![Gleipnir kissmanga](https://knopkazmeya.com/11.png)
Combine the icky monsters and grim violence with copious fanservice-every few pages there is another close-up of Claire’s clingy, wispy panties and/or bra-and you get a heady, disorienting brew of sex and violence. The monsters, especially Shuichi’s lumbering mascot form, are disturbing and repulsive, a mix of Cronenbergian body horror and the cuteness-gone-wrong aesthetic of anime like Paprika. Gleipnir is relentlessly dark, violent, perverted, and bizarre, the kind of work that some manga fans enthusiastically seek out and others avoid with equal fervor. Then they notice that Shuichi’s mascot body has a zipper in the back … “Monsters really exist!” As the sly, sexy, manipulative Claire and the reluctant Shuichi search for clues to explain his condition-and the whereabouts of Claire’s missing sister, who could also turn into a weird monster-they’re hunted by other monstrous people and forced into gory battles. “Don’t you think it’s fascinating?” she purrs. The next day she tracks him down, introduces herself as Claire, and threatens to out him unless he teams up with her. One night, while wandering the countryside like Frankenstein’s monster, he rescues a teenage girl from a fire, and she gets a glimpse of him transforming. His mascot form is powerful and deadly it even comes with a loaded gun. He’s like a werewolf, except that instead of turning into a wolf, he turns into a creepy big-headed amusement park mascot.
![Gleipnir kissmanga](https://knopkazmeya.com/11.png)