Why is shojo genre so bad? Most women are in shonen shipping gay couples

Why is shojo genre so bad? Most women are in shonen shipping gay couples.

Why do female mangaka fail so hard to get attention from another females?

Attached: images - 2022-03-23T115941.959.jpg (697x440, 50.42K)

>shojo
>genre
You have no idea what you are talking about. Your thread is pointless. Read more.

I'd argue the Mahou Shoujo genres top 10 most popular/significant works are inconceivably better than the top 10 biggest shonen

If you mean the MAHOU SHOUJO as a genre, commit an hero, majokko are made of win
If you mean shoujo, lurk a milion years more, shoujo is not a genre

>shojo
Shoujo and shojo are two different but related things. One means young girl, the other means young virgin.

>Why [bullshit]?
>Why [bullshit]?

Recommendation for the young virgin genre?

...is this bait

it's doing fine with its intended demographic which is elementary school girls

boku no pico

This is what constitutes a thread these days?

Japanese little girls don't care about magical girls anymore. They only care about Frozen, vtubers and k-shit

>shojo genre
The virgin genre?

There is a weird demographic shift in 2000s where traditional shoujo genres like mahou shoujo, battle heroines, yuri etc shifted to seinen audience, and as you said women became interested in works targed at shounen instead.

Unlike the queen's english, the u in japanese words is sometimes important.

Mahou shoujo is a dead genre just like mecha. There's still some stuff that comes out but it's generally mediocre and lacks the charm and quality of the stuff that came out in the past. On top of that, a lot of what does come out continues to focus on being "adult", and by that I mean being full of violence and sex as a substitute to being good.

Nigger, PreCure is still being made

I wouldn't consider a genre that consists of a single show with nothing else being able to compete a healthy genre.

But it contradicts everything you said in your post. It's not mediocre, it doesn't lack charm, it doesn't focus on being "adult", and if the biggest show in the genre is nothing like the reality you described it's safe to say you're wrong.

>It's not mediocre, it doesn't lack charm
This perfectly describes Precure though.

>in 2000s
It happened in the 80s with Momo.