However, come 1997 a shift would happen over at Shonen Gangan, one that went completely against what Hosaka had stated in interviews just a year prior. Now Gangan was going to go more in with "game-like" manga being serialized, as well as more direct video game adaptations, despite Hosaka stating that he had no intention of doing such a thing; of the 14 manga covered in this part five are game adaptations, three of which are Dragon Quest-related. This shift in focus looks to be what would eventually lead to a mass exodus of talent in the latter half of 2001... but, for now, we're still in what could be called a "united" era of Monthly Shonen Gangan, so let's see what notable manga debuted in the magazine right up until that very exodus was about the happen.
We start by jumping nearly an entire year ahead from Toki no Daichi's debut in early 1996, with the only stuff of minor note from that time being Mine Yoshizaki's Guardian Eight, a pre-Sgt. Frog series that has mostly been forgotten with time, & a short-lived Pokémon gag manga (which, again, emphasized Gangan's shift over to featuring more game-based manga). Instead, we start with Issue #4 of 1997, which saw the serialized debut of Renjuro Kindaichi... who was literally only 17 years old at the time & still in high school. The reason why Kindachi managed to find herself a serialization in Shonen Gangan as such a young age was due to a one-shot she submitted in 1996 that became the runner-up at the 3rd Enix 21st Century Manga Award, which she then expanded on for her serialized debut, Jungle wa Itsumo Hare nochi Guu/The Jungle Was Always Sunny, Then Came Guu, better known abroad as simply Haré+Guu. The manga told the tale of Haré, a young boy who lives with his widowed mother Weda in the jungle until, one day, Weda welcomes a young girl named Guu into their household. In reality, though, Guu is a highly sarcastic liminal being that's beyond true comprehension & is capable of all manner of things, from swallowing people whole (she even has a Japanese couple who essentially just live in her stomach) to causing natural disasters. Luckily for most, Guu simply just likes hanging out with Haré... and while Haré himself eventually comes to truly befriend Guu it's not as though his life will ever remain anything but simple after meeting Guu. Yeah, as you can tell from that concept, Haré+Guu was a surreal comedy manga that generally saw Guu creating some sort of havoc in Haré's life, though there were also story arcs involving things like Weda's relationship with a man named Clive who lives in the city, Weda becoming pregnant with a new child, Haré finding love in a girl named Rita, & all manner of various hijinks & insanity, including time travel shenanigans. Upon reaching 100 chapters (across 10 volumes) in the January 2003 issue of Shonen Gangan Haré+Guu technically ended... only for it to continue on in the very next issue under the new name HaréGuu (again, the OG Japanese title was much longer, but the change still makes a fittingly weird sort of sense with the simplified international title), and we'll get into that series next time.
While the Haré+Guu manga has yet to see official English release, there was a 2001 TV anime adaptation that actually did see release in North America via AN Entertainment (the short-lived licensing division of now-defunct anime retailer Anime Nation), which released the entire 26-episode TV series & the first OVA series (Haré+Guu Deluxe) via dual-audio DVD singles throughout 2006 & 2007; unfortunately, AN Entertainment never managed to release the other OVA series (Haré+Guu Final) in English.




