Font Size
15px

By early February, Haruki finally saw the royalties for the first four volus of Natsu's Friends land in his account.

With 6.1 million copies sold at a price of 500 yen per volu and a 10% royalty rate (after tax deductions and other cuts), he received over 124 million yen.

That amount just from half a year's worth of tankoubon sales had already eclipsed the total inco from his previous years as a mangaka.

Combined with the serialization paynts from his two running series in Shroud Line, Haruki officially beca a multi-millionaire. Tens of millions in liquid cash at only twenty years old, still technically a college sophomore. While there were plenty of rich kids around, among self-made creators his age, Haruki was quickly approaching the top of the pyramid.

anwhile, 5 Centiters per Second and Voices of a Distant Star were still making waves online. Although their montum would likely taper off in a week or two, current streaming numbers were staggering—19 million views for the forr and over 6 million for the latter. Even if they stopped growing entirely, Haruki's share from the broadcast revenue (after the split with Kazuya Mori) would already total around 100 million yen.

But this was just the beginning. With overseas licensing deals and rchandise sales ramping up, projections estimated his eventual earnings from those two projects could exceed 200 to 300 million yen.

Of course, all that money wouldn't co in until later in 2022. And with Natsu's Friends set to receive an ani adaptation in April, volu sales were likely to spike. If Initial D released its first volu this year and secured its own ani deal well, Haruki might be in for another windfall.

In 2021, he'd earn in about 130 million yen after taxes. In 2022? That number could triple or even quadruple.

Leaning back in his chair, Haruki stared at the ceiling and let out a breath. "Man... this industry really pays like you're robbing a bank."

Then again, it made sense. In the parallel Japan he drew inspiration from, top mangaka could earn hundreds of millions of yen annually. In a country with even more readers, it wasn't unusual for a hit creator to earn billions in a single year. Haruki wasn't there yet but if he kept going, if everything went smoothly...

In two or three years, people might na him among the top manga artists in the country.

And in seven or eight? He might be the only na that ca to mind.

That was the goal he quietly worked toward.

Even during the New Year holiday, manga fans stayed glued to their screens.

Initial D was now deep into its next major arc.

After Mako Sato, the top racer from Mount Usui, asked Iketani to arrange a race with Takumi, he finally agreed. Fans who had long admired the invincible AE86 were eager to see how it would perform outside its ho turf.

But this arc wasn't just about the race. There was a second storyline a romance.

Mako and Iketani t by chance, and feelings grew. Mako, unsure how he'd react if he knew she was a top-tier racer, kept her identity hidden. anwhile, Iketani, thinking she was just an ordinary girl, proudly showed off his own skills behind the wheel.

That illusion shattered one night on Mount Usui. Iketani realized the girl he liked was far better than him at the one thing he took pride in. Crushed by his inferiority complex, he withdrew.

Mako, inexperienced in love, didn't notice. She made a proposal if Iketani arranged a race between her and Takumi, she'd step away from racing and date him seriously.

But to Iketani, that made things worse. It felt transactional like she was giving sothing up for his sake, not because she genuinely wanted to be with him.

Still, he agreed. Not because of the condition, but because he wanted to do sothing for her.

Fans, of course, weren't as patient.

"Co on, Iketani! She's literally giving you an opening. Stop overthinking it!"

"If she didn't like you, she wouldn't even suggest it. You're making this harder than it is."

"This is why straight guys can't be trusted with emotions. Fragile egos and zero intuition."

"Is Mizushiro seriously writing a semi-normal romance? Don't tell he's going soft on us."

"If Mako and Iketani break up, that ans all three leads are single. Takumi, who only loves his car. Takeuchi, who scared off a girl by crashing during a date. And now Iketani dumped because his pride couldn't handle a girlfriend faster than him. It's like the Lonely Racers Club."

"Takumi still has Natsuki Mogi, though."

"Does he, though? Wait till he finds out who Daddy Natsuki really is…"

Initial D had been running for over six months. Its fanbase had stabilized, and while new readers continued to trickle in, the explosive early montum had cooled.

Without an ani adaptation, growth would plateau eventually. But even so, it was now neck and neck with Dream World in the weekly popularity rankings. The gap was small. One strong chapter might be all it took to claim the top spot.

Haruki was looking forward to it. That would an another system reward.

He hadn't used any world points yet. They'd accumulated steadily over the past two years—enough to exchange for a top-tier A-rank title like Rurouni Kenshin. But the copyright issues made adapting certain titles impossible, even if he had the points.

Still, he was saving up. If he waited longer, he could afford to exchange for an S-rank work.

Unlike the random lottery, which was a gamble, the point exchange let him choose the exact work. Better to wait and go for quality.

Especially if the lottery ever gave him sothing unusable say, a "trainwreck" like School Days it would be better to save the points for sothing serious.

Thankfully, it seed like more rewards were on the way.

5 Centiters per Second and Voices of a Distant Star were dominating the spring season. If no major challengers erged by March, he was likely to win the popularity award for the quarter by May or June.

Natsu's Friends was also slated for its ani debut in April. It might not hold the top spot for long like Dream World, but a temporary rise would still qualify for a reward.

As for Initial D, Haruki had no doubts. Once it aired as an ani, it would soar past the competition.

The bigger concern now was... what if all three of his works earned rewards?

Handling two manga series and an ani was already exhausting. If he added three more projects, it would be suicidal.

Thankfully, both Initial D and Natsu were planned with limited runs.

For Initial D, he only intended to cover Takumi's arc up to his decision to join Ryosuke Takahashi's team. The rest of the original manga while good felt less compelling to Haruki. Ending the story with that turning point would leave readers with a strong, lasting impression.

Natsu, on the other hand, could run longer. There were still over two years of story left, even if he serialized weekly. But the source material in the system's library updated slowly sotis just a chapter every few months. Haruki suspected he might finish the adapted version long before the original was even complete.

So for now, he'd keep going. If he landed a new hit and couldn't keep up, he'd simply pause Natsu and resu it later once he had more bandwidth.

And with those thoughts, Haruki's quiet Spring Festival ended and February arrived.

A week later, everyone was back to work.

Ryuko returned to the city early. Despite the holidays, the influx of dubbing offers after her standout performances in 5 Centiters and Voices ant she couldn't afford to stay idle.

Her first stop upon returning wasn't the office it was Haruki's place.

She rang his doorbell early in the morning, carrying a bag full of souvenirs.

While their interactions looked the sa on the surface, her gaze had changed. There was a quiet clarity in how she treated him now no more hesitation, no more tiptoeing.

Haruki felt awkward accepting her gifts. But refusing would've felt even worse.

Thankfully, Ryuko was tactful. She didn't push. She didn't try to seduce him like her friends had suggested. That wasn't her style and she sensed it wouldn't work on Haruki anyway.

What she did have, though, was patience.

Haruki had told her plainly: soday, he'd want to be in a relationship. He just wasn't there yet.

And for Ryuko, that was enough.

There's an old saying: "Proximity wins the race." She planned to be there when that day finally ca.

Sotis, when Haruki saw the way she looked at him, he felt like a rabbit cornered by a very polite wolf.

"So this is what a girl in love looks like… She's terrifying."

He could only sigh and try to focus on work.

Just in ti too. The Initial D Usui arc was finally entering its long-awaited climax.

(TL:- if you want even more content, check out p-atreon/Alioth23 for 60 advanced chapters)

You are reading I just want to quietly draw manga Chapter 214 - 212 on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.