Mar 13, 2024
Kazumi Magica is the first of many spinoff manga of the hit anime Puella Magi Madoka Magica, and it's a bit of an odd one, in my opinion.
A young woman wakes up in a suitcase with no memories, carried by a man who seems shocked to see her. She's rescued from this awkward and dangerous situation by two other girls who inform her that she is their best friend, Kazumi, and take her back to their house. But when she is attacked by a monstrous creature, she discovers that she has magical abilities, as do her friends - in fact, they are a part
...
of a team of magical girls known as the Pleiades Saints and despite her ongoing memory loss, Kazumi finds herself pulled into their efforts to clear the city of witches and monsters as she begins to realize that her friends are keeping secrets.
Kazumi Magica assumes that the reader knows Madoka Magica well, as much of the tension in early chapters comes from the realization that things don't quite match up with the world the story is ostensibly set in and the story makes little effort to explain many of the worldbuilding conventions. This isn't a critique, per se - it's a spinoff, after all - more of a heads up and a warning that this review may contain spoilers for Madoka Magica.
This manga is a bit of a mess. As the name might suggest, there are seven members of the Pleades Saints and that's way too many major characters for a story of this length. The pacing struggles and the action scenes are very poorly blocked, to the point that I frequently found myself skimming them and relying on the dialogue to tell me what was happening. And while none of it is any more graphic than a Barbie doll, I found the frequent nudity distracting and unnecessary.
Where the story does shine, however, is the characters. Kazumi is a bit more confidant and assertive than Madoka, but no less likable, and while there isn't much time to linger on the personalities of the rest of the Saints, I was intrigued by what I saw. I also enjoyed the look at some potential other reactions to the realities of the magical girl system (and the solutions attempted before Madoka's final wish), as well as the contracts that others might have made.
Puella Magi Kazumi Magica is a story with a lot of potential hampered by poor fight scene choreography and a plot that tries to do far too much with its allotted time. Worth checking out for strong fans of the Madoka universe, but not something that stands on its own merits.
Reviewer’s Rating: 5
What did you think of this review?
Nice
0
Love it
0
Funny
0
Confusing
0
Well-written
0
Creative
0Show all