Cherreads

Chapter 166 - Chapter 164

"The new issue of Echo Shroud magazine is out!"

"I've been waiting all week for this. I was so hyped for Mizushiro's manga, I even picked up a few random racing series from other magazines just to tide myself over."

"Oh yeah? I heard a bunch of small manga publishers around japan have started pushing their own racing series lately. Too bad most of those only circulate locally I can't find any copies out here or I'd give them a try."

"You're not missing much. Some are clearly trying to imitate Initial D, but they can't copy it outright probably afraid of a lawsuit. So they tack on weird storylines that just don't work. It's awkward. Honestly, they might look decent at first, but compared to the rush I get reading Initial D, they're miles off. And Mizushiro only gives us twenty-something pages a week! That cliffhanger rhythm is brutal!"

"Totally. I wasn't even into cars before this. I used to think driving was boring. But now, after reading Initial D, I keep watching the teacup in my car to see if the water spins on turns. Once, I opened the lid during a sharp corner, the water spilled all over me. When I met my friend, he thought I'd wet myself. That was... not my proudest moment."

In one of the popular forums, fans who weren't at work that morning began posting pictures of their copies of Echo Shroud magazine, casually chatting as they waited for others to catch up.

The buzz was back Mizushiro and Initial D were once again the center of attention.

Chapter 7 of Initial D picks up right where the previous chapter left off,

The countdown begins.

As the REDSUNS call the start of the match, Keisuke Takahashi's FD and Takumi Fujiwara's AE86 launch off the line.

Just like that, fans who had been bracing themselves for another teasing delay breathe a collective sigh of relief Mizushiro dives straight into the action this time.

In the opening panels, the performance gap between the two cars is clear: Keisuke shifts gears once, while Takumi quickly moves up to fourth.

The FD rockets ahead, instantly putting distance between itself and the 86.

And so the question builds what's going to happen next?

Readers familiar with Initial D's setup already know Takumi is skilled, but how skilled? That hasn't been fully revealed yet.

On paper, it shouldn't even be a contest. The FD has around 350 horsepower. The AE86? Only about 150. But this is manga. Fans want the underdog to defy expectations.

Even so, tension hangs in the air. Can Takumi really keep up?

A few pages in, Ryosuke Takahashi analyzes the AE86's start, while Keisuke shouts, "That 86? It's not getting anywhere near my rearview mirror again!"

Then comes the first turn.

Takumi adjusts his posture his usual calm giving way to laser focus. He braces the wheel with his cheek and one hand, shifting gears mid-drift.

The next full-page spread shows the AE86 screaming into the corner rear tires grazing the mountain road's guardrail, bystanders recoiling as if it's about to crash.

But it doesn't.

Next page the 86 exits the corner cleanly, still flying.

"That was the first corner? The 86 was barely five centimeters from the guardrail…"

"I've never seen anyone take a turn at that speed before…"

Ryosuke listens to his teammates' voices crackle through the walkie-talkie, the tension building page by page.

And the fans? They're locked in.

Watching Takumi hit that first drift, everyone has the same thought: "This is insane."

Mizushiro doesn't change the original plot, but his artistic choices give it new energy. Character designs strike a balance between detail and realism. Fans who might've been turned off by the older art style are now immersed in every panel.

He enhances the racing scenes, making the motion and power jump off the page.

And it works. Readers feel it immediately.

A few corners in, Keisuke still trying to shake the AE86 starts to sweat.

Then, just a few pages later, Takumi begins closing the gap with terrifying ease. After another bend, the 86 is right behind him.

The walkie-talkie lights up again: "He entered the corner that fast… and still exited ahead of pace!"

The visuals and pacing hit hard—fans reported literal goosebumps reading that sequence.

Was this even manga anymore? Or an actual downhill battle come to life?

Could someone actually drive like this?

And whether or not it was possible didn't matter what did matter was the feeling.

This was what they'd waited all week for. And it delivered.

Keisuke's face is drawn in sweat and disbelief. Takumi, driving one-handed, remains composed.

Once the AE86 overtakes the FD, it never falls behind again.

Even on straight sections where the FD theoretically has the edge the twists of Mt. Akina always bring Takumi back to his bumper.

On a course like this, raw horsepower can't be fully unleashed. The real contest lies in technique.

Still, some readers self-proclaimed driving buffs aren't convinced. "They're probably only going 60 or 70 kilometers per hour, right? It's too curvy to go faster."

Mizushiro has an answer for that.

In one panel directly inspired by the original he clearly shows the AE86 speeding downhill at 140 kilometers per hour.

Readers who thought they could match Takumi in real life? Silenced.

140 km/h. Down a mountain. On a two-lane road. While drifting.

That's not something you just try for fun.

Some fans ran to double-check real-life data on touge racing. Turns out, pro drivers can hit speeds like that.

But in an unmodified AE86?

That's what left them stunned.

Just like the manga says "Has he lost all fear of the downhill?"

This version of Initial D didn't just meet expectations. It blasted through them.

Mizushiro wasn't just drawing manga anymore.

He was drawing adrenaline.

(TL:- if you want even more content, check out p-atreon.com/Alioth23 for 55+ advanced chapters)

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