Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 80: Achievements and Adaptation Consultant Request from Parallel world Manga Artist, a Fantasy novel by AshNoir.

Thursday was arguably Rei’s most ntally draining day of the entire week.

Not because of schoolwork or daily stress, but because Dream Comic released new Chapters on Wednesday, and then rankings ca out on Thursday.

Rei’s identity had been exposed for long enough that his classmates were already used to having a nationally famous manga artist in their room.

No one scread over him anymore when hikaru no go updated.

No more chaos.

Just quiet familiarity.

But outside of school? Completely different story.

That morning, Rei could already tell that fans of Sai and Akira, along with people who were simply fans of Rei himself, were camped outside the school gates again.

During break, Miyu noticed Rei staring blankly at the window and walked over with that teasing half-smile.

"Quite popular these days, aren’t we, great manga artist?"

"Are you so bored that you ca all the way here just to tease ?" Rei whispered back after checking that no one nearby was listening.

"Your Sakura Rain has entered its mid-late serialization with a steady magazine ranking at #2... That’s still a long way from your claim that you’d ’quickly reach #1,’ isn’t it?"

"Of course I know that. You don’t need to rub it in."

Her face darkened imdiately.

For three straight weeks Sakura Rain had barely missed the top spot.

A few votes short each ti. It made her miserable.

"And anyway," she fired back, "your hikaru no go hasn’t climbed much either! You told with full confidence that it would break into the top three, right now it looks like that dream is a long way off."

In Dream Comic, the top three works were in a different universe entirely, sales, influence, weekly vote count, everything.

The third-place manga alone received 50% more votes than the fourth place.

Hoshimori Group treated the top three like royalty.

Pri-ti ani slots. Massive rchandise budgets. Front-page promotion.

Everyone below them fought over scraps.

But Rei didn’t react to her jab, which only made Miyu more curious.

"So then, about the ending of hikaru no go. When will Hikaru finally beco a professional? Will Akira and Sai have a fifth match? And what if Hikaru dies soday, when will Sai find a third host?"

"All of those are spoilers, and you know I don’t spoil things." Rei smiled. "But I can tell you this: every one of your questions will be answered within one year, before our college entrance exams."

Miyu froze.

"You’re only planning to serialize it for that short a ti?"

"What else? How long do you expect a Go manga to run?"

"No, no, wait. Shouldn’t it last four or five years?" She panicked. "I even researched all the world tournants because of your manga! There are seven global Go championships! Plus ijin, Tengen, Kisei titles... And the rivalry with the peninsula region is fiercer than ever."

She leaned forward, counting on her fingers.

"If Hikaru goes through the pro exam, becos a 9-dan, wins titles, represents Japan internationally, fights world champions. That’s hundreds of Chapters! Don’t you want that?"

Rei burst out laughing.

"What’s the point of that?"

"This story is about a boy going from knowing nothing to loving Go. It’s not about him becoming world number one. That’d be redundant, drawn-out, boring. Readers will drop it."

He shrugged.

Just like Slam Dunk. If it continued into the NBA with Sakuragi and Rukawa winning championships, it would’ve crashed in reputation like Prince of Tennis. Ending well matters more than dragging out success.

"But hikaru no go is insanely popular now. And you’re ending it in just a year? What about Hoshimori Group?"

"That’s not my problem. A manga should end when readers love it most. Don’t milk fans dry."

And because Rei knew the original story’s trajectory, he knew popularity would peak around the arc of Sai’s disappearance.Dragging it out beyond that point would only hurt the work.

The conversation ended there as the bell rang.

Morning classes flew by.

By noon, Rei carried his lunch and his phone up to the rooftop, waiting for Misaki’s Thursday call with the new ranking.

Right on ti, Misaki’s call ca through.

"Rei, congratulations. hikaru no go’s popularity ranking rose again this week, more than 400,000 votes, placing it at sixth!"

Through the phone, Rei could clearly hear both joy and disbelief tangled in her voice.

Breaking into the top six of Dream Comic ant the series had officially entered the league of country’s truly popular works.

A few weeks ago, Misaki herself had warned Rei that hikaru no go might stall for a long period, that a Go-thed manga simply didn’t have the legs to climb much further.

And yet here it was. Sixth place.

She honestly found it surreal.

She had known prodigies before.

But Rei was... sothing more.

From day one, hikaru no go had kept smashing every prediction she made.

She first thought the the was too niche, that even if it passed the serialization board, it’d struggle around rank 10 to 15.

Then when it broke into the top ten, she assud that was the ceiling.

Go was disadvantaged.

Even with Rei’s god-tier pacing and paneling, top eight was supposed to be the optimal limit.

But in just a handful of Chapters following the team arc, it had climbed again.

To sixth.

What was the real ceiling of this manga?

Could hikaru no go actually challenge the Big Three at the top of Dream Comic, Source War Chronicle, The Wanderer, and Fist Armor?

Logic told Misaki this was impossible. But emotion whispered...

"Why not dream?"

It was just three ranks away.

Yes, battle manga and sci-fi giants had a much broader comrcial ecosystem than a Go story.

But in the magazine rankings alone...? Top three wasn’t impossible.

"Sixth?" Rei finally exhaled in relief.

He believed in the series, but even he had grown restless after weeks of stagnation.

"There’s also sothing important I need to discuss with you..." Misaki said.

"Go ahead."

"The broadcast date for the hikaru no go ani has been set for January next year. And the manga has dramatically boosted the Go industry. Registrations for youth Go classes across the country increased 40% year-over-year..."

Rei blinked. He didn’t expect that number.

"And because Go isn’t usually mainstream," Misaki continued, "the Go Association, being a semi-official organization, has been aggressively promoting it. With their push, plus investors swarming in, all adaptation rights sold quickly. Animation rights of course, but the live-action drama rights have also been sold."

Rei’s eyes widened.

So that was why everything felt so "smooth."

The Go Association was quietly backing the series.

They had every reason to.

Unlike comrcial studios, the Association didn’t care about profit.They cared about national Go participation.

And nothing, no world title, no championship run could grow the national Go population faster than a smash-hit manga spreading through every school in the country.

Hikaru no go had already done more for Go’s popularity than a decade of official events.

"So what’s the part you need to discuss with ?" Rei asked.

Misaki inhaled.

"The animation team and the TV drama production team both want to invite you, the original creator, to serve as a creative consultant. But since you’re a student and entering your final high-school year, they were hesitant to ask directly. So the editorial departnt asked to check with you first."

"Consultant?"

Upon hearing this, Rei imdiately recalled the two versions of Hikaru no Go from his previous life, the ani’s legendary soundtrack, the iconic voice actors, and even the live-action casting choices.

Misaki, however, completely misread his pause. To her, Rei sounded timid.

"Of course, you don’t need to learn the entire production workflow," Misaki quickly added. "You’d only be exercising your aesthetic judgnt as the original creator, giving input on character design, actor casting, voice actor selection, and how certain scenes should be adapted for animation and the drama."

She didn’t ntion the real reason, the investors needed Rei’s na as a shield.

If extre fans complained after the adaptation aired?

They could simply say: "This was personally approved by the original creator, Shirogane-sensei."

Instant damage control.

Even the angriest fans would limit how harshly they criticized once they knew the original mangaka oversaw it.

"No problem. I can accept it," Rei nodded.

Misaki froze.

"Then... your studies?"

"Hikaru no Go is more important to than test scores right now," Rei said, smiling lightly. "My goal is to be a first-class manga artist, not a first-class university student."

With the knowledge he carried from his previous life, getting into a mid-tier key university wouldn’t be difficult anyway.

Misaki’s heart skipped.

At seventeen, Rei’s clarity and decisiveness were unnervingly sharp.

"But..." Rei continued, leaning forward slightly.

"Since they’re inviting as a consultant, I don’t want to just be a mascot. I want the production teams to take my opinions seriously. On character designs, music direction, casting, I want real decision power. Please help negotiate this."

He wasn’t joking.

In his previous world, the ani’s soundtrack was iconic, practically a spiritual core of the series. If they were inviting him properly, then he’d demand the right to preserve (or surpass) those classics in this world.

Misaki thought for a mont.

"No problem. But if you want influence, you’ll have to be genuinely involved. Rights only co with responsibilities."

"And... animation takes ti. Four to six months, minimum. But the live-action drama? That’s different."

She sighed.

"Japan’s TV dramas are fild and broadcast in tight cycles. So start shooting and air within two to three months. If Hikaru no Go’s drama begins production soon, it might air before the ani, maybe even ahead of the manga’s progress."

"If you accept the consultant role, you’ll have extra workload for months. And during that ti, you cannot stop updating Hikaru no Go. Can you handle it?"

"No problem."

Three simple words.

Rei didn’t overthink it.

Hoshimori Group had adapted countless works; he wasn’t intimidated.

After Rei formally accepted, the company’s promotional machinery began moving at high speed.

Hoshimori Group dropped a bombshell on their official site:

"Shirogane’s manga Hikaru no Go will begin production on a live-action TV drama.

Shirogane-sensei will join the crew as a creative consultant.

Public casting auditions will begin soon."

The entire fandom froze.

Last month, it was the ani announcent.

This month, the TV drama.

The speed of the IP expansion was insane.

The other five major manga groups imdiately felt threatened.

Is Hoshimori out of its mind?

A series only serialized for a few months, and they’ve already greenlit both the ani and live-action?

What if the plot collapses later?

Are they ready for the embarrassnt?

But ordinary manga fans didn’t think that far.

Within half a day, the news tore through the Hikaru no Go fandom.

Shirogane’s comnt section exploded with activity. It was the busiest it had ever been.

You are reading Parallel world Manga Artist Chapter 80: Achievements and Adaptation Consultant Request on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

My Arms Can Turn into Blades cover
Same genre

My Arms Can Turn into Blades

Ode ·Fantasy

ChenLuSifindsastrangestoneandmeetsastrangegirlduringhistombsweeping.Afterthegirlslasheshimwithasword,hefindsthathecouldn'tcontrolhiswholebodybuthis...

Lord of the Truth cover
Trending now

Lord of the Truth

TruthTeller ·Action

RobinBurtonisayoungmanwhogrowwitheverythinganyonecanhopefor,immensetalentforcultivation,sharpmind,awealthyfamilythatwillstopatnothingtoprotectandnu...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.