A side story detailing the events of a blank one year period before Japan arc, told from Djibril's point of view.
The main character is Justina, a very beautiful girl with angel face who dreams of adventures, but is sick and drags a traumatic past. Co-star is Rex, who is actually Satan himself sealed in a human body. A story with with a gothic touch and set on a school full of pretty boys.
In Japan, 80,000 people a year disappear. In this socially themed drama about a duo of detectives, the new recruit Mugino and the brilliant Terasaki set about to find a wide range of missing persons. Under their detective agency's banner of "Specialists in finding people," the two use the evidence left behind and the psychology of the missing as clues, becoming ever-more involved in a battle of wits and test of wills with the missing who have their various reasons to not be found. (Source: Japan Media Arts Festival)
Aoi is being forced into an arranged marraige. But then she meets Tatsuhiko, a boxer... A romantic comedy.
Fuu is a lonely girl from the lowest stratum of life. Her only friends are Asa, a little bird, and an old radio she found in the corner of a junk shop. Then there is Kazakura, a hungry girl who goes at her own pace. From the moment they first meet, she calls Fuu "big brother" and follows her around with a cheerful smile. The place where they meet is the only remaining human country in the world. In the middle of an endless desert ruled by deformed monsters, human beings must live for the king, the messenger of God, taking pleasure in daily hardships. But the world they know is all a big lie. With a lot of wisdom and a handful of courage. Now, the "world's heaviest escape drama" begins. (Source: Kadokawa, translated)
"A matchmaker to help people get married," is the motto for Shintaro Rinako, as he works hard to support his clients in their pursuit of marriage. But his clients all seem kind of… "odd"? It's a new kind of romantic comedy about a matchmaking center for women having trouble getting married! (Source: yawaspi, translated)
