AniFem Round-Up Covers BL OVAs, Gene Bride, and Anime in the UK
The round-up aggregates a wide range of industry and cultural stories from the week, from labor practices and AI regulation to representation and fandom, offering a single-source digest for readers who want the full picture.
Reporting from 1 sources: Anime Feminist.
Anime Feminist's weekly round-up for January 14-20, 2026, covers multiple topics: the first episodes of Oedo Fire Slayer -The Legend of Phoenix-, The Villainess Is Adored by the Prince of the Neighbor Kingdom, Kaya-chan Isn't Scary, and You and I Are Polar Opposites; a review of Hitomi Takano's manga Gene Bride; a Japan Fair Trade Commission report on transactional issues in the anime industry; Japan's probe of Elon Musk's Grok AI service over inappropriate image generation; a Mie Prefecture survey on foreign staff hiring that drew accusations of discrimination; and Prime Minister Ishiba's avoidance of challenging sumo's gendered ring ban. The round-up also includes links to videos on vintage BL OVAs, Lovely Complex, a documentary on Black anime fandom, and Jonathan Clements on the history of anime in the UK. The community section features reader picks for favorite anime of 2025, including You and Idol Precure, Medalist, and Zenshu!
The AniFem round-up leads with capsule reviews of four winter 2026 premieres. Oedo Fire Slayer -The Legend of Phoenix- is a historical fiction about a fire-fighter, but the 3D animation cannot keep up with the action. The Villainess Is Adored by the Prince of the Neighbor Kingdom is a straightforward villainess isekai. Kaya-chan Isn't Scary has good foundations and a strong central character. You and I Are Polar Opposites is praised as a love letter to high school romance manga with grounded characters and an excellent dubcast.
Beyond the premieres, the round-up links to a Beat review of Hitomi Takano's Gene Bride, which compares the josei manga to 90s shojo artists like Yumi Tamura and Reiko Shimizu, and notes a genre-changing twist at the end of the first volume. The Japan Fair Trade Commission report, covered by Anime News Network, surveyed 130 studios and 165 freelancers and found issues with insufficient contractual disclosures, low compensation, abuse of power, order cancellations, delayed payments, and a lack of surcharges for rushed orders. The report highlighted the concentration of rights and power in the hands of clients across both film and anime industries.
Other items include Japan's Cabinet Office probing Grok AI over inappropriate image generation, a Mie Prefecture survey on foreign staff hiring that local mayors criticized as discriminatory, and Prime Minister Ishiba's refusal to challenge sumo's gendered ring ban. The round-up also features community reader picks for favorite anime of 2025, including You and Idol Precure, Medalist, and Zenshu.
Synthesized by Yomimono from the 1 cited source below, including Japanese-language reporting where cited, then editorially reviewed before publishing.