To be fair, this does look like three guys who are annoyed because they just missed the bus. |
Before we get into the series itself, though, there's some publication & release history to go over, because it's a wee bit confusing & various places online have it wrong. Bus Gamer (pronounced "Biz Gamer", as in "Business") originally debuted sometime in 1999 in the pages of Enix's Monthly Stencil and may have actually been one of the very first manga serialized in the magazine, back when it was originally a quarterly supplement to G-Fantasy magazine (which is where Saiyuki originally ran). However, Bus Gamer actually only appeared on a bimonthly basis once Stencil became its own monthly magazine in 2001, and by the start of 2002 only 11 chapters had come out before it suddenly stopped getting published. While some have guessed that Bus Gamer was a victim of Monthly Stencil being cancelled altogether by Enix, that didn't actually happen until mid-2003. Instead, Bus Gamer's sudden stop was more a circumstance of Kazuya Minekura swapping publishers in early 2002. To keep it simple, Enix was going through a "family squabble" (yes, that's the literal translation for the term used) in 2001, which resulted in various staff establishing the publishers Mag Garden (which Enix actually went to court over, resulting in a settlement) & Ichijinsha (originally Issaisha), but the main focus here is that Kazuya Minekura was one of the managaka who wound up siding with Ichijinsha, more or less ending her association with Enix; this is also why Saiyuki transitioned into Saiyuki Reload. However, prior to all of this, Enix did manage to release a "Volume 1" for Bus Gamer in mid-2001, which included the first eight chapters, as well as produce a promotional anime short for the manga that saw release on VHS sometime in 2001. However, this is only the first half of Bus Gamer's general history!