Bubble De House Manga De The Animation 2 May 2026
Let’s address the elephant in the room. The phrase "de House" (of the house) followed by "Manga de The Animation" is a formatting style commonly found in older hentai OVAs (e.g., Words Worth, Cream Lemon). There is a notorious 1990s hentai series called Bubblegum Crisis (not related) and another called House of 1001 Nights.
Bubble: De House — The Animation 2
Action, romance, science-fiction, drame, animation (style shōnen/seinen, visuel néon/parkour) bubble de house manga de the animation 2
The original Bubblegum Crisis (8 episodes, unfinished) was a landmark. Created by Toshimichi Suzuki and produced by Artmic & Youmex, it fused Blade Runner aesthetics, 80s metal music, and power armor (hardsuits) into a story about the Knight Sabers—an all-female mercenary group fighting rogue androids (Boomers) in Mega-Tokyo.
However, by 1990, a messy legal and financial dispute between Artmic (the studio) and Youmex (the music/label company) over rights and profits led to the cancellation of Bubblegum Crisis after episode 8. Fans were left on a cliffhanger. Let’s address the elephant in the room
Enter: Bubblegum Crash! – a 3-episode "conclusion" produced solely by Artmic, without Youmex and without Suzuki’s direct input. It was designed to wrap up the story, but under severe creative and budgetary restrictions.
Après les événements du premier film, Hibiki et Uta naviguent un Tokyo remodelé par des bulles tombées du ciel — une ville où la gravité et les cœurs continuent de s’entrechoquer. Quand une nouvelle vague de bulles provoque la chute d’un quartier entier, le couple doit unir pilotes, survivants et musiciens pour empêcher une catastrophe qui pourrait effacer la mémoire collective de la ville. Bubble: De House — The Animation 2 Action,
Unlike the original’s serialized arc, Crash! is an episodic anthology attempting to tie up loose ends.
| Episode | Title (JP) | Title (EN Manga Release) | Key Plot | Verdict | |---------|------------|--------------------------|----------|---------| | 1 | "Metal Trail" | "Mega-Tokyo 2034" | Knight Sabers vs. a rogue military AI that controls old Boomers. | Solid action, but rehashes original’s themes. | | 2 | "Enemy from the Deep" | "Geometric Love" | Focus on Nene (the hacker). A deep-sea Boomer factory awakens a psychic android. | Weird, experimental, low-budget. | | 3 | "Rising from the Ashes" | "Super Weapon" | The return of Largo (from original ep. 5-6) with a doomsday device. Priss goes solo. | Best of the three, closest to original’s spirit. |
Major Change: The hardsuits are redesigned (less sleek, more bulky). The music is no longer by the legendary Michiaki Watanabe (who did Crisis’s rock anthems) but by a less memorable synth-rock group. The gritty, hand-painted cel animation of 1987 is replaced by early 90s cost-cutting techniques (more still frames, reused transformations).