Thursday, January 10, 2008

Introducing the "Take" Mahjong Set

The start of the year has certainly been busy and hectic (just how we like it at Japanese-Games-Shop.com). "Your Man In Japan" has been toiling away the hours on research, purchasing, adding new items to the range, publicizing them, dealing with new orders, packing parcels and hauling them to the post office, once it opened after the winter holidays...

Packing and hauling... packing and hauling... packing and hauling...

This week I have been holding two extended conversations with my suppliers and clients; one about a fine set of Japanese boxwood shogi pieces (report to follow soon), and the other about a new mahjong set that I have just added to my site. One moment I'm getting into the details of how different mahjong sets measure up to each other, and the next I'm admiring some finely crafted Shogi pieces, while trying to work out what my long-suffering supplier is telling me about the craftsman who made the set...

It was a bit of a shock when these pleasant activities were rudely interrupted by the beginning of college term and Your Man In Japan had to turn his attention back to the classroom. Don't get me wrong, I love teaching, but my New Year's Resolution is to take on no more teaching contracts and gradually whittle my teaching schedule down to just a few hours a week so that I can devote myself to my expanding my online activities. The last time I counted, I had five blogs and as many websites up and running and several domain names secured for further expansion... Here's a list of my active websites

Introducing the "Take" Mahjong Set


The mahjong set I have been checking out this week was called to my attention by a player in Holland who wanted to know whether it was as good as it looked. I ordered a set from the supplier and put it through its paces...

Click the photo to enlarge



The "Take" (pronounced "TA-KEH" with the stress on the first syllable) mahjong is a mid-range set which is designed with ease of handling and smooth play in mind.

The Tiles


The tiles are noticably brighter than the standard "off white" colouring so the faces are clear and easy to read. The tiles are also a little bigger than the standard Japanese size, measuring 19mm x 29.5mm x 15mm.

Click the photo to enlarge

Mahjong manufacturers often design a slight convexity into the back of the tiles and add a "notch" in the sides to represent bamboo. The designers of the Take set have dropped these features in favour of a slightly flatter back which makes for more stable walls! The tiles are also slightly lighter than average.

Click the photo to enlarge


In the above photo you can see three tiles from three different Japanese mahjong sets. The one on the left is a standard Japanese mahjong tile, the middle one is from an exclusive set sold under the label of the Mahjong Museum in Chiba-ken. The tile on the right is from the "Take" set. As you will notice, it is slightly larger and brighter in finish than the other two.

The tiles are standing on a wall of "Take" tiles.

Click the photo to enlarge


The quality of the detailed paint work is also good - this is one of the most important considerations when I select mahjong sets for my site. I'm pleased to say that the paint work is good and accurate.

The tiles shown in the picture above are the Spring Season tile and the Red 5-Coin, which also has an "embedded jewel" replacing the middle coin.

Click the photo to enlarge


The "Take" tile is closest to the camera in the last picture.

Other Features of the Set


The set comes with plastic trays, seven dice of two different sizes, standard sized scoring sticks plus some extra counting chips, a wind marker PLUS a novelty "Black West Tile" keyring!!

The case is made of standard quality plastic, with poppers and a handle. On the back there is the logo of the set in yellow.

Order a Set


To order a "Take" mahjong set, click here. Delivery is by Express Mail Service, which includes tracking and insurance and, as a rule, gets the goods to your door within a week of the shipping date.

David Hurley
Japanese-Games-Shop.com

Thursday, January 03, 2008

Happy 2008 From Japanese-Games-Shop.com!

Happy New Year from Hiroshima, Japan and everybody at Japanese-Games-Shop.com!

By "everybody", I mean just "me" because Japanese-Games-Shop.com is a one-gaijin show!

...And the reason why I haven't posted on this blog or added anything new to the website for a while is because my nose was firmly attached to the grindstone in the run up to Christmas. As you can see in the photo below, the site has been getting a lot of traffic...!


Japanese-Games-Shop.com has been attracting a lot of traffic recently!
New Years Resolution: Add more stuff to Japanese-Games-Shop.com


Now that the New Year has arrived I have found some time to expand the range of products. This month I am concentrating on manga and have added three new lines already.

Crayon Shin Chan
I must admit that this is one of my all time favourite manga series. It was a huge hit in Japan in the 1990's - yeah, I was here then too, so I remember it well. I even bought a Shin-chan character bottle of bubble bath to take back to the U.K. as a memento, but my sojourn in Japan has outlasted both the bubble bath and the bottle...

Crayon Shin Chan is a nursery school kid who indulges in thoroughly "inappropriate" (ghastly word) speech and behaviour. The manga was originally aimed at the adult market, but once it was turned into a television cartoon is became immensely popular with kids too, doubtless because they take great delight in identifying with, and most likely copying, Shin-chan's impertinence and lack of decorum.

If you study written Japanese then this comic will be a stimulating and enjoyable challenge to your reading comprehension skills. The basic dialogue uses a lot of everyday language and common expressions, but there is also a lot of word-play as Shin-chan inadvertently - or deliberately - makes linguistic blunders that embarrass his parents or outrage whoever else happens to be in ear-shot of them... However, like many manga, the kanji characters are drawn with furigana syllables down the side to aid reading comprehension.



Nobunaga

This is a very different calibre of manga... Nobunaga is one of the greatest Samurai generals of Japanese history. The manga series is a dramatic retelling of his life and struggles.

The illustrator, Ryouichi Ikegami, deserves to be better known in the West. In 2001, he won the Shogakukan Manga Award for general manga as the artist of another manga series called "Heat", which I will shortly be adding to my manga listings...

The language level of this series is quite demanding, partly because of the historical material it deals with and partly because of the lack of supporting furigana. This is a manga series for big boys and girls!



Howl's Moving Castle

This is the comic version of the 2004 animated film, "Hauru No Ugoki-Shiro", directed by possibly the greatest animation artist of this generation, Hayao Miyazaki.

The Japanese animation film is an adaptation of a young adult fantasy novel by British author Diana Wynne Jones. It broke box office records in Japan, and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Animated Feature.

The film-comic series faithfully reproduces the animation in full-colour. If you are not familiar with the film, check here for a synopsis and some nice stills.

The Japanese dialogue in the film-comic is relatively straightforward and every kanji character is supported by furigana.

The nice thing about these comics is that they are Printed in full colour on good quality paper.



David Hurley
Japanese-Games-Shop.com

Thursday, November 29, 2007

New Combinations At Nice Prices, Just In Time For Christmas!

The Christmas decorations have been in evidence here in Japan since HALLOWEEN (and the first Halloween decorations made their appearance sometime in September). Some private houses already have Christmas decorations up - it's CRAZY, and what's DOUBLY CRAZY is that this isn't even a Christian nation!!

As far as I'm concerned, we're not even in Advent yet.

There are still four more weeks before the little Christmas tree that I put in a pot and set outside our house last January will be brought back in again - the amazing thing is that it has SURVIVED. It will have earned itself the right to a bigger pot on 5th January 2008 - assuming it survives the shock of being brought back indoors for the Christmas season (which begins on 24th December, NOT 24th October or November).

So, it is not Christmas yet, and this is NOT a Christmas blog in any shape or form whatsoever...

New Shogi Combination Set At A Nice Price


A few months ago I introduced some cloth shogi "boards" to my website. They are hardwearing, convenient to carry around and cheap - oh, and very easy to ship around the world too.


Hardwearing, highly portable and cheap!


They have proved very popular and so today I combined the shogi cloth with a set of shogi pieces to make a new basic set for a reduced price of just $12.50 (down from $14.75), plus shipping and handling.

The set now heads my shogi and is the all new "Shogi Set 1". See Japanese-Games-Shop.com for details.

The other good news about the new combination set is that it is much easier to post than the previous "Shogi Set 1", which was a folding board that required protective wrapping and a larger envelope and was shipped by air freight (8-28 days delivery). Because the new set is lighter the shipping method has been upgraded to "small packet airmail" which usually takes between 5-10 days to get from Japan to Europe, North America, Australia and New Zealand.

In other words, there is still time to take advantage of the nice price in time for... er, CHRISTMAS!

Express Mail Shipping From Japan For Premium Items


Talking about shipping times, the premium shogi koma sets, mahjong sets, and the new lighter and smarter mahjong "JUNK" mat are all shipped by Express Mail Service, which almost always gets parcels from the Japanese Post Office to your door within a week of shipping.



This sleek Black Mahjong Set and Junk Mat combination could be yours... in good time for Christmas too! Supplies are VERY limited, however, so CLICK HERE NOW to secure your set.

It may not be Christmas yet, but when it comes to ordering stuff from the other side of the globe it is worth remembering the wise words of Solomon to avoid disappointment on 25th December:

"The soul of the sluggard desires and has nothing." (Prov: 28.26)

Have a pleasant Advent, one and all - neither too antlike, nor too sluggardly!

David Hurley
Japanese-Games-Shop.com

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Stylish New MJ Mat, Plus Black MJ Tiles Special Deal!


ITEM ONE - NEW STYLE MJ MAT

Earlier TODAY I added a new stylish mahjong mat to the listings
on my other site,


The mat is lighter than the long serving and robust standard
model, and it has some excellent extra features such as built
in trays for your score sticks. This is the mat I use in my
home games. I have wanted to add it to my site for a long time
but only recently have i been able to find a good source offering
the mats at a feasible price.



ITEM TWO - A NEW MJ SET AND MJ MAT COMBINATION

Also, I am pleased to announce a really good combination deal:

The dead cool Japanese Black Tile MJ Set is now on offer in a
combined package with the new Stylish MJ Mat!


  • The Black Tile MJ = $85
  • The Stylish MJ Mat = $47.50
  • TOTAL = $132.50
BUT right now you can get them together on my site for JUST $99 in total (plus shipping and handling). CLICK HERE.


AND NOW FOR SOMETHING COMPLETELY DIFFERENT!

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Friday, October 12, 2007

Foiled By Foil... A Trip to Nagasaki... Japanese Study Dictionaries & a 3 + 1 Free Autumn Offer!

Foiled By a Sudden Lack of Foil

It never ceases to amaze me how many spanners get thrown into the works of a one-man-show such as Japanese-Games-Shop.com!

Sudden shortages of what are usually plentifully available products is just one headache.

Fitting visits to my key supplier into a busy weekly schedule is another - and then arriving to find the lights on, the premises apparently open for business, but the door locked and the gaffer gone AWOL without even leaving a "back in ten minutes" note on the door!

Last month I was foiled by a completely unlooked for double-whammy...

I had the morning schedule sorted: Drop the daughter off at her nursery school and head back home via our local hardware mega-store (a chain that used to glory in the name of "DIK" - pronounced "dick" - but recently sought to, er, "raise its profile" by switching to DAIKI - pronounced "dykie", which flopped, but stuck).

Anyway, my beautifully uncomplicated and seemingly foil-proof plan was to buy a new supply of brown foil - i.e. bog-standard wrapping paper - then whip back home, pack and ship a small backlog of orders in the couple of hours I had free, and "Bob would be your uncle"... Or so I thought, until I came up against a notice and the entrance to Daiki that utterly foiled my plans:

"Stock renewal - shut for 3 days."

Three days later I went back to Daiki to find the layout of the shop completely altered. Several circuits later I felt I was getting warmer when I found the bubble wrap... Brown foil is ALWAYS next to the bubble wrap... But the shelf was empty! I turned to a shop assistant, who disappeared for ten minutes. When she came back it was to tell me:

"There is no excuse for it, but we don't stock brown foil anymore. I'm terribly sorry."

Foiled again!

Brown foil is not used so widely for packaging in Japan as it is in the UK. Suddenly, I began to doubt that I would ever be able to find any foil ever again... Two more days went by before I was able to track down a supply - a wonderful source of TWO different strengths of brown foil!

I now have a plentiful supply of the stuff and offer my apologies to those customers who were kept waiting by such an absurd turn of events!

Late Summer in Nagasaki Prefecture

Here's a photo I took from the balcony of the former Mitsubishi second dock house in Glover Garden, Nagasaki. Thomas Blake Glover (1838-1911) was a British trader who contributed to the modernization of Japanese shipbuilding, coal mining and other fields, including the establishment of the Kirin Beer company. He actively encouraged the forces opposed to the Tokugawa Shogunate and his house, still preserved in Glover Garden today, was the venue of various secret meetings supportive of the forces that eventually brought about the Meiji Restoration, which catapulted Japan into the modern world.

Nagasaki is TOTALLY different from Hiroshima.

OK, not "totally" - they are both port-cities in Japan that were a-bombed at the end of WWII, but that is where the similarity ends...

Check out my other weblog for my Nagasaki blogs and photos. The reports cover our time in Nagasaki city, Huis Ten Bosch (a theme park recreation of a Dutch township - a sort of Dutch "utopia"), and our trip to one of the Goto Islands (where many "hidden Christian" communities practised their faith - or a garbled version of it - for three centuries when Christianity was officially outlawed in Japan).

Japanese Study Dictionaries

Learning to read Japanese is a complex procedure to say the least. Because of the complexities of the language, standard dictionaries and textbooks often fail to cover all the bases even for native Japanese students of the language, let alone for foreign students...

For a long time Japanese-Games-Shop.com has carried a range of convenient and economical all-Japanese language dictionaries that cover various areas of the language, such as Kanji reading, Katakana (see pic, right), Proverbs, 4-kanji words, daily usage and so on.

These dictionaries are perfectly accessible to the serious student of Japanese. Indeed, making the effort to study Japanese IN Japanese and only referring to standard dual language dictionaries when necessary is an excellent study strategy.

The key information in the dictionaries comes with "furigana" to assist comprehension. (It is assumed that the reader has already mastered the hiragana syllabary.) The explanations are short and clear and make for excellent reading practice in themselves.

New Editions, Expanded Range

The Japanese Study page had become one of the more neglected pages on Japanese-Games-Shop.com - YES, Nihongo Benkyo IS a game!

I finally got around to updating the page earlier this week. There is a whole new range of dictionaries, many of them very recent editions (June 2007 in some cases).

Every dictionary is priced at just $3.50, plus $4.75 Shipping and Handling for 1 item, and a lower rate when you order more copies).

Japanese Homophone Dictionary

One new title is the Japanese Homophone Dictionary (see photo, above right, for a detail of a page of the dictionary).

The Japanese language is stuffed to the gills with confusing homophones. You know, two or three words that sound exactly the same but that are all written with different kanji characters. Even the Japanese get confused by homophones, especially nowadays when kanji WRITING skill is declining due to the prevalence of word-processing over writing by hand.

Using homophones as a study aid to acquiring Japanese vocabulary faster than usual is an excellent strategy. As you can see from the page detail, the homophone word is given in red hiragana, and the two or three examples are given in their respective kanji readings, with explanations of meaning, usage and examples provided beneath. The explanations are short and clear and as such they offer Japanese language students excellent reading practice.

Study Tip

It is by reading small chunks of "real Japanese" (i.e. Japanese texts written for Japanese readers) such as the definitions in these dictionaries that one gets a feeling for natural Japanese UNMEDIATED by English or the native language of the student. It is an excellent thing to work on your ability to read Japanese unaided - as much as possible - by mother-tongue explanations.

Practise reading Japanese text out loud, and practise transcribing it; read it out loud as you write it. Record yourself reading it, and play the recording back - get several different compartments of your brain working at the same time.

An Obstacle to Fluency

Incidentally, one reason why the Japanese may have so many problems attaining fluency in English is that they like to stuff their English study books with JAPANESE explanations that go into long, tedious, minute detail about EVERYTHING. It sometimes seems to me that the Japanese will do anything to study English except actually to use it!

Gross generalization.

Apologies to all you Japanese "Eikaiwa" (English conversation) students who are gung-ho about speaking English! That's the way to be - gung-ho about communicating and don't worry about making mistakes - every mistake, if noted and corrected, becomes a step on the ladder to fluency...

Autumn 3 + 1 FREE Offer

Just to make the economical pricing of the dictionaries even sweeter, I will send you a FREE dictionary of your choice, for no extra shipping or handling etc, every time you order any THREE dictionaries, hiragana card decks, or vocabulary cards from my Japanese Language Study Resources page, provided you order via Paypal.

The offer gets even better if you are on my mailing list - but to find out about that you need to fill in the "Don't Miss A Thing" form on my site, or, if you are already on my mailing list, check your inbox for an even better FREE offer.

Enjoy your in-season "matsutake" mushrooms, folks!

David Hurley
Japanese-Games-Shop.com
Japanese-Mahjong.com
Grasp-the-Nettle.com
100-Word-Book-Reviews.com

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Two New Items Uploaded to Japanese Games Shop


A couple of new items have been added to the listings this week.


Economy Shogi Board



Firstly there is an economy non-folding shogi board to announce.

It is made of plywood reinforced along its edges so it is light but reasonably robust.

It sits nice and flat and provides a smooth playing surface that looks similar to the surface of solid wooden boards.

The best news is that the all-in cost of the board plus shipping and handling is just $10.

Check it out here.




Hiragana Playing Cards


I have just uploaded details of a novelty item for Japanese language learners who want some help in mastering the phonetic Hiragana script: Hiragana Playing Cards!

The cards can be used as regular playing cards or used to study the Hiragana.

Each card has one of the letters of the Hiragana syllabary on it and a picture of something that begins with that letter. The name of the thing is also given so you can study individual letters and also practise reading and learning whole words.

You can also combine regular cards and Hiragana study by playing a popular memory game called Shinkeisuijaku in Japanese (i.e. Pelmanism, or "pairs" in English) and enjoy a double memory-training bonus of playing to win the matching game and increased familiarity with the Hiragana syllabary!

Monday, August 13, 2007

Claim your FREE Hanafuda Style Playing Card Deck


To celebrate the recent launch of Japanese-Games-Shop.com I am giving away a free pack of Japanese Hanafuda Style Playing Cards any time a reader of this blog does ANY ONE of these things:

1. Purchase a product at Japanese-Games-Shop.com.

or

2. Purchase an instantly downloadable audio book for your Ipod, MP3 player, or to burn to CD here.

3. Sign up FREE to the SFI affiliates program here.
Since 1985, SFI has helped tens of thousands of men and women worldwide build successful
home businesses. SFI can help you, too. Your enrollment now includes over $400 in FREE bonuses.


or

4. Sign up for a 14 day trial of the Success University program here.
(This will cost only $2 and the fee will be donated to Feed The Children.)
Success University enables you to profit from the rapidly growing personal development industry with the most powerful learn and earn referral program ever released!

After you have done any ONE of those three things just drop me a line here at hirohurl@gmail.com letting me know what action you took and request a "
Free Hanafuda style playing card deck".

That's it!

I will send you a complimentary Hanafuda-style playing card deck straight from Sunny Hiroshima!

Have a good summer.

David Hurley
Japanese-Games-Shop.com
Japanese-Mahjong.com
Grasp-the-Nettle.com
100-Word-Book-Reviews.com

Friday, August 03, 2007

Mahjong Sets: The Ugly, the Good & the Beautiful.

Regular visitors to the "mahjong shop" section of my website will be aware that I offer a range of eleven Japanese mahjong sets, from a standard set all the way up to an exclusive set complete with hand-made bamboo backs.

I have now upgraded the most basic set that I offer while keeping the price below $50. The standard set is now called the Japanese "Sango" Mahjong Set. It is housed in a smart "snap shut" case that is better finished than the case the previous "Standard MJ" set was housed in. The tiles are made to Japanese specifications and are "High Grade Mahjong Tiles".

You can get a close look at the Winds, Dragons, Seasons and Red Fives to check out the quality of the finish over at my Japanese Mahjong Goods site.

Every mahjong set I offer on my site has been made to Japanese specifications. Japanese specs cover size and also quality of production, including the quality of the plastic and paint that are used to produce the tiles.

The quality of the plastic that the tiles are made of is an important point to bear in mind when choosing a mahjong set. Cheap and nasty sets have a really noxious plastic odour to them. None of the sets I offer on my site are made of that ghastly cheap (almost certainly imported from you-know-where) plastic.

However, the other week I accidentally bought one such set. It has been filling my storage space with its noxious fumes. The only benefit I can put it to before throwing it away is to photograph the tiles so you can compare a cheap and nasty set to the sets I offer on my site.

Here goes!

Here are the cheap and nasty Winds, Dragons, Seasons and Red Fives. You will notice the poor finish, ill defined characters, and rather nasty plastic sheen.

Just imagine the whiffy pong of cheap plastic to complete the picture!





It gets worse when you check out the Bamboo and the Coin suits... That ghastly brute of a peacock looks more like a turkey!







The Coins are very blotchy - the nasty glossy paint has been carelessly applied so it runs over and obliterates the sketchy patterning.

The paint looks as if it is about to peel. I hate to think how much lead is in it...




Now, compare the Winds and Dragons of the most economical set that I offer, the "Sango" set that I discussed at the beginning of this article. The difference in quality is immense.

Straightaway the cleaner finish of the tiles is apparent. The paint has been carefully applied and the engraving is more detailed.

The tiles shown here are basic tiles made to Japanese standards. They are the most economical tiles that I offer on my site, yet they are far superior in quality on every count: quality of plastic, quality of paint, quality of engraving, quality of finish.


And now, just to complete the comparison, let's bring in my favourite Japanese mahjong set, the exclusive Nintendo "New Ivory" set for inspection:


The tiles have an ivory-style "grain" running through them and the engraving seems to shimmer above the surface.

So, you can see that when it comes to choosing a Japanese mahjong set, there is a huge difference between the ugly, the good and the beautiful!

DH
Japanese-Mahjong.com
Japanese-Games-Shop.com

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Hirohurl is Dead! Long Live Japanese-Games-Shop!

A couple of weeks ago hirohurl.net went dead! The domain name was supposed to renew automatically, but it didn't. By the time I was able to do anything about it the name had been snapped up by a shark who I presume was hoping that I'd buy it back from him at an inflated price.

I didn't, and if you head over there you will find a link farm.

Mindful that "Crisis = Opportunity" I decided to break up the site into its constituent parts, each with its own domain name, and today the Japanese Shop has been relaunched at:-

http://japanese-games-shop.com

Regular visitors will recognize the familiar format - somewhat tweaked and improved upon, I hope - and offering the same range of games and goods as before...

So, we are back in business. Today, even before the launch, Japanese-Games-Shop.com made its first sale - the search engine spiders must have been over the site already!

As well as http://japanese-games-shop.com, three other sites are up and running in various states of development. They are:-

http://japanese-mahjong.com

http://100-word-book-reviews.com

http://business-success-online.com

I am hoping to launch two more sites over the course of the long and humid Japanese summer!

Best wishes,

David Hurley
http://japanese-games-shop.com


Tuesday, July 03, 2007

Rokudenashi Blues and Ginga Densetsu Weed

Rokudenashi Blues - Summer Time Offer!

I just posted a special limited manga offer on http://japanese-games-shop.com/manga.html.

Rokudenashi Blues is a popular manga series by Morita Masanori it focuses on a delinquent Japanese high school student called Taison Maeda who is into boxing, street fights and motorbikes. His name is a combination of wrestler Akira Maeda and former world heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson.

The manga originally ran in Japan's Shonen Jump comic, a weekly comic that has run many of Japan's most famous comic stories.

The story is very popular in Japan but it has not been serialized in English so it is quite difficult to get hold of outside of Japan.

I have been meaning to add this series to my manga listings at $3.50 a pop. For the time being, however, I'm running a
summer time THREE FOR FIVE DOLLARS offer.

As manga go, this series is relatively easy for the Japanese language student to read. The Japanese is not so difficult, and all the Kanji in the speech bubbles come with
furigana to assist reading. The stories are fast paced and easy to follow. The series makes for excellent Japanese reading practice and are enjoyable to read in themselves - much better than "Nihon No Kiso" and other classroom textbooks!!

If you'd like to take advantage of the offer head over to http://www.japanese-games-shop.com/manga.html


Ginga Densetsu Weed - More Volumes Now Available

Until today fans of the canine animation series Ginga Densetsu Weed were only able to buy volumes 1-10 directly from my manga site.

The good news is that I have finally got around to making the first forty volumes directly available from my site.


The forty-fifth volume has just been published, so as you can see, I am trying to keep as up to date as possible with this popular series.

Now You Can Shop For Japanese Manga and Books On Amazon.co.jp

For Ginga Densetsu Weed fans who want to get the very latest GDW volumes, or any other Japanese manga or book for that matter, I am in the process of launching an "Amazon.co.jp buying service" so you will be able to buy new stuff direct from Japan.

Head over to http://japanese-games-shop.com/manga.html and run a search on one of the Amazon.co.jp portals. When you find what you want, send me the link and I will purchase it for you and ship it to you.

If you can't use Japanese script let me know what it is you are looking for and I will search for it for you.

I will shortly be adding all the details of this new service to the manga site. In the meantime, if you'd like to know more about what is on offer and the fees involved, drop me a line and I will send you full details.

In the meantime, best wishes from hot and humid rainy-season Japan!

DH
japanese-games-shop.com
3rd July 2007