>>279619017>(#215, nip salesfag)This is the result of stretching it out over and over
July 2017: Start of serialization
December 2019: 3 million copies, as of volume 13
May 2020: 4 million copies, as of volume 14
August 2020: 5 million copies, as of volume 16
October 2020: 6.3 million copies, as of volume 17
January 2021: 7 million copies, as of volume 18
May 2021: 8.01 million copies, as of volume 20
June 2021: 8.3 million copies, as of volume 21
August 2021: 8.7 million copies, as of volume 22
November 2021: 9 million copies, as of volume 23
December 2021: 10 million copies, as of volume 24
July 2023: 11 million copies As of Vol. 32
April 2024 13 million copies As of Vol. 36
April 2025 13.5 million copies As of Vol. 40
>(#217)Zuru: "I don't feel like jumping into a marriage right now."
Kasu: "I don't feel like i could support you right now."
Look forward to the next installment
>(#219)[Sad news] Otakus abroad go crazy over the plot of the anime adaptation of "Rent-A-Girlfriend" in which the hero gets dumped by the heroine wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww [839150984]
https://itest.5ch.net/greta/test/read.cgi/poverty/1749720394/
>(#222)The heroine and the protagonist fall in love with each other...
It ends in less than half the number of volumes as Kanojo...
Maybe Nisekoi was a god manga?
>(#227)I read the latest, but it's terrible that she rejected him here lol
Looking at the story list, it's been a year at Hawaiians, three years since they moved in and lived together, and it's crazy.
And the ending is like this, lol, how many volumes are they planning to keep doing it?
>(#228)Both CF and Hawaiians were long and not that interesting, but they were wrapped up in about a year, so the Cohabitation arc took three years to finish, so it's a departure from the norm for normal manga.
>(#242)If the two don't end up dating in the end, then does the title "Rent-A-Girlfriend" really just mean they're borrowing her for business purposes and not actually dating?