Otaku Culture
Author of Ganbare Nakamura-kun Closes Social Media After Harassment from Foreign Fans
The author of the popular BL manga deleted her official profiles and confessed feeling unable to satisfy the constant complaints from the international audience.
The dark and toxic side of the otaku community has claimed another victim in the industry. The author of the popular BL manga Go For It, Nakamura-kun! (Ganbare Nakamura-kun!) made the drastic decision to completely delete her social media accounts. According to reports, the measure was caused by an incessant wave of harassment and complaints specifically from foreign fans who discovered the work through its recent anime adaptation.
“No Point in Being a Mangaka”
The pressure on the creator has reached such a critical point that she not only erased her online presence but also confessed to seriously considering abandoning her professional career. In her last public statement before disappearing from platforms, the author expressed deep frustration and mental exhaustion: “I only receive complaints about why I drew something like this. I don’t have the ability to create something that makes everyone happy as they expect, so there’s no point in being a mangaka, right?”.

International criticism seems focused on questioning certain narrative elements of the original story. This situation highlights the enormous cultural clash and unrealistic pressures faced by Japanese creators when their works, originally conceived for a specific niche in the manga world, suddenly reach a much broader and demanding global audience thanks to television or streaming.
Support from Veteran Fans Was Not Enough
The news has generated a wave of sadness and indignation among the franchise’s longtime followers, who have tried to send messages of support amid the wave of negativity. However, the damage is already done. The case of Ganbare Nakamura-kun! serves as a painful reminder of the real and destructive impact that social media and harassment can have on artists’ mental health, pushing them to the brink of abandoning the passion they once shared with the world.
