For the week of June 11–17, 2026, the top article on Comic Natalie was coverage of the live-action Netflix series Kenka Dokugaku (喧嘩独学), which began streaming exclusively worldwide on June 11. The article featured an opening-scene clip from episode one alongside a character relation chart — the latter proving especially popular in the site’s gallery section. The piece also covered an accompanying Watch Party stream.
Two articles about MAPPA’s 15th-anniversary key visuals landed at No. 3 and No. 9 respectively, both drawing enough traffic that either could plausibly have topped the chart in a different week. The first key visual, themed around Chainsaw Man, depicts Reze stepping out of a dark alley toward the light. The second, themed around Attack on Titan, shows Mikasa walking toward the iconic hilltop tree.
Weekly Access Ranking — June 11–17, 2026
- #1 — Live-action Kenka Dokugaku: opening scene clip, character relation chart, and Watch Party announced
- #2 — New standalone story by Record of Lodoss War author Yoshinori Mizuno, depicting the last surviving elf
- #3 — MAPPA 15th anniversary key visual vol. 1: Chainsaw Man — Reze walks from a dark alley toward the light
- #4 — Tongari Boushi no Atelier × Honzuki no Gekokujou crossover visual featuring Coco and friends
- #5 — Dr. STONE anime climax visual: all astronaut characters assembled
- #6 — Baki: Hanayama-themed smartphone stand and fighting-game-style T-shirt merchandise
- #7 — Realtor vol. 1: the story of an old man who rises from small-town real-estate agent to the world’s greatest villain
- #8 — Shoegaze-style Doraemon T-shirt in a new LAD MUSICIAN collaboration
- #9 — MAPPA 15th anniversary key visual vol. 2: Attack on Titan — Mikasa walks toward the hilltop tree
- #10 — First art collection by animator Kayoko Ishikawa, featuring over 500 illustrations from Aikatsu! and various MAPPA productions
Featured Special & Column
This week’s editorial spotlight was a 25th-anniversary feature for Comic Bunch, the manga label published by Shinchosha. The piece took the form of a conversation between Junya Inoue and Yuya Kanzaki, who looked back on the label’s quarter-century journey — from its early days as a “mysterious magazine” to their hopes for its future direction.

