
Kirara Publication Circulation Ranking 7 million copies 3.35 million copies 3.2 million copies 3 million copies 2.8 million copies 2 million copies 1.8 million copies NEW Rankings may change.
Are you surpassing K-On!?
I didn’t really have the impression that the original was selling like crazy, so is it possible?
It’s amazing that Tough has boasted 10 million copies for about the last 15 years.
>>2
It means that it’s selling better than works that are experiencing such a massive boom.
Was Kill Me that popular!?
I thought it was only popular here…
The ceiling itself is quite low.
Kill Me has a lot of volumes…
It’s cute that Kill Me is mixed in a little bit.
That’s not Nadeshiko standing there, it’s Shima Rin…?
Kirara is a monthly magazine, so not many tankoubon are published.
K-On! Is it really like this!?
>>9
Isn’t that a pretty good number for a complete six-volume set?
I can’t remember the fifth child…
>>10
I feel like it was a story where everyone except for us had turned into zombies, but I forgot the title.
>>10
School-Live!
Yuru Camp has already released 17 volumes.
There’s no doubt that it was popular and I like it too, but is it really more than double K-On!??
Yuru Camp also has a lot of volumes.
K-On feels like the main four volumes and the two-volume side story, so it’s amazing.
I wonder if Yuru Camp continues to sell well.
Since it became an anime, it seems like it turned into a different manga, and I lost interest.
Is this the first Kirara work to have a fourth season since Hidamari Sketch?
The first character that appears in both the original work and the anime is Shimarin.
If the story focuses on Shimarin meeting with the Nadeshikos and undergoing changes, then the main character might be Shimarin.
If it isn’t selling, I don’t think they’ll do a third season.
I know that K-On seems to have changed from P-MODEL to Skirt.
Wait, isn’t the protagonist Nadeshiko?!
>>20
When the Kirara exhibition and the main characters gather, Shimarin will come.
I’m surprised that Sonia from Kill Me is the same too.
Bozaro isn’t selling as well as I thought…
>>22
I don’t think it can be simply compared since it is hitting in an era where e-books are widespread.
I don’t think they would be publishing anthologies and spin-offs at such a fast pace if the books weren’t selling.
It’s quite a high hurdle for Kirara to even continue the serialization itself.
Just because there are many volumes doesn’t mean it’s amazing even if a lot have been sold.
I guess the number of volumes is important, huh?
Even Professor Monkey is quite prolific.
I thought anime was popular, so I was surprised that K-On! is selling well.
It seems that Hidamari isn’t selling very well.
Since there’s volume 7 of Bozaro, it seems to be fairly decent at about a single volume’s worth.
It’s no wonder it’s completely different from the anime.
The Kirara page itself has decreased quite a bit.
Among these, am I the most senior in K-On?
>>29
Announcement period: April 9, 2007 –
18 years ago!?
Isn’t Yuru Camp and Zombie not a 4-panel comic?
Yuru Camp was selling really well…
I think there is a gap between the popularity of the anime and the popularity of the original work in the case of Kirara.
>>34
According to Hiroyuki, when it becomes an anime, the original work tends to sell significantly better.
It seems that with Doujin Work, sales just suddenly stopped after the anime ended.
I just thought.
I wonder what the best-selling Kirara work that ended with only two volumes is.
Well, I don’t really have any intention of seriously looking into it.
>>35
If Kirara’s volume 1 sales are poor, it will end with volume 2.
The sales of works that ended with just two volumes are likely to be less than poorly made doujinshi.
>>35
What are some works that you like that ended with volume 2? I would like to ask the experts.
By the way, K-On! is a work that is currently being serialized in real time.
>>37
The shuffle has been indefinitely suspended.
I wonder if Hidamari Sketch will be included.
I thought Yuru Camp was airing a lot of anime, but it turns out it was such a cash cow…
It’s all about hit anime.
Huh!? It wasn’t over with the college student version!?
What happened at the end of Gakkou Gurashi?
Looking at it this way, the art style of anime like K-On! and Gochuumon wa Usagi Desu ka? feels outdated.
Hidamari Sketch is the ancestor of Kirara anime that supported the Kirara dawn period…
>>47
What does this mean…?
>>47
Zombie psycho horror suddenly turns into outrageous sci-fi…?!
Now that you mention it, it feels like Shimarin has more descriptions…
Even though the camp has a wider target than the band, it sold this well?
Well, the content is quite easy to read too.
>>49
I think it got caught up in some demand during the COVID period.
Bozaro is doing well for something that isn’t that popular.
I can’t help but wonder why the new game is selling so well…
>>54
It was a hit and had quite a few volumes.
>>54
I did my best!
>>59
I can’t deny that it feels like I successfully made a quick start.
K-On! There are 4 volumes (excluding college/high school).
New Game was publishing two episodes every month.
I thought Bocchi-chan would be selling more…
Is Hidamari even worse than Kill Me?
I was surprised that the main character was Shimarinn.
A lot of people end up thinking, “Anime is good enough…”
That’s because the volumes are different in the first place.
Yuru Camp has about 17 volumes out, so of course the number of copies published is correspondingly high.
I wonder if K-On! Shuffle is selling well.
Despite selling so well, the author was like that, wasn’t they, Zoi-chan?
Is Hidamari currently being serialized regularly?
>>66
There are many breaks, so it’s hard to say it’s regular in practice.
It is not officially considered a long-term hiatus.
The most mysterious one among these might be the zombie…
Hidamari is an old series, but it has very few volumes.
>>68
About 10 volumes in roughly 20 years…
Is that not included…? Is it even Kirara in the first place…? There are a lot of…
Hidamari, when looking back at the early volumes now, was quite sharp.
I wonder if Teacher Ume is making a profit from the Madoka Magica royalties.
Hidamari is published about twice a year.
When did the latest volume of Hidamari come out?
>>76
5 years ago
If you’re only doing 8 pages a month with 4 panels, you rarely get a paperback published!
Kirara Forward isn’t a four-panel comic, so the pace is also fast.
Kill Me is too strong.
Soon the second season.
Considering that “Yuru Camp” has over 400,000 copies for a single volume, that’s quite impressive.
I’ll do my best; it was this popular!
It seems that there is about a twofold difference in sales between Bozaro and Kill Me due to height.
It’s not for nothing that the solo camping boom has been stirred up.
When Ume was young, almost every month there was a color cover…
I somehow managed to reach the final volume of Gakkou Gurashi without buying it.
I wonder if the friend who gave me the first edition of Hidamari Sketch is doing well.
I still like Hidamari Sketch, I guess.
It was interesting to feel some sort of hierarchy even in an image like the previous Kirara heroine gathering.
Ainamasan is strong.
>>92
This is easy to understand.
But isn’t it not a graph!?
>>92
Since the ranking only reflects the position, it does not indicate height.
It’s a work that causes a competition between Yamanashi and Shizuoka, after all, Yuru Camp△.
>>93
So I’ll go to Gunma or Aichi and play it safe.
>>93
I saw it in the local girls’ howl!
>>109
The competition between Hamamatsu and Mikawa is quite scaled down.
Yuru Camp is very popular, but since it’s a forward series, the format of the paperback is the same as that of regular manga, which is also a huge factor.
It’s cheap and small.
Large-format 4-panel comics are not selling very well at that time.
>>94
I see.
Surely, that big one isn’t something I want to buy much.
The 1.8 million copies of Kill Me were counted at the time of volume 12, so now that volume 15 has been released, it’s definitely in the 2 million range.
When it comes to NEWGAME being a moe slice-of-life genre, it was about high school girls.
I think it has spread the idea that there is a genre called “work” as well.
There were quite a few works in the case of regular manga time, but…
Mr. Ume has other series as well.
>>98
Draw more of the mild fever space!
The sales of “Kill Me” are surely being supported by the pots…
Yuru Camp is a pillar of Hobunsha that also serves to attract customers for fuz.
Hidamari can draw whenever they want to.
It is believed that there was a conspiracy to prevent the possibility of a hitman boom occurring if Kill Me became too popular.
Ume-sensei is probably working on character design for the Madoka Magica movie this year too…
Until recently, in Magia Record, they created dozens of characters…
There are often discussions about the discrepancies between the characters in “Bozaro” and the original work.
Since I started watching anime, I’ve become somewhat inclined towards it.
>>107
Also, the story has started to seriously focus on music, which doesn’t align with the preferred style of those who love anime.
The biggest contributor to the sales of Kill Me was, above all, the 55 yen sale.
People who liked it but didn’t buy the paperback, or those who were interested but had never read it, flocked to it at 55 yen, overwhelming the Amazon rankings.
A big stamp doesn’t fit well on the bookshelf.
It’s common to see three deaths, but it feels like there aren’t many cases of two deaths.
>>116
There’s no way that’s true.
Even forward readers wouldn’t make such a misunderstanding.
>>116
Kirara is so much like the second volume that it gets turned into a joke in the published works.
There are various differences in the power of publishers and other factors.
The first thing that appears on the Houbunsha official website is Yuru Camp.
I wonder if Yuru Camp is still selling well after the anime calmed down.
>>119
The anime has been on for a long time, and I can’t calm down!
>>124
It’s being rerun frequently.
As expected, if it resonates with the general audience, it really takes off.
As expected, even if I haven’t read it, I know the name well enough for it to rank.
Those who said that the original of K-On! is boring haven’t read beyond the third volume.
>>123
But the stuff at university was boring…
>>125
Even the high school kids are currently serialized…
The only one that was interesting was the one with Azunyan as the main character.
>>125
High school was still interesting.
Kill Me is suffering a lot because of that damn meme.
>>127
That shitty meme about that jar isn’t even selling in the sale.
Kill Me Baby doesn’t die even when killed.
I wonder why the process of starting a band and having their first live performance is so interesting.
I understand that Kazuhou’s manga is irreplaceable.
I only watch anime, but I really liked the first season of Yuru Camp.
I think it’s amazing that the drama adaptation turned out to be surprisingly good, given that it’s a laid-back camping story.
I didn’t realize Yuru Camp was this strong…
I had the impression that it was a work that only a few people knew about.
>>135
There are a lot of cars and motorcycles with stickers when you drive on the road.
Ah, the first time I became aware that this is how works that can be ridiculed are treated was with the original of K-On!
Once it reaches this point, saying anything is pointless.
Afurou’s work, Yuru Camp△, was quite an unusual piece.
>>137
Although the atmosphere I create is not bad, I was really bad at building a world, so I thought it was good to set the new work in a world that is almost based on reality, without any fantasy elements! That’s what I thought at the time.
It became a huge hit that was impossible to predict with such amateur reading.
If it’s 3 million a year ago, hasn’t it already surpassed K-On?
>>139
I don’t think it’s 400, but I think it’s around 350.
When discussing why the camping industry has seen a boom, it’s at the level where they specifically mention “Yuru Camp.”
Shimarin is amazing.
The content of Yuru Camp doesn’t really change much, but when a new volume comes out, I end up buying it.
Isn’t this thread image from about 3 or 4 years ago?
The Kirara manga could be said to be too successful for a 4-panel comic.
Isn’t the thread image from many years ago?
If you go to places likefumotoppara, you can find life-size figures of Yuru Camp lined up at nearby convenience stores.
I’m really looking forward to the mono anime.
The Togashi of the Kirara world.
It’s different from what usually sells.
Before the anime adaptation of Yuru Camp, the circulation was several thousand.
>>153
It seems to be a combination of anime adaptation and the camping boom.
>>154
The live-action series has also been successful for two seasons.
I’m curious about how many copies of the old San-sha San-yō and Kamisama were sold.
Probably about half of the people in Yamanashi Prefecture are buying it.
It was really fun back when it was mainly about camping.
I heard from someone anonymous that even though Kill Me is a Kirara work, it has a proper punchline and is funny in every episode, which apparently makes it quite popular.
Before it was adapted into an anime, Yuru Camp was already quite popular on Oricon and sold well as a Kirara title.
Since that time, there have also been pilgrims visiting the sacred sites.
It’s a mix of topics that appeal to a wide general audience, such as cooking and travel.
>>161
The breadth of the author’s hobbies, allowing them to accomplish so many different things, is truly impressive.
“Mono is just the author making the characters act out their hobbies more than in Yuru Camp.”
Life seems fun.
I think it’s amazing that Tokuno-sensei is in third place, even though Daiban’s anime isn’t as prominent as the top contenders.
Since it’s a story-based thing, those who only jumped on it for a moment when it went viral probably haven’t bought any subsequent installments by now.
>>162
Did Kill Me Baby bounce…!?
>>165
How many times has Killy been on the 55 yen sale?
>>165
I think it’s fair to say that when the anime box set was doing well for some reason, it really took off.
The producer was excited in the interview and said, “I want to do a second season too!”
A little after that, an incident occurs, but…
>>170
Beautiful…
>>165
There are enough dedicated fans to hold events like the Kill Me Baby exhibition.
I wonder if Kinmosa, A-Channel, and Yuyushiki are just below.
The genres are quite nicely varied.
The town of “Mashoko” that is highly praised by everyone is surprisingly not selling well.
The child in number 3 was selling that much?
The first place for Yuru Camp was unexpected.
I thought it was Lucky Star or Azumanga.
>>172
Let’s put aside the comment that it’s not Kirara.
Azumanga is in 3rd place with 3.25 million copies.
I think Lucky Star has grown a bit more now.
As far as I know, it’s 5.5 million copies, ranking second.
Zoi-chan, it’s hard to put into words, but the manga is pretty interesting…
That incident with Kirumi really left a lasting effect, huh?
You really didn’t throw it well, teacher.
Kill Me has gone flying off to some distant place with the anime, but the manga has consistently been interesting…
Kill Me is still a topic of conversation, so it’s good.
The anime was really boring; what should I do about it?
>>178
The original work is still ongoing, so it’s a winning situation.
If it’s per volume, K-On! is still strong.
Yuru Camp△ has been buoyed by the stay-at-home and coronavirus-induced camping boom.
I’m a bit surprised that Gochiusa has gained quite a bit of popularity; it’s somewhat lonely.
>>181
That’s true, but idol stories are full of struggles and it’s exhausting to read…
It was as popular as Kirumi Bocchi-chan…
I hate to say it, but among these, Yuru Camp is just a regular slice-of-life series.
Just because an anime is interesting, there are many times when I pick it up and find that the 4-panel comic doesn’t have much content.
>>186
Among these, Gakkou Gurashi is also a story manga.
There are other anime adaptations from Kirara Forward’s story manga, but they don’t make it into the rankings.
I don’t think that place has any particular advantages.
It’s a story about an underground idol filled with struggles, yet it’s an idol be-back that can be read without stress.
This is my recommendation…
There was a character named Shimarin whose bun on her head also resembled her face, right?
The original Bozaro lacks music, so there’s not much appeal in purchasing it…
>>191
If that’s the case, K-On isn’t music-focused either, but it’s in second place…
Where did you hide Yuyushiki! Spit it out honestly!
Yuru Camp feels more like a relaxed camping vibe with stories like the ones around now.
>>194
The schedule for moving is so tight that it’s not relaxed at all, with every minute counted…
The triangle can also be used as a memo for camping life hacks, making the standalone book quite practical.
Is Bozaro really that troublesome…?
The original creator denying the anime in Kirara…
>>196
It’s rock, right?
>>196
Don’t engage with the troll.
>>196
“Maybe the next one won’t be made by you all, huh? Well, that shows there’s not even a shred of respect.”
I thought Shamarin was a minor character because I don’t watch anime…
Yuru Camp sold really well to uncles and aunties during the camping boom.
It was sold at every outdoor shop and also available at the home center.
Yuru Camp is awesome!
To be honest, I don’t think any of Kirara’s manga are interesting as manga.
>>203
Well, we don’t get along.
Afloro’s art isn’t very sparkly, so this style tends to not get much attention, but when it does get noticed, it’s incredibly powerful.
Appealing to a wide range of people, young and old.
Will the rankings change with anime sales?
>>207
(Autumn 2022) *22,862 Bocchi the Rock!
(2014 Winter) *2,110 Sakura Trick
(2016 Spring) *2,099 Three Leaves, Three Perspectives
(Autumn 2021) *1,991 The Underdog Fruit Tart
(2018 Winter) *1,914 Slow Start
(2015 Summer) *1,787 Dandelion of the Castle Town
(2018 Spring) *1,774 Comic Girls
(Autumn 2022) *1,735 Chainsaw Man
It seems like Yuki-chan from Gakkou Gurashi has become an adult normally…