Flunk Punk Rumble



Flunk Punk Rumble (original name: Yankee-kun to Megane-chan) is a 23 volumes Manga written by Miki Yoshikawa from 2007 to 2011.

It was originally just a three part short story published in Kodansha's Weekly Shounen Magazine. These chapters are named "Stand", "Bow", and "Sit". Eventually, it turned into a regular manga, with the story continuing from the original three chapters; therefore, its first chapter is actually the fourth chapter. By the way that this manga is drawn, it looks like it would make a great anime series, but got a Live Action Adaptation instead.

Speaking of which, Miki Yoshikawa was the assistant of Hiro Mashima (Rave Master and Fairy Tail), so the art style of this manga is very reminescent to Hiro Mashima's work. This is most apparent in the Intercontinuity Crossover, Fairy Megane.

It's a Slice of Life manga that follows the lives of a "Yankee" named Daichi Shinagawa and a Meganekko named Hana Adachi, who is also the Class Representative of Daichi's class (thus the name Yankee-kun to Megane-chan, which can be roughly translated as (The Adventures of) Delinquent Boy and Glasses Girl). In the course of the manga, the two soon formed a whole Five-Man Band, with the genius and Gray look-alike Seiya Chiba, Adachi's former kohai Rinka Himeji and the Marty Stu wannabe Izumi Gaku.

Expect lots of silly facial expressions, comedic circumstances, and quite a few cool fight scenes as Hana ropes Daichi and the gang into her crazy ideas.

A 10 episode live-action drama was broadcast in 2010. It modified some plot points and added some depth and emotion, but the show kept much of the spirit and goofyness of the manga, at least in the first couple of episodes.


 * Absurdly Powerful Student Council: Though not your typical definition of "powerful".
 * Action Girl
 * Art Evolution: Just compare the first appearance of Chiba with a latter one
 * Authority Equals Asskicking: The current student council, the previous one, and the one from the rival school have mostly been composed of people who can kick serious ass when needed.
 * This is definitely the case with the two groups who ran for the new student council.
 * Subverted with the StuCo of Aosuji Academy.
 * Badass
 * Bad Bad Acting: Komaki Howari (turned into a Large Ham after proper training from the student council).
 * Berserk Button:
 * Don't call Akita a girl.
 * Do not mess with Izumi's former True Companions.
 * Don't mess with Adachi's duties as class rep/student council president. Or with her glasses.
 * Beach Episode: Which somehow turned into a Hot Springs Episode because Adachi forgot her swimsuit.
 * Chekhov's Gun: The toilet cubicle, the porn show used to lure Chiba out of his room.
 * Chekhov's Gunman: A lot of characters who are seen in earlier chapters often end up playing some important role in later ones (see the Early-Bird Cameo example on this page), even seemingly minor characters.
 * Clark Kenting:
 * For some reason, people only realize who Adachi truly is (and run away as fast as possible) when her glasses come off.
 * Subverted and played straight in.
 * Shinagawa also doesn't recognize Adachi to be.
 * And he also doesn't
 * Continuity Nod: By chapter 112, Shinagawa is still playing that MMORPG in the computer club room.
 * Corner of Woe: Displayed a few times.
 * Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass: You'd never guess that the sweet, ditzy, Meganekko class rep could be so terrifying.
 * You'd also never guess that.
 * Curb Stomp Battle: Every time Adachi physically attacks someone. So much that Shinagawa hardly recovers from his extreme surprise after seeing Izumi successfully blocking Adachi's first kick.
 * Deep-Immersion Gaming: Occurs whenever Shinagawa plays the MMORPG with a team.
 * The Drag Along: Much of the fun in earlier volumes comes from Shinagawa reluctantly complying with Hana and co.'s shenaningans. It changes when the focus of the story drifts from her to him.
 * Dream Sequence
 * Dynamic Entry
 * Adachi does this sometimes by kicking down doors.
 * Himeji Rinka's initial debut.
 * Izumi after the Culture Festival, taking on a group of delinquents who attacked a friend and sent him to the hospital.
 * Early-Bird Cameo: Izumi's first appearance in the manga actually coincided with Rinka's in chapter 23 along with all the other "nerds" of class 2-A. He's seen again in chapter 25 as one of the harassed students in the field trip before his proper introduction at the end of chapter 28.
 * Everyone Is Related:
 * The cute little girl Mako-tan who keeps messing with Shinagawa in the MMORPG he plays? She's   younger sister. She pops up when they visit his place.
 * Expository Hairstyle Change: Parodied in chapter 119 during the second StuCo beach trip.
 * Fan Service: While there are some not-so-blatant examples, there usually is not so much of this. It does happen, but pales compared to...
 * Fan Disservice: Especially when Nerima's flirting around.
 * Five-Man Band: Humorously constructed in the student council, with Adachi as The Hero, Shinagawa, Izumi and Rinka as a troika of lancers, and Chiba checking in as The Big Guy, The Smart Guy AND The Chick. Later becomes Shinigawa as The Hero, Izumi as The Lancer, Adachi as The Big Guy, Rinka as The Chick, and Chiba as The Smart Guy.
 * Flat What: Izumi reacts this way after the student council finds a necklace that claims to grant three wishes....
 * Flock of Wolves: The student council,.
 * Generation Xerox: Every male in Izumi's immediate family.
 * GIRL:, to the shock of the gang.
 * Subverted in Chapter 69 when Shinagawa assumes this to be the case regarding a rival merchant whose avatar is a cute little girl. It turns out, the rival player actually is a cute little girl.
 * Good Eyes, Evil Eyes: If Akita opens his eyes, it will be likely the evil variant, 'cause you just pushed his Berserk Button.
 * Good Scars, Evil Scars: Chiba actually has the 'good' kind, though it's a little more ambiguous than he would like.
 * Makoto's avatar in Battle Legend has a big scar upon his left eye.
 * Green-Eyed Monster: It first seemed that Chiba's interest in Makoto was unrequited. However, when Chiba has to practically carry Himeji during the three-legged race because of their height differences, Makoto is less than pleased.
 * Hot-Blooded: Sliding doors are no match for Himeji Rinka!
 * Honorifics: See the Japanese title.
 * Hypocritical Humor : There's a certain amount of humorous irony derived from Shinigawa thinking Adachi obviously likes him when his feelings for her are far more objectively clear. That's projection for you.
 * Idiots Cannot Catch Colds: When the whole school comes down with the flu except for Shinagawa, this is Adachi's explanation.
 * Intercontinuity Crossover: With Fairy Tail. Note that Miki Yoshikawa was actually Mashima Hiro's (Fairy Tail's author) assistant in his past works.
 * I See London: Izumi catches a peek at Himeji's undies in her infamous Moe Blob shot.
 * Japanese Delinquents: Just take a look from this spoiler quote:
 * Japanese Delinquents: Just take a look from this spoiler quote:

"Chiba: That stall is serious business!"
 * To Chiba's chagrin and repeated misfortune, his height and naturally glaring eyes automatically causes others to assume he is a delinquent. Him hanging out with Shinagawa, Adachi, and their group has only exacerbated this.
 * Kidanova: Seiun Nerima, though his tastes for women are rather... questionable...
 * Kogal: Anna Ichinomiya (also ).
 * Loads and Loads of Characters: The cast list keeps growing with every volume.
 * Love Triangle: Confirmed, with the revelation that Rinka likes Shinagawa, who likes Adachi, who likes her glasses. Possibly morphing into Love Dodecahedron or Unwanted Harem as some girls later introduced to the story also seem to have a thing for Shinagawa.
 * Manic Pixie Dream Girl: Subverted. Hana forces Shinagawa to help under the pretext of being the class president, making this loner life a hell with her hare-brained attitude and well-meaning schemes. But she's only bugging him because she used to be a delinquent herself and can't relate to anyone else.
 * : In chapter 209,
 * Maybe Ever After: Mixed very well with No Romantic Resolution.
 * Meganekko: Subverted with.
 * If the manga was set during their middle school times, it would be
 * Aosuji's Student Council's president much less nice than you would expect from her Meganekko looks.
 * Nerd Glasses: The two recurring computer club students.
 * Never Mess with Granny: Adachi probably got her insane fighting skills from her grandmother.
 * Nobody Poops: So very averted to the point that it's an early Running Gag. Even the very first scene of the manga is Shinagawa sitting in his favourite cubicle.
 * Official Couple:
 * Offscreen Teleportation: Adachi has a habit of doing this.
 * Only Sane Man: Shinagawa, Izumi and Hana tries to be this, God bless them, but failed utterly for various reasons. Shinagawa is too Hot-Blooded, Izumi always find himself being targeted and challenged and can't do much but accept it, and Hana... well, Hana.
 * Panty Shot -> Magic Skirt: Adachi had some Panty Shots in the first chapters, thanks to frequent kicks. In typical FPR fashion, it wasn't fanservicey nor comical, but rather realistic wardrobe moves. It quickly faded away, having Hana (or Himeji) always drawn in an angle so the readers won't see any underwear when that happens. The characters, though...
 * Passing the Torch: From Student Council to Student Council.
 * Rivals Team Up: Shinigawa and Izumi as Co-Vice-Presidents. They continue to live out their rivalry in the most trivial ways possible.
 * Running Gag: Adachi has a habit of peeking into Shinagawa's favourite cubicle in the boy's bathroom. This actually created a rumour in their school that there's a ghost in the said bathroom. One chapter actually had Adachi using the said cubicle.
 * Scare Dare: School the evening during the holidays.
 * Scary Shiny Glasses: Adachi and Chiba at times. It's more often Opaque Lenses, though.
 * Schedule Slip: The author, Miki Yoshikawa, usually mentions that she fails to reach the deadline in her commentaries.
 * Sempai-Kohai
 * Serious Business: The rivalry between the Red and White teams during the school athletic festival is so intense that friendships and couples have been known to break up for the duration of the competition should the friends or lovers find themselves on opposing teams.
 * The stall at the back in the boys' bathroom is Shinagawa's only.
 * The stall at the back in the boys' bathroom is Shinagawa's only.

"Hana Adachi: What a lame name for a play. Shinagawa: YEAH!"
 * She Cleans Up Nicely: Inverted in Volume 6's bonus chapter. Shinagawa originally meets Adachi in cleaned-up mode, and then doesn't even recognize her the next year. In chapter 134,
 * Shout-Out: "He's the legend, everyone who sees the dragon, won't live to tell a tale...."
 * Show Within a Show: "Boobalicious Bounty Hunter Momoko". Buxom female bounty hunter in skimpy outfits.
 * The play in which Komaki Howari has a part. It's named "Yankee-chan and Megane-kun".

""The computer club is 'the computer club;' there's nothing more to it! Even if I did know, I'd still want to call them 'computer club!' Even as adults, they'll still be called the computer club.""
 * Super-Deformed: Adachi becomes chibified (with accompanying Opaque Lenses) whenever she's doing or saying something weird.
 * Spoony Bard: Shinagawa played as a merchant who can't even fight when the gang tried to play a Deep Immersion MMORPG in order to get a certain student to go back to school. True to Adachi's characterization, she picked the merchant class for Shinagawa. Despite having a useless class, Shinagawa still became addicted to the said MMORPG and became a highly successful merchant.
 * The Stoic: Kagawa always has a straight face, even when he fights.
 * Surrounded by Idiots: Izumi makes this observation when the rest of the student council starts fighting the gang he'd tried to take on himself. His friend points out that he too is an idiot.
 * Chiba says this to himself pretty much every day.
 * Straight Man: Shinagawa to Hana, Seiya to everybody.
 * Theme Naming: Author Yoshikawa states in one of her commentaries / Q&A's that she names all of her characters after places.
 * With the exception of the first two chapters ('Stand' and 'Bow'), the chapter titles are (almost) always something picked up from the dialogue inside the manga. This could also count as Title Drop.
 * The Glasses Come Off: Happens several times in the first chapters when Adachi decides to kick some serious ass.
 * This Is Something He's Got to Do Himself: The point of the whole story is to subvert this trope, as nothing is as strong as The Power of Friendship. Specifically subverted a couple times, such as when
 * Those Two Guys: Two students keep criticizing the various posters the student council come up with.
 * The two students from the computer club.


 * Nacchi and Macchi. As of the recent, they have ascended into secondary characters.
 * Title Drop: See Theme Naming of the chapter titles above.
 * Two Guys and a Girl: Itsuki Kagawa, Akira Kitami and Anna Ichinomiya
 * Two-Teacher School: The only prominently featured teacher is Sakai, who is also the coordinator for the Student Council, and even then he is just a side character.
 * Vitriolic Best Buds: Shinagawa and Izumi. They spend much of their time together either viciously staring each other down or outright brawling. But they make a good team, and even if they clearly don't get along, they both grumpily admit that doesn't mean each would inarguably (and demonstrably) go to the ends of the Earth to save the other from danger.
 * Wig, Dress, Accent: The usual way the characters disguise themselves is to change the hairstyle and clothing style and possibly to put on some glasses.
 * Will They or Won't They?: Shinagawa asks himself this on a chapterly basis...
 * Zettai Ryouiki: Grade B for Himeji Rinka.
 * Miki Yoshikawa sometimes depicts Adachi Hana as an archer wearing Zettai Ryouiki socks. She manages to do this without making it fanservicey.

The Drama provides example of:
"Shinagawa: Ha! Strawberry-print panties! Hana: They're tomatoes!"
 * Adaptation Expansion: The first episode gives an explanation of how Hana Adachi became class rep and a different and hilarious take of how Shinagawa and her first met.
 * Adaptation Dye Job: Himeji isn't blonde, but has a pink stripe in her Shiny Midnight Black hair.
 * Adult Child: Shinagawa's mother certainly is one.
 * Annoying Older Sibling: Shinagawa's sister, period.
 * Be Yourself: Kind of a leitmotiv throughout the whole drama.
 * Beauty Inversion: You wouldn't believe the plain-looking Chiba is actually the handsome Yu Koyanagi.
 * Bittersweet Ending: Episode.
 * Cloudcuckoolander: Shinagawa's mother. And Hana, of course.
 * Dawson Casting: Haruna Kawaguchi (Himeji), is a rare aversion, as she was really 15 at the time (being born in 1995). And already taller (166 cm) than the actress playing Hana.
 * Hiroki Narimiya (Shinagawa) was 28 at the time. The actors playing Hana, Izumi and Chiba were between 22 and 20.
 * Gecko Ending: Shinagawa finally, then asks her name...
 * Gender Flip: Hana lives with her grandfather rather than with her grandmother.
 * Goofy Print Underwear: Hana Adachi (See I See London below)

"Sensei, confessed to me! Sensei: I see, I see! Something to be glad about, isn't it? Yes! *cutting in, referring to her answer* You said yes just now. Yes? Which is it?!"
 * : Discussed. Shinagawa . Various characters discuss what attitude Hana should have over this. Finally, she.
 * I See London: Shinagawa has the chance to catch an eye at Hana's panties when she tries to kick him. Though we spectators see nothing.
 * I Want My Beloved to Be Happy: 's reaction towards the ending.
 * Large Ham: Almost EVERYONE is required to be given the nature of the show. Riisa Naka particularly does her best at looking as dumb as she can. Even . Special mention also goes to Kanata Hongo as Izumi.
 * Lonely at the Top:.
 * Maybe Ever After: For  at the end.


 * Public Domain Soundtrack: Beethoven's Ode to Joy appears almost Once an Episode.
 * Screams Like a Little Girl: Shinagawa's reaction to the house of Youkai made for Monshiro High Festival. Nerima's too.