
Ya can read the new chapter for free and legally at the Shueisha website: https://mangaplus.shueisha.co.jp/titles/100014

If you are desperate for the new chapter, fret not. Shueisha (the manga magazine) has an english website where you can read some of their mangas (translated in english) for free. They release chapters the same time as in Japan. Here is the link for boku no hero academia: https://mangaplus.shueisha.co.jp/titles/100017 . There's other Shueisha mnga as well such as One Piece and Haikyu!!
https://mangaplus.shueisha.co.jp/titles/100020
https://mangaplus.shueisha.co.jp/titles/100014

I feel like Arhad was the one to turn back time using divine power and that's why he's sick. Arhad hates Ianna having spirits use her divine power because it's a double-edge sword. This means using too much divine power can harm you. Also, according to Ianna, Arhad wasn't sick in his last life. Furthermore, Arhad mentions in chapter 90 that this is his last opportunity to get Ianna on his side. This might be because he doesn't have the divine power left to turn back time again. Furthermore, him recognizing for sure that this is his last opportunity implies that he for sure knows how time was brought back and was possibly the one to do it.

I hope this story is about the character development of the emperor. I want him to get overthrown by the duke and end up with nothing. Then realize he majorly fucked up and try to redeem himself. I don't want him to keep on being a constant piece of shit from beginning to end and then still end with Bella. He needs a rude awakening.

Just wanted to share with yall that Japan is quite present in South America. I grew up in Venezuela (from ages 0 to 8) and the TV would always air anime. I had about 15 different anime that would air regularly and I would watch after school. There's no one in South America that doesn't know anime. Even my parents watched anime growing up. There's even a Peruvian called Jefferson Tadea that almost won the Peru La Voz competition singing anime songs in Spanish. Furthermore, there's a large group of people of Japanese descent in South America due to a Japanese immigration that happened I think during the 1800s. The largest population of Japanese outside of Japan is in Brazil. Therefore, Hinata's roommate liking anime and knowing a little Japanese is not really something lucky and unlikely. It's actual pretty real and it accurately portrays the diversity in Brazil and South America.

Yeah I feel you. Once I moved away from Venezuela I didn't get to enjoy anime in TV anymore as I did before. The only way was to stay up late on Saturdays and watch CN's Adult Swim and they only had a few animes (like 3) at a time. So I've been using the internet for the last decade to watch em. Btw, I think it's nice that Netflix has been putting effort into having a better and bigger selection of anime. Also, the only anime DVDs I got are Hayao Miyazaki movies xD

Yas :) Mexico is the dub house for the Latin American anime Spanish dub. Latin American international channels (like CN+Toonami) follow p much the same schedule with the exception of Puerto Rico since it follows the USA schedule. So if you were watching anime on TV in the early 2000s then you and I were watching the same shows

A question out of curiosity here, what animes you watched on TV growing up?
To me was Captain Tsubasa, Pokémon, Digimon, Saint Seya, Dragon Ball, Naruto, Tokyo Mew Mew, Kaleido Star, Card Captor Sakura and Ashita no Nadja
...and there was one that was about a future where the last human was only there because she was hibernating in a capsule and apart if the group with her the rest of the humanoid beings there where pretty much trying to eat her. (⌒▽⌒)

I watched all the ones you mentioned xept Kaleido Star. I also watched Get Backers, Yu Yu Hakusho, Shaman King, Vandread, Saber Marionette, Hamtaro, Gundam Wing, Ba Daman, 3000 Leagues in Search of Mother, Ranma 1/2, Inuyasha, Sailor Moon, Rurouni Kenshin (Samurai X), Yugioh, and Speed Racer (Meteoro).
Note: some of those animes are not for children xD

Yassss! My brother had Piccolo and Vegeta figurines and yugioh cards. We also had a lot of pokemon cards tho tbh I didn't know how to play. I just liked the cards xD In school I remember the boys playing with their B Daman's and their Beyblades (Beyblade V-Force was pretty popular at the time. The grey hair dude was a snack)
I think what's really great about this story is how they put the romance for later while they first focus on Paulianna and her growth and how she earns her place as a respectable knight. She's also exactly how you would imagine a young girl raised for war would be, coarse, muscular and strong. None of that crying bullshit and feels or voluptuous "womanly" body (she's all muscle folks). She's a thorough soldier. I love her so much <3