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Kaguya-sama: Love Is War Season 2 And Another Anime Exclusively Coming To Funimation

Funimation now has the exclusive rights to The Millionaire Detective - Balance: Unlimited and Kaguya-sama: Love is War Season 2, and both are coming soon.

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Funimation, the premium anime streaming service, has grabbed the exclusive rights to two series: The Millionaire Detective - Balance: Unlimited and Kaguya-sama: Love is War Season 2. Both of these series will be arriving to the service this spring.

Kaguya-sama: Love is War follows the story of Miyuki Shirogane and Kaguya Shinomiya, Shuchiin Academy's student council leaders. Peers think the duo would make the perfect couple, but neither wants to go out on a limb to ask the other out. So they determine ways to trick the other into instigating a date. Check out the Season 2 trailer below.

Season 2 of of the romantic comedy series, Kaguya-sama, arrives this April. The new season will be subtitled. Currently, all episodes of Season 1 (subtitled) are streaming on Funimation. English dubs for both seasons will arrive later this year.

Also arriving to Funimation this spring is The Millionaire Detective - Balance: Unlimited. The series follows Modern Crime Prevention Task Force detective Daisuke Kambe and partner Haru Kato at the Toyko Metropolian Police Department. They work in a department where only people who've caused problems for the police end up. It's a real odd couple situation, as Daisuke is rich and materialistic and Haru believes money isn't everything. Check out the trailer below.

No official release date has been revealed yet. The Millionaire Detective is created by Yasutaka Tsutsui (Paprika, The Girl Who Leapt Through Time) and directed by Tomohiko Ito (Death Note, Sword Art Online).

If you're looking for more anime to check out while you're stuck at home, check out the 10 best romance anime, the best anime on Netflix, or the best anime of 2020 to watch, which includes the recently-released Beastars on Netflix. In her review of Beastars, Jenny Zheng said, "Beastars isn't interested in a tidy equality message per se--it's more concerned with exploring what the characters think equality is, unpacking that, dumping it on the floor, and watching them slip and slide in the mess. It's a glorious and complicated examination of power (both physical and via capital resources) and social relationships through the lens of an anthropomorphic society."

Mat Elfring on Google+

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