Whenever I’m hunting for specifics, I treat it like a small detective mission. First, figure out which release of 'Love Day' you’re talking about (Japanese, North American, special edition), because the bonus scenes vary wildly. Japanese limited editions usually include an OVA special and a drama track; international releases sometimes only localize the main extras and drop region-only bonuses. Second, check the Blu-ray menu screenshots or a retailer’s detailed description — they often list “bonus episodes,” “making-of,” or “cast commentary.”
I’ve seen editions that add deleted scenes stitched as a single ‘omake’ reel, storyboard comparisons (cut-to-final), and short character sketches that are basically micro-episodes. If you care about subtitles in those extras, watch for language notes — commentary and drama CDs might remain Japanese-only. If you want, tell me which region or retailer you’re looking at and I’ll help narrow down which bonus scenes are included.
Quick and practical: the Blu-ray for 'Love Day' typically packs things like one or more special/OVA episodes, deleted or extended scenes, clean OP/EDs, trailers, and behind-the-scenes featurettes. Limited editions often add drama CDs, staff/cast interviews, and a booklet with art and storyboards.
If you need the exact list for a particular release, grab the product code (or ISBN) from the seller page and search it on collector sites or the manufacturer’s announcement — that’s the surest way to know whether an exclusive short or commentary made the cut. Happy hunting — those hidden extras are always a warm little surprise.
Oh man, if you’ve got the Blu-ray of 'Love Day' in your hands or you’re scoping the product page, there’s usually a nice pile of extras tucked away beyond the episodes. From my collector’s shelf experience, the common bonus scenes are: an OVA or special episode that didn’t air on TV, extended/uncut versions of a scene, deleted scenes that flesh out character moments, and sometimes short chibi spin-offs that are gloriously silly.
Beyond those, the disc often includes clean opening and ending animations (no credits), promotional videos (PVs), trailers, and a short ‘making of’ segment that shows voice actors and animators goofing around. If you bought a limited edition, expect extra goodies like a drama CD track, staff interviews, and a booklet with storyboards or concept art. Tip: the back cover or retailer listing will usually list specifics like “special episode” or “bonus footage,” so check the product code or item description to confirm what version you’re looking at.
I grab physical releases more than streaming, so when someone asks me what’s on the Blu-ray of 'Love Day' I think in terms of editions: standard vs limited. Standard often gives you textless OP/ED, trailers, and maybe one short extra scene. Limited/collector editions usually throw in an exclusive OVA, deleted scenes, behind-the-scenes featurettes, and sometimes an extra audio track with commentary from the cast.
Also watch for retailer-exclusive bonuses — places like the official store, Animate, or Amazon JP sometimes add postcards, mini booklets, or an extra short episode. If you want the exact scene list for a specific release, check the product page (look for item code or ISBN) or databases like MyAnimeList or Discogs where collectors upload detailed contents.
2025-08-31 22:41:48
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"Our romance will never fade away, even if we die. Yvonne Shaw, my heart belongs to you always."
Right away, I realize that my husband, Henry Glover, has specifically prepared the fireworks display just to please his childhood sweetheart, Yvonne Shaw.
Under the powerful attacks of the fireworks, the cable lines begin to shake and tremble violently to the point they are about to snap.
My fingers tighten around my phone so much that they've turned white. I scream into the speaker, "Henry Glover, have you gone nuts? Stop it! Mom and Dad are still in the cable car!"
But he merely chortles in return. I can hear Yvonne's delicate voice egging him on in the background.
"Why should I stop? When Yvonne's parents were lying in the ICU and waiting for help three years ago, you screwed up their life-saving surgery despite the fact that you never failed a surgery before!
"Today, I want you to have a taste of what it feels like to lose your loved ones as well!"
After that, the bodyguards' responses echo from the other end of the line.
Henry orders, "Add another huge batch of fireworks and aim them at the cable car. Just keep firing at it!"
Yvonne's titters are like poisoned honey. She continues egging on Henry.
"You're amazing, darling! Make those two bastards turn to ash!"
The cable car sinks all of a sudden. Mom and Dad are so frightened that their complexions turn deathly pale.
With bloodshot eyes, I use all of my strength in roaring at my phone.
"Henry Glover, your own parents are the ones trapped inside the cable car right now!"
Love is a very beautiful feeling and we all want to feel it and be with the person we love but is it that easy as it is to say?Join the journey of our characters to know how they wrote their own love saga
When the earthquake struck on what should have been our fourth wedding anniversary, my supposedly devoted and family-oriented husband, Lionel Brooks, abandoned me and our children, who were trapped under the rubble.
Despite our children's pleas for help, Lionel left without a second thought, carrying his former flame, Fiona Smith, and her daughter to safety. While Fiona and her daughter escaped with minor injuries, my precious children had their chests pierced by steel beams, leaving this world forever.
It was such a twisted fate. What was meant to be a day of celebration turned into an annual day of mourning for my beautiful children.
A week later, during my children's funeral, Lionel had the audacity to call and ask which hospital the kids were in. It was laughable—after ensuring Fiona and her child were comfortable and safe, he finally found time to check on his flesh and blood.
I could only say, "You finally remembered your children after a whole week? Lionel, I hope you rot in hell."
It was the day before SAT. I made a video for my time capsule. If all went well, I'd be watching the video 10 years later, and all did go well. A bit too well, really.
The moment I opened the video call app, I was connected to the future me. The one living a decade in the future.
"Did I get into Harland U? Got a PhD? Is Johnny still my best friend? He has a very short temper. No one else can stand him. I bet you've gotten your PhD and married Zoe."
The future was a bright, hopeful place in my mind. Unfortunately, the future me flew into a rage the moment Zoe's mouth left my tongue.
"That bitch is giving you pens filled with vanishing ink so Johnny gets to be the state's top scorer instead of you! You're not getting into Harland! You're forced to repeat the year!
"That bitch is going to act sorry and down and promise to get into an LDR with you only to go steady with Johnny right away! The whole campus knows about them! They're the perfect couple!
"You're an idiot, Seamus! Your girl's going to cheat on you, and you'll thank the guy who railed her for fucking taking care of her!"
After a century of war between humans and the Otherkin, both sides finally agree to a ceasefire.
To preserve peace and coexistence, an intermarriage pact is established—every hundred years, humans and the Otherkin must marry. The first Otherkin to produce an Otherkin child will become the chairman of the Otherkin Alliance.
In my last life, I married Kevin Walker, the famously devoted Alpha of the Whitefang pack. One year after our wedding, I gave birth to a wolf pup, and Kevin ascended smoothly to the chairman of the alliance.
My sister, Meredith Singer—driven by vanity and a thirst for power—married Simon Lynch, the leader of the vampires. However, she didn't expect his chaotic private life, overflowing with mistresses, to leave her with a disease that robbed her of her ability to bear children.
Bitter over her ruined life, Meredith blamed everything on me. She drugged both me and my pup before setting a fire that burned us alive.
"Annabelle, everything you have should've been mine! I should be the one married to the Alpha! I should be the chairman's mate! You're nothing!"
As the fire roared around us, I clutched my pup tightly in my arms. He sobbed against my chest.
"Mom... it hurts..."
I couldn't do anything but watch as the flames consumed us both.
In the final moments of my life, I saw someone I never expected—the zombie king, Landon Zeller.
Without hesitation, he charged into the inferno, cradling me and my pup in his arms, trying desperately to save us.
However, it was too late. We'd already taken our last breaths.
This is a story of Laura Watson and Martinis Williams.Laura, She was a simple and naive girl, who had fantasy about her dream man. She never dated a single man, because she never met a man who gives importance to sincere relationship. But in present, scenario is different, she doesn't give importance to any relationship. For her, all the boys are same, who are just behind one thing which is body not soul."Martinis is extremely dedicated to his career. He had never dated a girl because for him the only aim of living is to become successful", everyone used to say this thing about him, but is this the main reason for him to stay away from relationship? What will happen with them when they got tied with the knot of arranged marriage and one of them will fall for other? Will other one accept the love from his/her partner?Will they able to create balance between LOVE and TRUST in their life?Let's see by reading this novel....
I got totally absorbed by the extra materials when I unboxed the 'The Longest Day in Chang'an' DVD — those discs are like little treasure chests if you enjoy behind-the-scenes craft. On most official DVD releases I've seen, you usually get a multi-part making-of or production featurette that digs into set design, costumes, and the very specific historical research the crew did. There are often deleted or extended scenes that didn't make the broadcast cut, plus bloopers and lighter on-set moments that show the cast cracking up between takes.
Beyond that, special extras commonly include cast interviews (short chats with the leads and key creators), a photo gallery or stills montage, trailers/teasers, and sometimes an OST or theme-song music video. Some editions also tuck in a booklet with photos and notes, or director commentary if it's a deluxe box. If you're hunting for a particular DVD, check the back cover or product listing — region and edition can change what extras are included, and fan communities sometimes catalog which release has which bonus features. I always watch the making-of first; it's like getting a backstage pass to the whole production.
I got totally sucked into the extra material for 'Rescue Me With Your Love' — and honestly, the bonus scenes are what kept me re-reading it on late nights. The deluxe edition packs a juicy epilogue titled 'After the Rain' that isn't in the standard release: it jumps ahead a few months and shows the quiet, domestic moments between the two leads, like them learning to cook together, a clumsy rainy-day umbrella rescue, and a small, understated proposal scene that felt earned rather than theatrical. That epilogue is paired with a short prequel called 'Before the Rescue' that traces one character's lonely high school years and explains a few habits you wondered about in the main story. These two pieces alone reframe some emotional beats, so they’re worth hunting down.
Beyond the time-jump extras, there are a bunch of side vignettes and character-focused scenes. There's a POV chapter from the sidekick's perspective — 'Side Notes' — that turns a previously comedic supporting role into someone with clear motivations and a heartbreaking backstory. I loved the extended confession chapter, which gives the kiss scene more breathing room: more internal monologue, a longer lead-up, and a tender aftermath where both characters process what it means for them. For fans who crave levity, the omake section contains chibi 4-koma strips where everyone is extremely dramatic about mundane things — laundry, pets, and stealing the last slice of cake — and the art gets delightfully exaggerated.
If you go for the collector's physical package, there are tangible extras: a mini artbook full of color plates and alternate outfits, sketchbook pages showing rough storyboards and deleted panels, and an author interview where the creator explains decisions behind certain scenes. The digital deluxe version tends to include audio extras — a short drama track titled 'Midnight Call' with voice actors performing a bedtime scene, and a commentary track where the author and editor talk through one chapter page by page. I found the deleted storyboard pages particularly fascinating because they reveal cut ideas that were condensed, and the author commentary answers questions I didn't even know I had. All of this adds layers to 'Rescue Me With Your Love' and made me appreciate the pacing and character growth even more — it’s the kind of collection that’s simultaneously comforting and full of little revelations, and it left me smiling long after I closed it.