Who Illustrates The Overflow Season 2 Manga?

2025-11-03 06:32:22 239

2 Answers

Dominic
Dominic
2025-11-04 12:01:55
Quick and casual take: I went hunting for the illustrator credit for a Season 2 manga of 'Overflow' and came up empty-handed on an actual, official name. There doesn’t seem to be a separately credited Season 2 manga illustrator announced; typically the original series artist would continue or a new artist would be announced by the publisher. If you want the definitive credit, look for the tankōbon release notes or the publisher’s announcement—the illustrator’s name will be right there in bold when they release it.

In the meantime, be wary of random forum posts claiming someone new is illustrating Season 2—real credits come from the publisher or the artist’s verified social account. Personally, I find the waiting a little thrilling; when creators announce tie-in manga, they often pick artists who bring a fresh vibe, and that can completely change how the story feels on the page. I’m looking forward to the reveal, whenever it comes.
Mason
Mason
2025-11-07 12:22:37
Great question — I dug into this because I'm as curious as you are about who’s doing the art for 'Overflow' Season 2's manga (if one exists). From everything I've been able to track down, there hasn’t been a separate, newly credited manga illustrator explicitly announced for a Season 2 manga adaptation. What that usually means in practice is one of two things: either the original manga artist continues to handle the artwork for any official continuation, or a studio/publisher will commission a spin-off artist and credit them prominently in press releases and volume listings. I checked the usual places—publisher pages, magazine serialization announcements, and creators’ social feeds—and there’s no clear Season 2 manga illustrator name floating around in the official channels right now.

That said, the landscape for anime-to-manga or season continuations can be messy. Sometimes a Season 2 anime is covered by a spin-off or a special manga drawn by a different artist and serialized in a monthly magazine or on a publisher’s web platform. Other times the original manga continues under the same artist and the anime just adapts the new material. If a Season 2 manga were to appear, the tankōbon credits, the publisher’s site, and the artist’s own social media are where the illustrator’s name would first show up. I also keep an eye on scanlation communities and fan translations, but those sources are unreliable for credits—official publisher info is always the definitive place to check.

So my short takeaway: no single new illustrator has been officially announced for a distinct 'Overflow' Season 2 manga as far as the official channels show. That could change quickly if a publisher decides to commission a tie-in manga, so I’d expect a clear credit (and tweet from the artist) when it happens. Either way, I’m excited to see who gets the job if they do go that route—there’s something fun about seeing different artists’ takes on the same characters, and I’ll be refreshing those publisher feeds with popcorn ready.
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