Monthly Ikki
Cover of the first issue of Monthly Ikki (April 2003)
EditorHideki Egami
CategoriesSeinen manga[1]
FrequencyMonthly
Circulation10,000 (2013)
First issueApril 2003
Final issueNovember 2014
CompanyShogakukan
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese
WebsiteOfficial website

Monthly Ikki (Japanese: 月刊IKKI, Hepburn: Gekkan Ikki) was a monthly seinen manga magazine published by Shogakukan. It tended to specialize in underground or alternative manga, but it had its share of major hits as well. The magazine started in 2000 as a spin-off to Shogakukan's Weekly Big Comic Spirits, titled Spirits Zōkan Ikki, published on a bimonthly basis, and became a standalone monthly magazine in 2003. In 2009, Viz Media launched an online English version of Monthly Ikki, named SigIkki, which serialized selected titles from the magazine. Ikki ceased publication after an almost 14-year-run in 2014, and was replaced by Hibana, which ran from 2015 to 2017, before ceasing its publication as well.

History

First issue of Spirits Zōkan Ikki

Editor Hideki Egami worked in the editorial department of Shogakukan's Weekly Big Comic Spirits for 18 years. Egami realized that although the weekly manga magazine is the standard in Japan, manga was getting more sophisticated, and he thought that some manga artists would do better as creators of monthly series rather than weeklies (mentioning Taiyō Matsumoto of Tekkonkinkreet fame as example), as weekly serialized creators tend to use many assistants, and it is a very fast-paced work stream. On the other hand, he considered that monthly manga artists were more likely to do more of the work on their own or with very few people assisting them, taking time for a more thoughtful approach to create their stories. According to Egami, Matsumoto persuaded him to develop a new magazine.[2]

Egami decided to create a monthly magazine, as a spin-off to Weekly Big Comic Spirits.[3] When the magazine was about to be launched, there were obstacles, mostly trademark issues in coming up with a name for the magazine. Egami created an advertisement to devise a name from ideas submitted by readers, in exchange for a monetary reward, but Egami's boss rejected the plan.[4] Egami and Shin Sobue, the designer who worked on the overall design concept of the magazine, came up with the name "Ikki" in a "freestyle way," and according to Egami: "[i]t was a word with several possible good meanings, it had a nice ring to it, and the copyright was clear, so we just had to believe it was the right one."[4][lower-alpha 1] The magazine debuted with the title Spirits Zōkan Ikki (スピリッツ増刊IKKI, Supirittsu Zōkan Ikki), and 13 issues were released on a bimonthly basis from November 30, 2000,[lower-alpha 2] to December 25, 2002.[8] Ikki then became a standalone monthly magazine and debuted with the April 2003 issue (released on February 25).[9][10]

In 2009, Viz Media launched an online English version of Monthly Ikki, named SigIkki.[11] According to Egami, the defunct American manga magazine Pulp "opened the way for Ikki to be accepted in America, that it was a gateway to manga for a lot of creatively minded people."[4] Egami stated that the original pages of the magazine in Japan were digitized, and deciding how to use this material, the first thing he thought was on translating it in English to reach a wider audience.[3] He further said: "[i]n the files themselves, the text and art are separated into different layers. So, it's easier to localize the series into another language. I'm totally counting on the English versions of the IKKI series, because English is now the "universal language." Many many more people will now be able to read IKKI comics."[4] Leyla Aker, former Viz Media editorial manager, said that the project was jokingly referred to as "Pulp 2.0" in internal planning discussions. Aker said that the objectives of Ikki and their Viz Signature imprint were the same: "publish series that offer a diverse range of content but that are all marked by creative excellence."[12] Monthly Ikki was also Shogakukan's first manga magazine to start publishing manga in digital format.[4] The website serialized various titles from Monthly Ikki online, and then, when a title proved to be popular it received publication in graphic novel form. It also included interviews with the Japanese creators and editors.[11] In January 2013, Ikki Paradise, the official website of the magazine, launched the web manga corner Web Ikipara Comic (WEBイキパラCOMIC), which serialized manga specifically made for the web, for free, to readers.[13][14]

The September 2014 issue of Monthly Ikki (released on July 25) announced that the magazine would cease publication after an almost 14-year-run, finishing with the November issue of that same year (released on September 25).[15][16] Some series, which were running in the magazine at the time, finished with the last issue, while others were transferred to other magazines.[17] The magazine would be replaced by Hibana,[lower-alpha 3] which started with its April 2015 issue (released on March 6).[18][19][20][21] Hibana ceased publication after a two-year-run with the September 2017 issue (released on August 7).[22][23]

Style

Well, not too long ago I was watched Shine a Light, and that reminded me of this quote of Keith's that I read about fifteen years ago. A reporter asked him something like, "What does it take to be like you?" Keith being Keith—that is, a much better talker than Mick—answered, "Stop trying to be like me." In other words, to be like Keith, you can't be like Keith. I want people out there to read IKKI in order to get inspired to create something brand new, not to become an IKKI look-alike. Be ready to make an entire genre yourself. Keep on digging underground to a whole new level even if you don't know what you'll find there.

— Hideki Egami[4]

Monthly Ikki was considered an underground magazine[24] and the kind of series which it featured was compared to the American/European alternative comics.[25][26][2] The magazine mainly focused on the creativity of the authors rather that the expectation of the audience, as Egami stated: "[a]t the time we were founding IKKI, my boss told me that with Weekly Comic Spirits, we have to see the ocean for the sea, meaning that you have to see the audience or the readers' point of view. But for IKKI, you have to see the spring that is the origin of the river, meaning you have to see the creator and work with the creator; that it's important to understand the artists' point of view."[25][3] Monthly Ikki advertised itself as a "comics magazine" instead of a "manga magazine" due to its different kind of manga.[27]

Egami said that the slogan of the magazine was "[w]e are still at the dawn of the manga era," explaining: "[t]he spirit of this tagline is that the dawn is still approaching; meaning that if you assume that the history of manga will continue for 200 years or longer, we are still at the very beginning. Even though some people think that the manga market is saturated, that it is mature and sophisticated, we believe that there is still a lot more that can be done in the manga world."[28] Egami further elaborated: "[w]hen I think about it like that, it almost seems as if only a really short period of time has elapsed in terms of the evolution of manga, that there will be more and more mangaka in the future who could be right up there next to Tezuka."[4]

To recruit artists for the magazine, they looked for creators who worked for other magazines or publishers, and to look for new artists, they held a newcomers contest.[3] Saturn Apartments's author Hisae Iwaoka and I'll Give It My All... Tomorrow's author Shunju Aono were artists discovered through the newcomers content.[28]

Circulation and demographic

By 2009, the magazine had 13,750 copies in circulation;[29] the numbers were dropping to 11,500 copies in circulation by 2010;[30] 11,000 copies in circulation by 2011;[31] 10,584 copies in circulation by 2012;[32] and 10,000 copies in circulation by 2013.[33] Egami himself admitted that the magazine did not sell very well in Japan.[27] Some series from the magazine, like Bokurano: Ours and Rideback, received anime adaptations which helped to increase the tankōbon volume sales of those series, but did not affect that much the sales of the magazine itself.[25]

Monthly Ikki was a seinen manga magazine, aimed at older teens and young adult readers;[26][25] however, Egami stated that they were not trying to focus on the gender or age of their readers, unlike the majority of the manga industry, and the magazine was meant "for everybody."[28][34] Egami said that most of their audience was in their twenties, and there also was a younger group of readers who ranged from older teens to an older audience, some who were up to 50's. According to Egami, 40% of Monthly Ikki's readers were female,[28][2] something unusual for a seinen manga magazine, and regarding the teen readers, 60% were girls. Egami said that in every age, gender or group are people with creative minds who could understand the concepts and topics featured in their series, and Monthly Ikki was trying to reach that specific type of reader.[28][34] He further explained: "[w]ith IKKI, I wanted to create something that belongs on that very top shelf inside of people. I wanted to make a magazine that stimulates the highest sentiments that a person could feel. It's not about gender or age group, because everyone has these feelings in them."[4] Ikki, unlike other seinen manga magazines, did not use color nude photos on the issues cover, because according to Egami, it alienated female readers and it was not "the kind of nudity to begin with."[27] Egami also stated that they were not intentionally trying to make series equally appealing to both men and women readers, and titles like House of Five Leaves, which was popular with female readers, "just happen[ed] to be popular with female readers."[34]

Ongoing titles in the final issue

Series title[17][16][35] Author Premiered Notes
Afterschool Charisma (放課後のカリスマ, Hokago no Charisma) Kumiko Suekane April 2008[36]
Babel Narumi Shigematsu May 2012[37] Completed publication via compiled tankōbon volumes.
Dien Bien Phu (ディエンビエンフー, Dien Bien Fū)[lower-alpha 4] Daisuke Nishijima July 2006[38] Prototype version published in Kadokawa Shoten's Comic Shin Genjitsu from 2004 to 2005.[39]
Continued in Futabasha's Monthly Action as Dien Bien Phu: True End in 2017.[40]
Dorohedoro (ドロヘドロ) Q Hayashida November 2000 Transferred to Hibana.[21]
Futagashira (ふたがしら) Natsume Ono April 2011 Transferred to Hibana.[21]
Golondrina (ゴロンドリーナ, Gorondorīna) Est Em June 2011[41] Completed publication via compiled tankōbon volumes.
Hakka Shōjo (薄花少女) Yasuto Miura December 2012[42] Transferred to Monthly Sunday Gene-X.[43]
Ikki to Watashi (IKKIと私) Shunju Aono May 2014[44]
Kajiba no Baka IQ (火事場のバカIQ) Shunji Enomoto January 2013[45] Completed publication via compiled tankōbon volumes.
Kingyo Used Books (金魚屋古書店, Kingyoya Koshoten) Seimu Yoshizaki March 2004 Completed publication via compiled tankōbon volumes.
Kuma Fūfu (くま夫婦) Yanboru Chūō April 2009[46]
Levius Haruhisa Nakata December 2012 Continued with a sequel titled Levius/est in Shueisha's Ultra Jump.
Lotta Rain (ロッタレイン, Rotta Rein) Tsuyoshi Matsumoto April 2014[47] Transferred to Hibana.[21]
Nekkoro (ネッコロ) Isami Nakagawa July 2013[48] Also published (and continued) in Shogakukan's Monthly Big Comic Spirits, Shōnen Sunday S and Pucchigumi.[49][16]
Nōken (のうけん) Ayumi Osada December 2013[50]
Oni-san, Dochira (鬼さん、どちら) Ine Arinaga May 2014[44] Completed publication via compiled tankōbon volume.
Period Sakumi Yoshino June 2003[51]
Slapstick (スラップスティック, Surappusutikku) Shunju Aono November 2013[52] Transferred to Hibana.[21]
Songbook KNOTS March 2014[53]
Sumire Fanfare (すみれファンファーレ, Sumire Fanfāre) Naoko Matsushima September 2011[54] Completed publication via compiled tankōbon volumes.
Sunny Taiyō Matsumoto December 2010 Transferred to Monthly Big Comic Spirits.

Previously serialized works

2000–04

  • Anjū no Chi (安住の地) by Naoki Yamamoto (2000–2002)
  • The Beetles[lower-alpha 5] by Atsushi Nobuzawa (original story) and Toshihiro Katagiri (art) (2000–2001)
  • Fujisan (富士山) by Akira Sasō (2000–2001)
  • G Senjō Heaven's Door (G戦場ヘヴンズドア, G Senjō Hevunzu Doa) by Yoko Nihonbashi (2000–2003)
  • Guns & Blaze (ガンズ&ブレイズ, Ganzu & Bureizu) by Seiho Takizawa (2000–2002)
  • Kagata no Suzu (永田のすず) by Ryo Nagata (2000–2002)
  • Mahiru no Umi (まひるの海) by Sakuya Hikochi (2000–2002)
  • Mangaka Chō Zankoku Monogatari (漫画家超残酷物語) by Nawoki Karasawa (2000–2003)
  • No. 5 (ナンバーファイブ 吾, Nanbā Faibu) by Taiyō Matsumoto (2000–2005)
  • Sexy Voice and Robo (セクシーボイスアンドロボ, Sekushī Boisu Ando Robo) by Iou Kuroda (2000–2002)
  • Manga Sekuhara Senmon Gakkō (漫画セクハラ専門学校) by Nakatani D. (2001–2003)
  • Freesia (フリージア, Furījia) by Jiro Matsumoto (2001–2009)
  • Sukimasuki (スキマスキ) by Yumi Unita (2001–2003)
  • Tetsuko no Tabi (鉄子の旅) by Hirohiko Yokomi (story) and Naoe Kikuchi (art) (2001–2006)
  • Noramimi (のらみみ) by Kazuo Hara (2002–2009)
  • Heibon Punch (平凡ポンチ, Heibon Ponchi) by George Asakura (2003–2006)
  • Rideback by Tetsurō Kasahara (2003–2008)
  • Witches (魔女, Majo) by Daisuke Igarashi (2003–2004)
  • Maho Tsukai Mimicchi (まほおつかいミミッチ) by Hiroko Matsuda (2003–2006)
  • Wild Mountain (ワイルドマウンテン, Wairudo Maunten) by Hideyasu Moto (2003–2009)
  • Natsu no Kumo (ナツノクモ) by Rokuro Shinofusa (2003–2007)
  • Bokurano: Ours (ぼくらの, Bokura no) by Mohiro Kitoh (2003–2009)
  • Hakai: Uri Geller-san, Anata no Kao wa Iikagen Wasurete Shimaimashita (破戒 ~ユリ・ゲラーさん、あなたの顔はいいかげん忘れてしまいました~) by Suzuki Matsuo (story) and Naoki Yamamoto (art) (2004)
  • Hana Boro (花ボーロ) by Hisae Iwaoka (2004–2005)
  • Tsukidate no Satsujin (月館の殺人) by Yukito Ayatsuji (story) and Noriko Sasaki (art) (2004–2006)

2005–09

  • Swweeet by Kei Aoyama (2005–2006)
  • Children of the Sea (海獣の子供, Kaijū no Kodomo) by Daisuke Igarashi (2005–2011)
  • Flying Girl (フライングガール, Furaingu Gāru) by Tetsu Kasabe (2005–2006)
  • House of Five Leaves (さらい屋五葉, Sarai-ya Goyō) by Natsume Ono (2005–2010)
  • Saturn Apartments (土星マンション, Dosei Mansion) by Hisae Iwaoka (2005–2011)
  • Yomawari Sensei (夜回り先生) by Osamu Mizutani (original story) and Seiki Tsuchida (art) (2005–2009)
  • Blanco (ブランコ, Buranco) by Wisut Ponnimit (2006–2010)
  • Fruits (フルーツ, Furūtsu) by Kōichi Kiba (2006)
  • I Love Biyori (あいらぶびより, Ai Rabu Biyori) by Kō Akita (2006–2009)
  • Real World (リアルワールド, Riaru Wārudo) by Natsuo Kirino (original story) and Den Ishida (art) (2006–2007)
  • I'll Give It My All... Tomorrow (俺はまだ本気出してないだけ, Ore wa Mada Honki Dashitenai Dake) by Shunju Aono (2007–2012)
  • Saruman 2.0 (サルまん2.0) by Koji Aihara and Kentaro Takekuma (2007–2008)
  • Ma Q Ken (魔Qケン乙) by Masahiko Kikuni (2008–2010) — Moved from Weekly Young Sunday
  • Bob & His Funky Crew (ボブとゆかいな仲間たち, Bob to Yukaina Nakamatachi) by Puncho Kondoh (2009–2012)
  • Sex Nanka Kyōminai (セックスなんか興味ない) by Nanki Satō (story) and Akira Kiduki (art) (2009–2012)[55][56]
  • Wombs by Yumiko Shirai (2009–2010)[57][58] — Continued publication via compiled tankōbon volumes
  • Shin Tetsuko no Tabi (新・鉄子の旅) by Hirohiko Yokomi (story) and Kanoko Hoashi (art) (2009–2013)
  • Junkin' Gap Clash by Jinko Kobayashi (2009–2014)[59][17]
  • Takanashi-san (高梨さん) by Motoyuki Ōta (2009–2012)

2010–14

Explanatory notes

  1. Possible meaning of "Ikki":[5]
    • Hyakusho Ikki (百姓一揆): Peasant uprising or revolt. Ikki by itself here means "uniting spirits under one goal" or "alliance."
    • Ikki Kassei (一気呵成): To finish up writing at once. The parallel American idiom would be "Get it done!"
    • Ikki Uchi (一騎討ち): A one-on-one battle or close combat.
    • Ikki (イッキ): A drinking chant. The American parallel would be "Chug it!"
  2. The first issue of Spirits Zōkan Ikki, with cover date December 30, 2000,[6] was released on November 30 of the same year.[7]
  3. ヒバナ, stylized as HiBaNa
  4. Stylized as Điện Biên Phủ
  5. Titled as Wāgen wo Dakishimetai (ワーゲンを抱きしめたい, "I Want to Hug the Volkswagen") in the collected volume.

References

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