As a longtime manga reader, I’m equally desperate and terrified for a second season. The first season ended right before the story plunges into darker, more existential territory—Phos’s transformation is heartbreaking in the best way. Studio Orange’s silence is frustrating, but their track record suggests they’re meticulous. Remember how long it took for 'Beastars' season 2? Worth the wait. The manga’s art is so intricate that translating it to 3D animation must be a nightmare, but the payoff could redefine what anime can do visually.
That said, I’ve noticed more merch and artbooks popping up lately, which often hints at studio interest. Maybe they’re waiting for the manga to near its conclusion? Ichikawa’s pacing is deliberate, and rushing an adaptation would ruin the impact. For now, I’ve consoled myself with fan theories and that one stage play adaptation nobody saw coming.
The wait for 'Land of Lustrous' season 2 has been agonizing, hasn’t it? I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve rewatched the first season, mesmerized by its unique CGI animation and that hauntingly beautiful world. Studio Orange did something truly special with the adaptation, and the manga’s later arcs only deepen the story’s emotional and philosophical layers. Rumors pop up every now and then—some fans point to cryptic studio tweets or convention murmurs—but nothing concrete yet. The manga’s popularity hasn’t waned, though, and with gems like 'Beastars' under their belt, Orange clearly has the chops to pull it off. Fingers crossed we get news soon; Phos’s journey deserves to be finished on screen.
What’s wild is how the manga’s tone shifts so dramatically post-season 1. If they adapt it faithfully, anime-only fans are in for a visceral ride. I’ve seen debates about whether the CGI style held the series back commercially, but honestly, it’s part of the charm. The way light refracts through the gems? Stunning. Maybe the delay is just Orange taking their time to perfect it. Until then, I’ll keep glaring at my 'Land of Lustrous' merch, willing an announcement into existence.
Ugh, the 'Land of Lustrous' season 2 limbo is my personal purgatory. Every anime convention season, I clown myself into hoping for a trailer. The first season’s cliffhanger was cruel—Phos on the beach, everything about to change—and the manga just keeps twisting the knife. Studio Orange’s tech has evolved since 2017, so imagine what they could do now! I’ve even dreamt about that luminescent fight scene with Cairngorm. Realistically, though, anime production is a logistical beast. Between 'Trigun Stampede' and other projects, Orange might be swamped. But hey, if 'No Game No Life' stans can hold out hope for a decade, so can we.
2026-04-26 15:23:23
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“If you can’t provide an heir, you’re a Luna in name only. I need more than a worthless, barren omega cosplaying as a Luna!”
My Alpha husband Jason’s words cut deeper than any silver blade. For three years, I have kept the truth from him. He thinks he married a weak omega. But the truth? I am the Alpha King’s daughter.
I wait eagerly for his return from a victorious war, ready to reveal who I truly am. Only to find him walking back with his mistress, Viki, who has already carrying his pup.
“You have two options,” Jason snarls, eyes cold. “Lose your status as Luna and go back to being a useless omega. Or stay for Viki and help raise my heir.”
Pushed to my breaking point, I accept his rejection and return to my father’s kingdom. I think my heart is dead but fate has led me to a dangerous second-chance mate. Worse, Jason can’t let me go that easily.
Humans? A low-level world? No cultivators or gods? Could that world be trampled as easily as ants by the powerful beings from above? This is Long Chen's new journey after being reborn from the flames of the Vermilion Bird, emerging to fight against powerful cultivators who always use low-level worlds as their slaves and playthings. He also discovers the evils of the world and the people who rule over these various worlds. Protecting, destroying, and shaping are Long Chen's new goals. This journey brings Long Chen into contact with various powerful cultivators and even those called gods. Fighting, defeating, protecting—all of these are already in Long Chen's heart. He will also meet his parents, whom he has never seen since the day he was born. Will Long Chen accept them? Or will Long Chen decide to have nothing to do with them anymore? Can Long Chen maintain his purpose, or will he fall once again into the same temptation as the black dragon? "I live for myself, fate? Fate cannot stop me! I will keep standing no matter how many times I fall. As long as I still breathe, there is no such thing as giving up in my life."
For most of her life, Kelly had been a background character, the substitute, a mere afterthought even to the people who were supposed to be her family.
Believing she had found happiness by marrying the man she loved, Kelly's world shatters when she finds him in bed with her sister.
Tired of the horrible treatment, Kelly strives for divorce, determined to get revenge on everyone who had ever hurt her but it proves to be a difficult fight.
Enter Alaric, the all powerful Alpha King whose one command could make anyone kneel. He has been searching for his mate for 12 years and must find her soon or the consequences will be dire. He also holds a secret that could tear the entire wolf world apart.
Will fate lead these two to each other? Can they let go of their past and accept each other? Will love prevail and will Kelly finally find happiness?
FB: Author Ireti
Cassy had always felt different from others as if she didn't belong anywhere, and if it was because she didn't belong here but in another world, and if her destiny was more important than just going to college and getting a job after graduation.
After a solar eclipse and apocalyptic visions, Cassy's destiny will be revealed to her, will she be strong enough to face the danger that will come her way.
Fortunately, she won't be alone, her soul mate will always be there for her and so will her friends, together they will learn to fight and become strong enough to face the Demon God and his army.
If you like fantasy novels about mages, warriors, shapesfithers, demons, travel between different worlds, systems, this novel is for you.
WARNING, the main couple will be a straight couple and the side couple will be a gay couple (boys love), you have been warned.
Update monday to friday
For french people a french version is available on my personal website at https://celianayawebnovel.com/
in this website you can find all my stories :)
Evelyn Carter’s wolf awakened when she was eighteen.
The Moon Goddess pointed her to Adrian Blackwood—the strongest Alpha of the most powerful wolf tribe.
She thought it was a blessing from fate.
But for six long years, she was a Luna no one cared about.
Charlotte Whitmore, Adrian’s childhood friend, stayed by his side always.
Evelyn’s son Ethan was taught to call that woman “Mom”.
Not even on her birthday night did she get a single word of care from her mate.
Evelyn broke her Mate Bond with Alpha Adrian. She left with nothing and vanished beyond Moonfall City’s borders.
Five years later, a hit drama brought her back to Moonfall City.
No one knew the truth about the abandoned former Luna.
She’s a top screenwriter. She’s an awakened heir to the ancient Silver Wolf bloodline. She’s also the closed-door disciple of a medical legend.
A four-year-old girl stays by her side. She has ash-blue eyes and soft golden-brown hair—just like the man Evelyn never wants to mention again.
Alpha Adrian smelled that familiar, soul-stirring scent again in the elevator of Saint Aurelia Medical Center.
It finally hit him: she wasn’t just throwing a fit. She really didn’t want him anymore.
And why did this little girl—who called him “Uncle”—make his wolf roar wildly? Roar that they shared the same blood?
Luna always knew she was nothing but ordinary. And when her father suddenly died, she thought she lost the chance to understand the mysteries shrouding her life. Until the night of her 13th birthday, when her desire for answers pushed her to venture into an unknown realm.
But will Luna finally find the answers she's desperately seeking for?
The first thing that struck me about 'Land of Lustrous' was how it blends serene beauty with existential dread. The manga follows Phosphophyllite, a fragile gem being in a world where immortal, genderless gems fight off moon-dwelling creatures called Lunarians. But it’s not just a battle shounen—it’s a slow-burn character study. Phos starts off as this clumsy, weak gem, but their journey is about finding purpose beyond their original fragility. The world-building is sparse but haunting; the gems live in this desolate, almost post-apocalyptic landscape, and their immortality contrasts so sharply with their emotional vulnerability.
What really got me hooked was the art style. Haruko Ichikawa’s linework is minimalist yet expressive, making every panel feel like a delicate painting. The story’s pacing is deliberate, almost meditative, but when the action hits, it’s brutal and sudden. And the themes! It digs into identity, change, and what it means to 'grow up' when you’re technically ageless. By the later arcs, Phos’s transformation is downright unsettling—I won’t spoil it, but it’s one of those stories that lingers in your mind like a weird dream.
The ending of 'Land of Lustrous' is one of those bittersweet, thought-provoking conclusions that lingers with you long after you turn the last page. Phos’s journey from a fragile, naive gem to a being carrying the weight of countless memories and losses is both tragic and beautiful. By the final chapters, Phos has become almost unrecognizable, both physically and emotionally, after absorbing so many others’ experiences and suffering. The last scenes show them alone, waiting eternally as the last conscious being on Earth, while the others achieve a form of peaceful oblivion. It’s haunting—this idea of immortality as a curse rather than a gift. The series doesn’t wrap up neatly; instead, it leaves you grappling with themes of purpose, change, and the cost of enlightenment. I’ve reread those final volumes three times, and each time, I notice new layers in Ichikawa’s artwork and symbolism.
What really gets me is how Phos’s transformation mirrors the reader’s own emotional journey. You start out charmed by the world’s beauty, only to realize how deeply its cruelty runs. The way Ichikawa uses the gems’ brittle physicality as a metaphor for emotional fragility is masterful. That final image of Phos, cracked and weathered, staring into an endless horizon—it’s like the ultimate punchline to a joke about the futility of seeking answers. Not everyone loves the ambiguity, but for me, it cemented 'Land of Lustrous' as a modern masterpiece.