The Chainsaw Man creator’s sister has a new proposition for fans, and it’s none other than Hell’s Paradise.
The official English translation of Hell’s Paradise is not available to read on the Shonen Jump app due to a lot of nudity and obscene content. However, readers can access it through Viz Media. Somehow, Tatsuki Fujimoto’s “sister”, Koharu Nagayama, a 12-year-old girl in her third year of elementary school, found a way to read manga and liked it enough to let the world know. Nagayama tweeted, “I recommend reading Jigokuraku [Hell’s Paradise] because it is very interesting.
In addition to Hell’s Paradise, Fujimoto’s “sister” has made recommendations to her brother’s countless fans and updates her daily, such as what she eats with her meals. Like her brother, Nagayama is very fond of movies because she recommended Nope by Jordan Peele and The Menu by Mark Mylod. She also recommended a BL one-shot that her brother’s assistant wrote, named Boku Yori Sukoshi Taiyō ni Chikai, with the tweet, “It’s R-18, but it’s cool, so you should read it.” In fact, if fans didn’t know better, they’d think Nagayama was Fujimoto, but the mangaka adamantly stated that he and Nagayama were two separate people.
The Twitter account of Fujimoto’s “Sister” was once suspended
For whatever reason, Fujimoto decided not to have a Twitter account of his own and instead borrowed his “sister” account. Unfortunately, his live tweeting during the broadcast of the Chainsaw Man anime adaptation resulted in Twitter deleting his “sister’s” account due to age restrictions from the platform. Nagayama returned to Twitter on November 15, 2022, announcing her epic comeback by tweeting that she ate persimmons and apples.
Written and illustrated by Yuji Kaku, Hell’s Paradise: Jigokuraku began serialization on Shōnen Jump+ from January 2018 to 2021. The series follows the strongest ninja in Igo, Gabimaru, who, despite always yearning for something. died, but never found anyone strong enough to kill me. When he met Sagiri, a swordsman of the Yamada Asaemon family, she correctly deduced that Gabimaru didn’t really want to die. To reunite with his wife, Gabimaru agrees to embark on a suicide mission to Shinsenkyo in search of the elixir of life along with a group of death row inmates. Hell’s Paradise: Jigokuraku got an anime adaptation from the same studio that adapted Fujimoto’s Chainsaw Man.
Hell’s Paradise is available to read on Viz Media, while the side story Hell’s Paradise: Jigokuraku Special Edition: Forest of the Unexpected, released on April 8, is available on Viz Media and the Shonen Jump+ app.
Source: Twitter