When Did Hanako-Kun Manga First Begin Serialization?

2025-08-24 01:08:14 281

4 Answers

Paisley
Paisley
2025-08-25 22:26:50
No fuss: 'Toilet-Bound Hanako-kun' began serialization in 2014, in Square Enix’s 'Monthly GFantasy'. I first picked it up because someone on my timeline posted a panel of Hanako being adorably chaotic, and by then there were a few compiled volumes floating around.

What I liked as a casual reader was how the manga’s balance of creepy and cute stood out early on. The English license (I think Yen Press handled it) helped friends who don’t read Japanese catch up, and the anime later in 2020 expanded the fanbase even more. If you’re checking it out for the first time, start at the beginning — those first serialized chapters set the tone perfectly.
Talia
Talia
2025-08-28 17:30:57
Pretty quick fact: 'Toilet-Bound Hanako-kun' started serialization in 2014 in Square Enix’s 'Monthly GFantasy'. I found that tidbit when I was curating a list of supernatural-school manga for a thread — it’s one of those series that felt fresh right from the serialized chapters, blending humor, mystery, and a cute-but-eerie aesthetic.

If you like character-driven supernatural stories, the serialized start in 2014 is a good entry point to follow the manga from chapter one and see how the world and relationships deepen. Definitely worth a read if you’re into spooky school settings.
Uma
Uma
2025-08-28 23:16:53
As someone who reads a lot of serialized manga and enjoys tracing where series come from, I can say that 'Toilet-Bound Hanako-kun' officially kicked off its serialized run in 2014 through Square Enix’s 'Monthly GFantasy'. The start felt like a neat collision of yokai folklore and school comedy, and you can see how that early serialization established recurring motifs and character dynamics that carried through the whole run.

I like thinking about serialization context: getting monthly chapters means a different rhythm than weekly shonen, and that pace allowed AidaIro to elaborate atmospheres and visual flourishes. After beginning in 2014 the manga was gathered into volumes and later gained wider exposure thanks to an anime adaptation, which brought a lot of international attention. For anyone studying how series grow from magazine pages to bigger multimedia presence, this one’s a tidy example with charming art and steadily evolving storytelling.
Riley
Riley
2025-08-29 09:35:05
Honestly, I got hooked on 'Toilet-Bound Hanako-kun' before the anime dropped, and what stuck with me is how quickly the manga grabbed my curiosity. The series first began serialization in 2014, debuting in Square Enix's 'Monthly GFantasy'. I still have a fuzzy memory of scanning the early chapters online, loving the mix of spooky school vibes and goofy character moments.

Over the years the art and storytelling matured so nicely — you can see AidaIro refining panels and pacing from those initial chapters. If you want a quick timeline: serialized start in 2014, steady tankōbon releases after that, and then the anime adaptation that brought even more fans. It’s one of those series I recommend to friends who like supernatural slices of life with a comedic bent; it led me down a rabbit hole of exploring other manga in the same magazine lineup.
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