[Explosive Buzz!] Massive Response Exceeding 2 Million Impressions! 'Grimm Connect' (Dangan Bunko & Dangan Comics) Reaches Overseas!

A PR post by the editor for the print release of the light novel 'Grimm Connect 1 - Chapter of Little Red Riding Hood' surpassed 2 million impressions on X. The manga adaptation is also highly popular.
その他NQ 75/100出典:PR Times

📋 Article Processing Timeline

  • 📰 Published: April 6, 2026 at 20:40
  • 🔍 Collected: April 6, 2026 at 12:00
  • 🤖 AI Analyzed: April 21, 2026 at 03:04 (351h 3m after Collected)
As PR for the paper book version of "Grimm Connect 1 - Chapter of Little Red Riding Hood," which was released nationwide for the first time on March 25, a post by the editor in charge received a massive response, exceeding 2 million impressions.

[The Relevant Post]
https://x.com/NovelPengin/status/2038595558282338405?s=20

This illustration features the character "Elphilia" from "Grimm Connect 1 - Chapter of Little Red Riding Hood" written by Hare Tori (Dangan Bunko), and the design is handled by the illustrator "Nyanpo"-sensei.

This series started publication as an e-book on April 25, 2024. Currently, up to Volume 3 has been released as e-books. From there, the paper book version was published and rolled out nationwide on March 25, 2026, leading to the current momentum.

In the past as well, a post made by "Nyanpo"-sensei, the illustrator who drew this art, generated a massive reaction exceeding 3.14 million impressions.

Furthermore, the popularity of the manga adaptation currently serialized on "Nico Nico Seiga" is also heating up, with a post clipping a page from it recording over 840,000 PVs.

https://x.com/NovelPengin/status/2032787937528893645?s=20

## [Work Information]
"Grimm Connect 1 - Chapter of Little Red Riding Hood" (Light Novel: Dangan Bunko)
Author: Hare Tori | Illustrator: Nyanpo

## "Synopsis"
Let's purify the maddened world of fairy tales. It's okay, because we can start over as many times as we want.

Purify the world of fairy tales invaded by madness──. Mahiru Misora, a boy with a younger sister suffering from an incurable disease, was in the library of the juvenile reformatory when