crosshaired sights of various weirdos in the school, just to flavor her life a bit more. What is she supposed to do?
The plot centers around a Grail War faultily copied from the Third Holy Grail War in Fuyuki. After the end of the third Grail War, an organization from the United States that has magi separate from the London based Mage Association as members took data from Fuyuki's Grail War and planned their own ritual. After seventy years, they used the city Snowfield as the Sacred Land for their own Grail War. They were unable to successfully copy every aspect of the ritual, which lead to it acting only as an imitation that has lost the Saber class and allowed for the summoning of strange Servants due to the definition of a "hero" being blurred.
This doushinji is split into two parts. I. Saber and Ilya vie for Shirou's favor. II. Ilya raises a plant. Audience: PG-13.
Consists of three stories: 1) Lancer x Rin Rin summons Lancer instead of Archer, and Lancer demands the mana from her... 2) Archer x Rin What will happen when they're taking a bath together? 3) Archer x Saber Archer's reminiscence of Saber, as the one he'd loved...
One of the firsts adaptations of the Fate/stay night game.

