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ちび☆デビ!
80
11
Finished
May 1, 2008 to Nov 1, 2014
8.0/10
Average Review Score
50%
Recommend It
2
Reviews Worldwide
Chibi Devil is one of the first manga I ever picked up (I was still in elementary school lmaoo) and it holds a special place in my heart. It's so cute and mainly revolves around the demon babies and is more light-hearted and fun to read but the main character Honoka also gets a great character development. The relationship she builds with the other demon baby adoptive mother's is also cute and just in general the manga was fun to read during lunch or something. but seeing the babies grow was soo cute too and the artstyle is also very adorable. It's so nostalgic that I hadto give a high rating but it's still really good since I recently started rereading it.
Sawada Honoka is a 14-year-old girl who is very timid. She easily gets bullied by other classmates. Honoka is a non-believer in God, Angels, and Devils. Though one day, a devil baby was dropped into her room while she was sleeping. What will Honoka believe in now? (Source: PocketScans)
Chibi Debi (Chibi Devi) is an episodic, cute, feel-good type of manga. The first couple volumes set the story and introduce the characters, the last volume wraps up what little central plot exists, and everything in between is cute baby devils doing cute baby devil things. If you want to implode with cuteness as you watch a baby devil and his human family grow up, then Chibi Debi is for you. For anyone learning the Japanese language: This is my first manga I've read all the way through in Japanese. The language is extremely simple, much more so than more popular starter manga like Yotsuba to.After reading, I believe Chibi Debi is a great way to get into reading manga in the Japanese language, for people who know basic Japanese. The reason I gave Chibi Debi a 7 is because, even though it accomplishes its goal extremely well, I expected there to be a stronger central plotline based on events that occurred early on in the series. Instead, questions are left open-ended for the entire series and then explained away abruptly in the last volume. Also, some questions, or areas of the plot that could've been explored further, are kind of forgotten and ignored. That being said, I am glad that i read Chibi Debi. I would definitely recommend it to someone learning Japanese (or not) as an easy-to-read, fun adventure, that will probably leave them feeling happy. On the other hand, if someone prefers manga with complex or well-developed central plotlines, rather than manga that are episodic and somewhat repetitive, they should look elsewhere. This is 11 volumes of babies doing baby things. It's not very deep.