Why are so many promising manga canceled after just a few chapters? Shinsuke Kondou, author of Ninja to Gokudou, has just given an answer that few mangakas dare to say in public: Many times the problem is not the story or the author’s talent, it is the editorial interference that distances the work from what made it special in the first place.

The question that every manga reader has ever asked
In Japan it is not uncommon to watch series canceled after only a few chapters, without enough time to develop their story or connect with the public. It is a pattern that readers constantly notice and that always generates the same question: what really happened behind the scenes?
According to Shinsuke Kondō, author of Ninja to GokudōMuch of the answer has to do with something that the industry rarely discusses openly: the direct influence of publishers on creative decisions, often based on what they consider ‘more salable’, and not necessarily what the work needs.
‘Any editor who tells you that if you do exactly what he tells you you will sell, he is a scammer’
The conversation started when Kondou He shared a phrase in networks that his former editor left him, warning him about blind trust in guaranteed formulas for success within the publishing industry.
According to the author himself, that warning sums up much of the problem: there are publishers who present their suggestions as guarantees of commercial success, when in reality no one can predict with certainty what will work with the public. Kondou was clear in pointing out that those kinds of promises should set off alarms in any mangaka that listens to them.

When the error that readers criticize is not of the author
One of the most revealing points of the entire conversation is something that probably surprises a good part of the fandom: in several cases that Kondō knows first-hand, the elements of a work that readers publicly criticize, plots, character decisions, narrative turns, were not born from the own Mangaka, but of editorial suggestions specifically designed to increase the commercial appeal of the series.
That is to say, the author ends up carrying public criticism of decisions that, in many cases, were not even completely his.
Following the editorial board does not guarantee success
Kondō also mentioned cases of other mangakas who received various suggestions from their editors to make their stories more popular. What is striking is that, even when those authors followed the recommendations to the letter, several of these works ended up criticized by the readers and did not achieve the success that was sought — which in some cases led to their cancellation.
This calls into question one of the most repeated premises within the Japanese publishing industry: that publishers, due to their experience, always know what is going to work commercially.
The weight of a publisher with great successes behind
Another important nuance that Kondō pointed out is that some of these publishers were already involved in great previous commercial successes, which gives them an additional weight within the industry. When an editor with that history suggests a change, it’s much more difficult for a mangaka—especially a young man or no success yet of his own—questioning or rejecting that suggestion, even if his creative instinct tells him otherwise.
This dynamic of power, according to the author’s statements, is a structural part of the problem.
A surprisingly balanced posture
Despite all of the above, Kondō did not point to the editors as villains of the process. The author himself stated that, in his experience, he never considered that the editors were completely ‘wrong’ in his suggestions — the final responsibility, according to him, ends up being shared or deeply depends on the particular context of each work.
His final conclusion was just as nuanced: the result of a manga depends both on the ability of the author and on a real component of luck in the editorial decisions that are made along the way. There is no guaranteed formula, neither on the talent side nor on the editorial side.
Why this conversation matters to any manga reader
the statements of Kondou They touch a nerve that goes far beyond their own work. Every time a fandom wonders why a manga he loved abruptly changed direction, or why a promising series was canceled for no apparent reason, the answer probably involves decisions made at editorial meetings that the public never gets to see.
For readers, this changes the way of reading criticism towards an author: many times, the mangaka is not the only person behind the decisions that end on the printed page.