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Yen Press Announces Digital Publication of No Game No Life Light Novel Chapters

Digital Chapter Publication of No Game No Life to Start Simultaneously with the Japanese Release of No Game No Life, Vol. 11

NEW YORK, NY (11/20/21)—Yen Press, LLC announced the digital release of chapters of , the bestselling light novel series that inspired the popular anime and manga, at the Yen Press Industry Panel at Anime NYC. The Yen Press digital chapter publication of Yuu Kamiya's intriguing tale of gamers transported to a fantasy world will involve the prologue chapter of No Game No Life, Vol. 11 being made available on November 25, 2021 to time with the Japanese release of the highly anticipated volume.

While Yen On releases have previously been published as digital firsts, as seen with the The Intuition of Haruhi Suzumiya and Megumi Hayashibara's The Characters Taught Me Everything, the publication of the No Game No Life, Vol. 11'sprologue is the first Yen On digitital chapter release. The No Game No Life chapter publication is an exciting addition to the Yen Press digital chapter program that strives to give fans access to highly anticipated content in English as soon as possible.

No Game No Life, Vol. 11's prologue will be available on November 25, 2021 exclusively on digital platforms, such as BOOK WALKER Global. The release schedule of later chapters will be announced at a later date.

About Yen Press, LLC
­­Yen Press, LLC is a joint venture between Kadokawa Corporation and Hachette Book Group. Founded in 2006, Yen Press has quickly risen to become one of the largest and most prolific publishers of manga and original graphic novels in the North American marketplace and a driving force in the introduction of light novels and Japanese literature to new readers through its Yen On and Yen Audio imprints. For more information, visit www.yenpress.com.

About the author

Adam Symchuk

Adam Symchuk is a Canadian born freelance writer and editor who has been writing for Asian Movie Pulse since 2018. He is currently focused on covering manga, manhwa and light novels having reviewed hundreds of titles in the past two years.

His love of film came from horror and exploitation films from Japan that he devoured in his teens. His love of comics came from falling in love with the works of Shuzo Oshimi, Junji Ito, Hideshi Hino, and Inio Asano but has expanded to a general love of the medium and all its genres.

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