Link-U Technologies Pivots to AI-Assisted Manga App Development
Link-U's shift to AI-assisted development could accelerate how quickly Japanese publishers launch digital manga platforms overseas, potentially changing the competitive dynamics of the global digital manga market.
Reporting from 1 sources: Animenomics.
Link-U Technologies, a Japanese developer of digital manga platforms for publishers including Shueisha and Square Enix, is shifting its software development work toward artificial intelligence. The company has reorganized its leadership, moving co-founder and CTO Tsuyoshi Yamada into a chief AI officer role to lead the transformation. Last month, Link-U secured a ¥100 million ($640,000) contract to build a digital manga service using AI-assisted development, following a ¥200 million ($1.3 million) contract for similar services four months earlier. In a seminar last April, Yamada said that 60 percent of employees saw increased productivity after using Cursor, an AI-assisted development service by Anysphere. The company plans to move software engineers to upstream work like system planning and design. The pivot comes as Japan's digital manga market becomes more competitive, with 459 manga and e-book reading apps having more than 500 monthly active users as of June 2025. Overseas, publishers are expanding their own digital manga apps, and Link-U's recent partnership with Crunchyroll to relaunch its manga app shows renewed efforts to boost digital manga adoption outside Japan.
Link-U Technologies has built digital manga platforms for major Japanese publishers, including MANGA Plus for Shueisha and Manga UP! for Square Enix. The company's recent partnership with Crunchyroll to relaunch its manga app also signals a push to increase digital manga adoption outside Japan. The domestic market is crowded: as of June 2025, App Ape counted 459 manga and e-book reading apps in Japan with more than 500 monthly active users. Link-U's move to AI-assisted development follows its reorganization of leadership, with co-founder and CTO Tsuyoshi Yamada becoming chief AI officer. The company secured two contracts for AI-assisted digital manga service development in recent months, worth a combined ¥300 million ($1.94 million). Yamada said at a seminar last April that 60 percent of employees reported higher productivity after adopting Cursor, an AI-assisted development tool by Anysphere. Link-U plans to shift software engineers to higher-value upstream work such as system planning and design.
Synthesized by Yomimono from the 1 cited source below, including Japanese-language reporting where cited, then editorially reviewed before publishing.
Sources
- Animenomics Link-U pursues AI-driven manga app development