Mahoutsukai no Yome
Chise Hatori has been able to see things other people cannot since she was small, and the adults around her have been finding excuses to send her elsewhere for as long. She is fifteen when she sells herself on a London auction block, and a tall man with the head of a horned skull buys her — Elias Ainsworth, an ancient mage who introduces her to his cottage in the English countryside as his apprentice and, eventually, his bride. The series follows Chise's slow understanding that she is not, in fact, disposable, and Elias's even slower understanding of what he has agreed to.
Magus Bride has something for everyone. What I got though was my own unique experience..
Uma verdadeira obra prima...
A mythology fan's paradise!
Serene, imaginative, quiet, and emotional, you'll love it by the time you're finished
A complicated story that explores what it truly means to be someone.
Great visuals and soundtrack. Characterisation could do with some improvements. Lackluster ending.
A work of rich and strange magic.
Mahoutsukai no Yome is leaps and bounds above its modern contemporaries, even if it feels a bit withered in places
A truly enchanting journey to lose yourself in if you can work around it's pacing problems and other inconsistencies.
A better version of the Beauty and the Beast. But is it quite enough?