Go For It, Nakamura! Creator Syundei Deletes X Account Amid Harassment

Following the mainstream success of the recent anime adaptation, older controversial sketches surfaced, resulting in a severe clash between new viewers and the original creator.

okuto nakamura blushing in a scene from the go for it nakamura-kun anime adaptation
The recent anime adaptation of Go For It, Nakamura-kun! brought the series to a massive global audience, leading to unexpected scrutiny of the creator's past work.
Credit: Syundei / Akaneshinsha / Go For It, Nakamura-kun! Production Committee

Manga artist Syundei, the creator of Go For It, Nakamura-kun!, deleted her X (formerly Twitter) account on April 12 following a severe wave of online harassment. The controversy centers around past illustrations depicting a controversial student-teacher dynamic between characters Aiki Hirose and Sō Otogiri.

New viewers discovering the franchise through its recent anime adaptation unearthed these older drawings, leading to intense backlash. In a parting post, the author expressed deep frustration, stating she saw no point in continuing her career after being told to disappear by angry internet users.

Why Did Syundei Leave Social Media?

The situation escalated quickly following the April 1 premiere of the Go For It, Nakamura! animated series.

Fresh audiences began exploring the creator’s back catalog.

They stumbled upon content that diverged significantly from the lighthearted tone of the television broadcast.

The Breaking Point

Specifically, critics targeted a “what if” sketch featuring high schooler Aiki Hirose alongside educator Sō Otogiri.

An additional early drawing involving an octopus also drew heavy fire. Outraged individuals flooded Syundei’s replies with relentless messages.

screenshot of the final japanese tweet from go for it nakamura creator syundei expressing frustration and announcing the deletion of her x account
A screenshot of Syundei’s final posts on X (formerly Twitter) from April 12, where the artist expressed severe emotional burnout from the harassment before permanently deleting her profile.
Credit: Syundei / X / Reproduction / Social Media

Translation of the Tweets:

  • First Tweet (Top): “Is it OK if I delete my account?”
  • Second Tweet (Bottom): “I only get complaints asking why I drew something like this, and since I don’t have the talent to make something that pleases everyone as expected, I don’t think there is any point in continuing as a manga artist. I thought I should at least give a final farewell, but since I am being told to disappear as soon as possible, I will delete [this account] by noon.”

The artist’s final message highlighted the severe emotional toll.

She wrote, “I only get complaints asking why I drew something like this.”

Believing she lacked the talent to satisfy everyone, she chose to exit the platform entirely before noon that Sunday.

The Root of the Controversy

official anime poster for go for it nakamura kun showing nakamura blushing in the center surrounded by classmates and his teacher inside star and heart outlines against a blue background
Official key visual and promotional poster for the Go for It, Nakamura-kun!! anime adaptation, featuring the main cast and teachers.
Credit: Syundei / Akaneshinsha / Go For It, Nakamura-kun! Production Committee

Context matters when examining this timeline.

The original comic debuted in December 2014 within Opera, a magazine specifically known for its Boys-Love (BL) demographic.

Longtime Japanese readers understood the niche conventions associated with that specific publication space.

Note: If you are new to the anime scene, you might not realize how hyper-segmented Japanese publishing actually is. Magazines like Opera are not sitting on the same shelf as mainstream comics. They cater specifically to niche readers who expect edgy or taboo tropes. The friction usually happens when overseas fans jump straight from a sanitized TV broadcast to unedited manga scans online. It is a lot like watching a family-friendly movie and then accidentally reading the original, very dark fairy tale it was based on. Culture shock is basically guaranteed.

Anime Adaptation Brings New Scrutiny

The official Crunchyroll trailer for the Go For It, Nakamura-kun! anime. The bubbly, lighthearted tone of this broadcast version attracted a mainstream audience, leading to the unexpected culture clash when new fans discovered the manga’s older, niche content.

However the Crunchyroll streaming release introduced the property to a mainstream Western audience.

General American viewers often carry strict expectations regarding character relationships.

When curious fans researched the source material, a severe culture clash became inevitable.

Manga vs. Anime Differences

Online sleuths actively compiled scenes left out of the screenplay.

This comparison effort, originally meant to prepare newcomers, inadvertently fueled the anger.

People unfamiliar with the broader BL genre reacted with shock at the romantic undertones between a minor and an adult.

Table: Format Comparison: Go For It, Nakamura! Source Material vs. Adaptation

Feature Original Manga Series 2025 Anime Adaptation
Initial Release December 2014 April 2025
Primary Platform Opera Magazine (Akaneshinsha) Tokyo MX, Crunchyroll
Target Demographic Niche / Boys-Love (BL) Readers Mainstream / General Audience
Content Tone Uncensored, genre-specific tropes Sanitized, broadcast-friendly
Core Conflict Driver Features controversial “what if” sketches Excludes raunchy source material
  • The Broadcast Version: Features a sanitized narrative tailored for general television.
  • The Print Version: Contains raunchier elements standard for its target magazine.
  • The Result: A fractured fanbase fighting over author intent versus viewer morality.

The Journey from Print to Screen

The Go For It, Nakamura! franchise boasts a long publication history.

It originally launched as a short story and its positive reception prompted Akaneshinsha to serialize it fully.

Readers connected with the awkward charm of the titular protagonist.

A compiled volume hit bookstore shelves in May 2017.

Recognizing the steady financial demand, a sequel titled Motto Ganbare! Nakamura-kun!! followed shortly after.

This second installment concluded in August 2021.

Dedicated followers waited patiently until April 2025, when the third series (Yurūku Ganbare! Nakamura-kun!!) revived the narrative on Hero’s Comiplex.

The greenlight for an animated project should have been a celebratory milestone.

But instead, it acted as a catalyst for public scrutiny.

Table: Publication & Broadcast Timeline: The Nakamura-kun Franchise

Installment Title Format Publisher / Network Release Date
Go For It, Nakamura! Magazine Short Opera (Akaneshinsha) December 2014
Go For It, Nakamura! Compiled Manga Volume Akaneshinsha May 2017
Go For It Again, Nakamura! Sequel Manga Volume Akaneshinsha August 2021
Yurūku Ganbare! Nakamura-kun!! Web Manga Continuation Hero’s Comiplex April 2025
Go For It, Nakamura-kun! Television Series Tokyo MX / Crunchyroll April 1, 2025

The Manga’s Future

Some fans are currently wondering if the printing press will keep rolling.

Syundei’s farewell tweet strongly implied a desire to quit the industry altogether.

Hero’s Comiplex, the current publisher for the latest ongoing chapters, has not issued an official statement regarding a hiatus or cancellation.

If the creator stands by her words, this beloved story might remain permanently unfinished.

Publishing contracts sometimes require completed arcs, but companies rarely force an unwilling writer to produce art under duress.

Industry Insight: Do not panic too much about the creator quitting forever. Manga artists operate in a very different sphere than western influencers. Many use strict pen names specifically to protect their real identities from this exact type of backlash. When the internet heat gets too intense, it is incredibly common for a Japanese artist to nuke their current social profiles, lay low for a year, and quietly debut a brand new project under a completely different alias. Syundei the brand might be gone, but the artist behind the pen is likely just taking a necessary mental health break.

A Growing Problem in the Industry

This incident is not isolated. Japanese creators frequently face severe pushback when global audiences intersect with niche overseas media.

Cultural differences in storytelling often lead to immediate misunderstandings on global social networks.

Earlier this same week, Seven Seas Entertainment dealt with similar complaints regarding their English translation of Little Mushroom.

Modern readers demand content that aligns with their personal ethical boundaries.

When fiction crosses those lines, the reaction is fast and unforgiving.

Professional manga artists usually operate without public relations teams.

They manage their own digital profiles, leaving them completely vulnerable to direct attacks.

Conclusion (The Real Cost of Fandom Clashes)

Watching an artist get driven off the internet is just incredibly frustrating to witness.

We see this exact scenario play out almost every time a niche manga gets pushed into the mainstream streaming spotlight.

It is way too easy to forget there is a real human being sitting at a desk in Japan, sketching these pages and reading those brutal comments.

You absolutely do not have to love every single piece of art a creator has published in their past.

If a specific character dynamic makes you uncomfortable, the block button is completely free and highly effective.

But c’mon, organizing a harassment campaign until an author breaks down and nukes their entire digital footprint helps absolutely nobody.

It just burns down the community and leaves everyone empty-handed.

Hopefully Syundei takes the quiet time she needs offline to recover from this exhausting headache.

Until major publishers figure out a reliable way to shield their writers from the wild west of global social media, we are probably going to keep losing talented storytellers.

Try to remember the actual person behind the pen before hitting send on an angry post.

Source: K-Comics Beat.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Why is the Go For It, Nakamura! author getting canceled?

Syundei faced backlash after new anime fans found past manga sketches. These drawings depicted romantic tension between a student and a teacher, which deeply upset Western audiences.

Where can I watch the new Nakamura-kun anime?

The show is streaming on Crunchyroll across North America, Europe, and other major regions. It features both subtitled and English dubbed formats.

Is the Go For It, Nakamura! manga officially canceled?

There is no official cancellation notice from the publisher yet. But the writer stated she does not see the point in continuing her career, putting future chapter releases in serious doubt.

What is the difference between the Nakamura-kun anime and the manga?

The television adaptation tones down much of the explicit Boys-Love themes found in the original printed work. Several raunchy sequences were cut to meet general broadcasting standards.


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