Melty Blood: Type Lumina Manga Comes to an End After Two Volumes

Melty Blood: Type Lumina Piece in Paradise, the spin-off manga of the popular fighting game Melty Blood: Type Lumina, has officially come to an end. The final chapter of the work, illustrated by Metarogu, was recently published on the Kadokawa publisher’s Type-Moon Comic Ace website, concluding the story that followed the character Arima Miyako. With this, in January 2026, fans of the Type-Moon universe, especially in Brazil where anime and fighting game culture is strong, bid farewell to a series that captivated readers with a simple and charming premise.
The manga focused on Miyako’s journey, a character from the original game, as she tried to learn how to play her first fighting title. Her goal was to reach the top of the rankings, which led her to intense training alongside friends and rivals. The series, which began in 2022, had its first physical volume released in January 2024 and the second in October of the same year, totaling two volumes that compile the complete story.
From Pixels to Pages: The Expanding Universe
The manga’s story is directly linked to the success of the base game, Melty Blood: Type Lumina, which arrived on Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC in 2021. Developed by French Bread, the title is a new work that expands the world of the series, featuring over 10 iconic characters like Shiki Tohno and Arcueid Brunestud, each with their own stories. Additionally, it’s important to remember that the game serves as a direct sequel to the remake of Tsukihime -A piece of blue glass moon-, also released in 2021, which in turn renewed the original 2000 visual novel. Thus, the end of the manga does not mean the end of the universe, which remains alive both on consoles and in the hearts of fans.
The trajectory of Tsukihime and Melty Blood in media is long, with anime adaptations in 2003 and other manga released throughout the 2000s. Therefore, the conclusion of Piece in Paradise fits as another completed chapter in this rich chronology. For Brazilian players, who have always closely followed news about fighting games and anime, this ending brings a taste of nostalgia, but also the expectation for what Type-Moon and French Bread might bring next. After all, the legacy of Miyako and her crew is now preserved in the pages of the two volumes, ready to be reread by anyone who wants to be inspired by her determination to win.





