Comic Beam

Japanese manga magazine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Comic Beam (Japanese: コミックビーム, Hepburn: Komikku Bīmu) is a Japanese monthly manga magazine published by Kadokawa. It publishes seinen manga, though critics have described it as being distinct from other seinen manga magazines and described it as an alternative manga magazine instead. Titles published in the magazine include Desert Punk by Masatoshi Usune, Emma by Kaoru Mori, Wandering Son by Takako Shimura, and Thermae Romae by Mari Yamazaki.

Editor-in-ChiefWakana Nishiyama[1]
CategoriesSeinen manga
FrequencyMonthly
Circulation25,000 (2010)
Quick facts Editor-in-Chief, Categories ...
Comic Beam
Cover of the May 2006 issue, featuring Emma
Editor-in-ChiefWakana Nishiyama[1]
CategoriesSeinen manga
FrequencyMonthly
Circulation25,000 (2010)
First issueNovember 11, 1995; 30 years ago (1995-11-11)
Company
CountryJapan
Based inTokyo
LanguageJapanese
Websitecomicbeam.com
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The magazine was launched in November 1995 by ASCII as a successor to Famicomi and ASCII Comics. Enterbrain acquired the magazine in 2000, before they were merged with Kadokawa in 2013. The magazine has struggled with low sales throughout its history, though it has managed to cultivate a small audience of hardcore comics enthusiasts.

History

Comic Beam was launched by ASCII as a successor to Famicomi and ASCII Comics [ja].[2][3] Initially, the magazine's focus was manga based on video games.[4] Its first issue was released on November 11, 1995.[5] The magazine was acquired by Enterbrain in 2000.[6] In 2006, the magazine published a special issue, Comic Beam Fellows!, which was spun-off into the magazine Fellows! (now Harta) in October 2008.[7]

In 2013, Enterbrain was merged into the Kadokawa Corporation.[8] As part of the magazine's 30th anniversary in 2025, the magazine launched the Comic Beam Manga Award for new manga artists.[9]

Content

An editor at work in a Comic Beam office in November 2006

Comic Beam is considered to be a seinen manga magazine.[10][11] However, critics have described it as distinct from other seinen manga magazines, with Shaenon K. Garrity describing the magazine as "alt-seinen"[12] and Erica Friedman calling it part of a "fifth column" distinct from other manga demographics.[10] It is also sometimes considered to be an alternative manga magazine.[4][13]

Works published in Comic Beam tend to be more experimental in nature.[10] Noriko Tetsuka [ja], who was the editor-in-chief of AX, felt that, despite being owned by a major publisher, Comic Beam still published works shunned by other manga magazines.[13] Jason Thompson wrote that the magazine publishes "an eclectic mix of material".[4]

Comic Beam has been noted as one of the first manga magazines in Japan to publish works written by Korean authors.[14] The magazine also published Wandering Son, a manga that features a transgender protagonist and discusses gender identity in Japan.[15]

Beam Comix

The magazine's titles are published in tankōbon volume format under the Beam Comix (ビームコミックス, Bīmu Komikkusu; also spelled 'Beam Comics') imprint. Until September 2017, Beam Comix volumes were released on the 25th of each month, but since October 2017, they have been released on the 12th of every month instead, which corresponds with the magazine's release date.[16] The Beam Comix imprint also publishes works that were not serialized in the magazine, such as Captivated, by You.[17]

Circulation

In 2009 and 2010, Comic Beam had a circulation of 25,000.[18][19] The magazine has struggled throughout much of its history and has published manga making fun of its low sales.[2][6] It has often resorted to "going-out-of-business scare tactics" and begging to keep its existing readers.[4] In 2016, the magazine declared a "state of emergency" due to declining sales.[20] A year later, an editor stated the magazine improved its financial situation by offering more of its titles through digital services and increasing their international distribution.[21]

Despite the small readership, the magazine has managed to cultivate an audience of hardcore comics enthusiasts, with Friedman describing it as a "comic for comic freaks".[10]

Serializations

More information Title, Year ...
Title Year Author(s) Notes Ref.
Desert Punk 1997–2020 Masatoshi Usune [22]
Yajikita in Deep 1997–2002 Kotobuki Shiriagari [23]
Bambi and Her Pink Gun 1998–2002 Atsushi Kaneko [24]
Otakus in Love 1998–2001 Jun Hanyunyū [25]
Zombie Hunter 1998 Yang Kyung-il Based on a novel by Kazumasa Hirai [26]
Ultra Heaven 2001–present Keiichi Koike On hiatus [27]
Emma 2002–2008 Kaoru Mori [28]
King of Thorn 2002–2005 Yūji Iwahara [29]
Wandering Son 2002–2013 Takako Shimura [30]
Little Fluffy Gigolo Pelu 2002–2004 Junko Mizuno [31]
Soil 2003–2010 Atsushi Kaneko [32]
Astral Project 2005–2007
[12][33]
The Strange Tale of Panorama Island 2007–2008 Suehiro Maruo Based on a novella by Edogawa Ranpo [34]
Thermae Romae 2008–2013 Mari Yamazaki [35]
Areyo Hoshikuzu 2013–2018 Sansuke Yamada [36][37]
The Colour Out of Space 2015 Gou Tanabe Based on a short story by H. P. Lovecraft [38]
Cocoon Entwined 2018–2022 Yuriko Hara [39]
Mizuno and Chayama 2018–2019 Yuuta Nishio [40]
Little Miss P 2018–2020 Ken Koyama [41]
Lost Lad London 2019–2021 Shima Shinya [42][43]
Fami-res Iko 2020 Yama Wayama [44]
Evol [ja] 2020–2025 Atsushi Kaneko [45]
Hereditary Triangle 2021–2022 Fumiya Hayashi [46][47]
Onna no Ko ga Iru Basho wa 2021–2022 Ebine Yamaji [48]
Stardust Family 2022–2023 Aki Poroyama [49][50]
Kaijū o Kaibō Suru 2024–2025 Mado Saitō [51][52]
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Accolades

In the 2018 edition of Takarajimasha's Kono Manga ga Sugoi! guidebook's list of the top manga magazines, Comic Beam ranked thirteenth.[53] It ranked eighth in the 2020 edition.[54]

References

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