magical transformation from male to female
Retrieved 24 March 2015. ^ "Aisawa Riku Manga Wins 19th Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize's Top Award". Anime News Network. 30 March 2015. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 5 April 2015. ^ "2016 Eisner Award Nominees". Comic-Con. Archived from the original on 2016-04-19. External links[edit] Official website (in Japanese) A Silent Voice (manga) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia vteWeekly Shōnen Magazine: 2010–20192010 Hammer Session! In High School AKB49: Ren'ai Kinshi Jōrei 2011 Again!! Bloody Monday Final Season Tobaku Haōden Zero: Gyanki-hen Dragon Collection: Ryū o Suberu Mono My Wife is Wagatsuma-san Sherlock Bones 2012 Godhand Teru: Kamigami no Sōheki Yamada-kun and the Seven Witches The Seven Deadly Sins Aho-Girl 2013 As the Gods Will: The Second Series Acma: Game Days A-bout!! – Asagiri Daikatsuyaku Hen A Silent Voice UQ Holder! 2014 Fuuka Domestic Girlfriend 2015 Tsuredure Children Ace of Diamond Act II Fire Force Muteki no Hito 2016 Senryu Girl To Your Eternity 2017 Tokyo Revengers Smile Down the Runway Rent-A-Girlfriend The Quintessential
Quintuplets Boarding School Juliet I Love You, My
Teacher 2018 Bakemonogatari She's Adopted a High School Boy! Orient Hitman Edens Zero Blue Lock 2019 When Will Ayumu Make His Move? Mashima Hero's 1960–19891990–19992000–20092010–20192020–present vteTezuka Osamu Cultural PrizeGrand Prize1990s
Fujiko Fujio for Doraemon (1997) Jiro Taniguchi and Natsuo Sekikawa for the trilogy Bocchan No Jidai (1998) Naoki Urasawa for Monster (1999) 2000s Daijiro Morohoshi for Saiyū Yōenden (2000) Reiko Okano and Baku Yumemakura for Onmyōji (2001) Takehiko Inoue for Vagabond (2002) Fumiko Takano for The Yellow Book: A Friend Named Jacques Thibault (2003) Kyoko Okazaki for Helter Skelter (2004) Naoki Urasawa for Pluto (2005) Hideo Azuma for Disappearance Diary (2006) Ryoko Yamagishi for Terpsichora (2007) Masayuki Ishikawa for Moyashimon (2008) Fumi Yoshinaga for Ōoku: The Inner Chambers and Yoshihiro Tatsumi for A Drifting Life (2009) 2010s Yoshihiro Yamada for Hyouge Mono (2010) Motoka Murakami for Jin and Issei Eifuku and Taiyō Matsumoto for Takemitsuzamurai (2011) Hitoshi Iwaaki for Historie (2012) Yasuhisa Hara for Kingdom (2013) Chica Umino for March Comes in like a Lion (2014) Yoiko Hoshi for Aisawa Riku (2015) Kei Ichinoseki for Hanagami Sharaku and Kiyohiko Azuma for Yotsuba&! (2016) Fusako Kuramochi for Hana ni Somu (2017) Satoru Noda for Golden Kamuy (2018) Shinobu Arima for Jitterbug The Forties (2019) 2020s Kan Takahama for Nyx no Lantern (2020) Kazumi Yamashita for Land (2021) Uoto for Orb: On the Movements of the Earth (2022) Kiwa Irie for Yuria-sensei no Akai Ito (2023) Special
Award1990s Toshio Naiki (1997) Shotaro Ishinomori (1998) Fusanosuke Natsume (1999) 2000s Frederik L. Schodt (2000) Akira Maruyuma (2001) Shigeru Mizuki (2003) Tarō Minamoto (2004) Kawasaki City Museum (2005) Kousei Ono (2006) International Institute for Children's Literature, Osaka Prefecture (2008) 2010s Yoshihiro Yonezawa (2010) Weekly Shōnen Jump (2012) Fujiko Fujio (A) (2014) Chikako Mitsuhashi for Chiisana Koi no Monogatari (2015) Kyoto International Manga Museum (2016) Osamu Akimoto for Kochira Katsushika-ku Kameari Kōen-mae Hashutsujo (2017) Tetsuya Chiba for Ashita no Joe (2018) Takao Saito for Golgo 13 (2019) 2020s Machiko Hasegawa for Sazae-san (2020) Koyoharu Gotouge for Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba (2021) Kazuo Umezu for Zoku Shingo: Chiisana Robot Shingo Bijutsukan (2023) Award for
Excellence Moto Hagio for A Cruel God Reigns (1997) Yūji Aoki for Naniwa Kin'yūdō (1998) Akira Sasō for Shindō (1999) Minetarō Mochizuki for Dragon Head (2000) Kotobuki Shiriagari for Yajikita in Deep (2001) Kentaro Miura for Berserk (2002) Creative
Award Yumi Hotta and Takeshi Obata for Hikaru no Go (2003) Takashi Morimoto for Naniwadora ihon (2004) Fumiyo Kōno for Town of Evening Calm, Country of Cherry Blossoms (2005) Asa Higuchi for Big Windup! (2006) Nobuhisa Nozoe, Kazuhisa Iwata and Kyojin Ōnishi for Shinsei Kigeki (2007) Toranosuke Shimada for Träumerei (2008) New Artist
Prize Suehiro Maruo for The Strange Tale of Panorama Island (2009) Haruko Ichikawa for Mushi to Uta (2010) Hiromu Arakawa for Fullmetal Alchemist (2011) Yu Itō for Shut Hell (2012) Miki Yamamoto for Sunny Sunny Ann! (2013) Machiko Kyō for Mitsuami no Kami-sama (2014) Yoshitoki Ōima for A Silent Voice (2015) Yuki Andō for Machida-kun no Sekai (2016) Haruko Kumota for Descending Stories: Showa Genroku Rakugo Shinju (2017) Paru Itagaki for Beastars (2018) Sansuke Yamada for Areyo Hoshikuzu (2019) Rettō Tajima for Mizu wa Umi ni Mukatte Nagareru (2020) Kanehito Yamada and Tsukasa Abe for Frieren (2021) Natsuko Taniguchi for Kyōshitsu no Katasumi de Seishun wa Hajimaru and Konya Sukiyaki da yo (2022) Ganpu for Danchōtei Nichijō (2023) Short Story
Award Hisaichi Ishii for Gendai Shisō no Sōnanshātachi (2003) Risu Akizuki for OL Shinkaron (2004) Rieko Saibara for Jōkyō Monogatari and Mainichi Kaasan (2005) Risa Itō for One Woman, Two Cats, Hey Pitan!, Onna no Mado (2006) Hiromi Morishita for Ōsaka Hamlet (2007) Yumiko Ōshima for Cher Gou-Gou.
Elsewhere, Rei attempts to write a letter to Rakuro asking to join his party and play together, but everything she writes embarrasses her so she
does not send him any of the letters. 14"Squish"
Transliteration: "Puchitto" (Japanese: ぷちっと)Ayumi KurashimaKazuyuki FudeyasuTokuaki SaitōJanuary 7, 2024 (2024-01-07) Dragonfly eventually wins one duel using a double-punch glitch Rakuro and other players have not seen before, impressing them as no one has discovered a new BERP glitch in years. In exchange, Rakuro shows her a glitch he discovered; Doppleganger, which creates a glitch clone of himself as an ally in duels. Dragonfly decides to invent a name for her new glitch. Returning to Shangri-La, Rakuro decides to try Skill-Linking by visiting one of Emul's triplet siblings, Elke the Skill
Gardener in Rabituza. He acquires six linked skills and a Vorpal Moonblade skill, not initially realizing Elke is completely money obsessed, and convinces him to spend almost all his coin.
Unbeknownst to him,
Aqua's fraternal twin sister, Ruby Hoshino, is the reincarnation of Sarina Tendōji, one of Gorou's patients who was a fan of Ai's. Four years later, Ai is murdered by the same fan who had killed Gorou. The fan later commits suicide, but Aqua deduces that the murderer may have had his and Ruby's father as an accomplice and resolves to infiltrate the entertainment industry to find and kill him. Twelve years later, Aqua and Ruby have become high school students and have been adopted by Ichigo and Miyako Saito, the
owners of Ai's talent agency, Strawberry Productions. Ruby dreams of becoming an idol singer herself and becomes employed by their family's agency. She forms an idol group with actress Kana Arima and YouTuber Mem-cho, named "B-Komachi" after Ai's former group, while Aqua returns to acting.