Logo Binge Senpai
Chat with Senpai Browse Explore Calendar
Log In Sign Up
Sign Up
Logo
Chat with Senpai
Browse Calendar
Language English
SFW Mode
Log in Sign up
© 2026 Binge Senpai

Yuki ni Tsubasa · review

★
Top reader Feb 3, 2023 · 2 min read
↑ Recommended
7 /10

The drawing is very clean in some parts and very dirty in others, the author used clean drawing for the main characters and dirty drawing for the dynamic scenes and scenes of violence making the rapists have no face, comparing it to the worst thing that can happen to anyone. But the music, the fulcrum of the story, also shines through in the drawing. With this work, the author wants to denounce what is happening in Japan, showing the reader bullying, prostitution, soliciting young girls by mixing in a bit of detective story, telling the story of two boys with many problems, how they know eachother, how grow up and how they fall in love with the sound of a saxophone always in the background.
I feel like saying that this manga has aroused conflicting feelings in me, on the one hand we see a protagonist who continues to point out the fact that snow covers everything, even the dirt of the world, but on the other hand the beauty that shines through when there are the scenes where Yuki plays the saxophone, as if that sound cleanses everyone's conscience and is a way of saying I'm here.
Basically it's very complex than normal stories I recommend it to anyone who likes Shin Takahashi's trait and who likes more adult stories.

2 reactions
Mark
© 2026 Binge Senpai
  • News
  • About
  • Privacy
  • Terms