Majo no Tabitabi
Elaina was the prodigy of her village mage academy and has earned her witch's license at the youngest age the curriculum has ever certified. Tradition dictates a year of wandering before settling into a permanent post. Elaina commits to it: a broom, a black-and-white travelling cloak, and an open itinerary. The series is the small countries she visits — a town where every resident is required to lie, a kingdom whose princess is a famously bad poet, a slave-trader town that does not see itself as one — and Elaina's careful policy of intervening only as much as her sense of curiosity (and not her sense of justice) demands.
Elaina was the prodigy of her village mage academy and has earned her witch's license at the youngest age the curriculum has ever certified. Tradition dictates a year of wandering before settling into a permanent post. Elaina commits to it: a broom, a black-and-white travelling cloak, and an open itinerary. The series is the small countries she visits — a town where every resident is required to lie, a kingdom whose princess is a famously bad poet, a slave-trader town that does not see itself as one — and Elaina's careful policy of intervening only as much as her sense of curiosity (and not her sense of justice) demands.
These Journeys are Simply Bewitching.
The art of exploration and narcissistic acts
Who is this reviewer making strong points about MajoTabi? That's right, it's me.
Letters from a Wandering Witch: Some Better Left Unsent
A clunky and disjointed episodic tale with flashes of potential.
Comparing this series to Kino's Journey is a joke
No characters, no stories, no world
One of the least likeable main characters I've seen in years.
one of the most underwhelming works of fiction I've ever had the displeasure of watching
Wandering Bitch: The Journey of Elaina feels like fanfiction written by a 12-year-old edgelord.