A Certain Scientific Railgun, Vol. 4

By Kazuma Kamachi and Motoi Fuyukawa. Released in Japan as “Toaru Kagaku no Railgun” by ASCII Media Works, serialization ongoing in the magazine Dengeki Daioh. Released in North America by Seven Seas.

This volume, as the back cover tells you, marks the start of the ‘Sisters’ story arc for Railgun. Which, if you’re only following the manga, means very little to you. But this is not a manga for those who merely read the manga (though it can be read on its own fairly easily, as I have shown). Franchise manga tend to lack the surprising plot twists that original titles may have, simply as they rely on an already existing base. So if you’re buying this 4th volume of the Railgun manga, it’s already expected that you’ll have bought the Index light novels, and the Index manga and anime, and indeed Railgun’s own anime, which is namechecked here. Higurashi does this too – I’ve been coyly pretending not to know who the villain is in my reviews, but of course I do – as did all the readers of the manga when it came out. Expectations are set differently.

That said, this volume has a lot to offer. It’s rather upfront about the way that it manipulates its cast – particularly its heroine, Misaki. We start right off with her being shown a boy with muscular dystrophy, and asked to donate some of her DNA to help fight such things. Which would be fine, if she had parents who were also giving consent, or if the scientist askin g didn’t have an evil leer on his face after she agrees. No, we know we’re going to be getting into evil clones right off the bat. (Well, the cover might have clued us in as well.)

Of course, the evil is debatable – the clone on the cover actually looks rather sad and vulnerable (and mysteriously missing genitalia, in the best time-honored tradition). And indeed, when we first meet Misaka 9982, she is immediately filled with likeable traits. She’s snarky, and intelligent, and deadpan, and talks in the third person (something I wasn’t sure Seven Seas would carry over – it sounds more awkward in English, but does help to set the clones apart from the original). This is contrasted with Misaka herself, who spends the entire volume frustrated and not sure how she should feel. She’s heard the rumors before, but being faced with the actual reality is a bit much.

As we see Misaka meet her clone, and have amusing arguments with her clone, and come to see her clone as a little sister sort of figure – complete with giving her a frog badge she got from a crane machine – we know, instinctively that we’re heading for tragedy, and that this clone is going to die. Of course, the number ‘9982’ after her name might also clue us in – these clones are being created as experimental subjects, and their purpose is to die for the greater good. I suspect Misaka is not going to see it that way, however, and the volume ends with her losing it and attacking the mysterious boy who is responsible.

All of this is handled quite well. The manga flies by, and we get just enough characterization from Misaka 9982 to feel horrible about what happens. And certainly we immediately loathe Accelerator, the young man who seems to be our heroine’s new villain. Ah well, I’m sure he will simply be a minor villain… you see? There I go again, pretending that this isn’t a franchise. :) Definitely recommended.

A Certain Scientific Railgun Volume 1

By Kazuma Kamachi and Motoi Fuyukawa. Released in Japan as “Toaru Kagaku no Railgun” by ASCII Media Works, serialization ongoing in the magazine Dengeki Daioh. Released in North America by Seven Seas.

Ah, franchises. In the beginning there was the light novel series Toaru Majutsu no Index (A Certain Magical Index), which started in 2004 and has shown no signs of stopping anytime soon. In turn, it spawned a series of side-story light novels, based on the breakout character Mikoto Misaka, called A Certain Scientific Railgun. Then a manga of Index started over in Square Enix’s Shonen Gangan. Then a manga of Railgun (this series) started in Dengeki Daioh. Then the anime came out. Then the Railgun anime. Then the 2nd Index anime. Then the game…

It can get very confusing. Here in North America, light novels don’t sell, so the books are not available. The anime has one season released by Geneon (now defunct), and the Railgun series due to come out soon. As for the manga, one would expect that you’d put out the parent series before you license the spinoff. However, as is quite common in Japan, they’re owned by two different companies. And Yen Press, who deal with Square Enix a lot lately, have made no noises about licensing the Index manga. Seven Seas, though, does deal heavily with the company publishing the spinoff, and so that’s what we have. Luckily, a) you see very little crossover between the two, beyond the hero, who is introduced to new readers; and b) Railgun has become more popular than Index anyway, so should do well here provided that fans of the franchise actually purchase a thing rather than merely gushing about how much of a fan of the series they are and then reading a scanlation online.

As for the manga itself, the supposed premise is that we’re at a magic school (which is apparently so large it’s the size of a city) where various powerful kids learn to control and harness their powers. Our here is a normal schlub of a guy who has no actual powerful skills but manages to win the hearts of over a dozen… no wait, wrong series. In *this* story, our heroine is Mikoto, who is one of only 7 students whose power has been graded at ‘Level 5’. Her power apparently involves zapping folks with electricity, and her specialty is using an arcade token as a magical bullet and firing it at people at several times the speed of sound. She’s pretty awesome, and the first volume involves seeing her trying to go about her everyday life while dealing with mad bombers, groping best friends, and the one boy who’s unaffected by her powers… that hero I mentioned earlier.

Honestly, there is the start of a serious plot introduced here, with the so-called “Level Upper” that will allow you to increase your power level with little to no effort. Given this is a Japanese manga, I’m sure we know how well THAT will go. But for the most part, we get goofy scenes of Kuroko, Mikoto’s best friend and a teleporter, trying to hit on her and being completely unsuccessful in a dumb “oh hey, it’s the comedy yuri girl” way. Misaki herself seems to have a crush on Touma, the hero of A Certain Magical Index, who shows up here and gets a “reintroduction” scene since he’s apparently going to be appearing both here and in the parent series. And there’s one or two other characters who clearly will get fleshed out over time.

It’s good simple fun, but it’s not gripping or exciting. Aside from the bomb threats, not a lot happens here. If you’re a fan of Index and its universe, you’ll really enjoy it. If you have no idea what this is, but like the idea of a modern-day Lum firing electricity at bad guys, you might give this a shot. Everyone else can probably safely skip it.