The Magical Revolution of the Reincarnated Princess and the Genius Young Lady, an incredibly long title for a remarkably entertaining series, will be shortened to Magical Revolution Princess for brevity and sanity. J-List briefly touched upon the series before, when it was shown off in a recent issue of NewType, and when it was featured on a list of anime that we’re hyped to see this season.
If you’ve missed it, this trailer will set the stage for a magical isekai adventure with two cute magical girls. There is yuri, and yuri is justice.
Magical Revolution Princess began streaming on Crunchyroll’s services to the West on January 4th, 2023.
Studio Diomedéa set up a home page and an official Twitter account that fans can follow for more insight into the characters and lore. They also released a Key Visual that perfectly captured its essence.
Magical Revolution Princess follows Anisphia “Anis” Wynn Palettia, the first princess of the great Kingdom of Palettia. In her previous life, she lived in a modern city, most likely Japan, and had a great love and fascination with magic. After Anis’s rebirth in the sword and sorcery world of her dreams, once she reached adolescence, she regained her memories and pursued her love of magic.
The story begins after Anis’s younger brother Algard, the crown prince of Palettia, ends his engagement with Euphyllia and accuses her of bullying Lainie Cyan, a commoner-turned-noble and Algard’s love interest. Anis takes her own interest in Euphyllia, and the two become fast friends, thus setting the stage for our isekai yuri adventure.
Studio Diomedéa released the clean opening and clean ending videos for Magical Revolution Princess. The opening theme is titled Arc-en-Ciel, and it’s performed by Hanatan.
The ending theme is titled Only for You, and it’s performed by Sayaka Senbongi and Manaka Iwami.
The Magical Revolution of the Reincarnated Princess and the Genius Young Lady (Tensei Ōjo to Tensai Reijō no Mahō Kakumei, aka Tenten Kakumei) originally began as a light novel series written by Piero Karasu with illustrations by Yuri Kisaragi. The series ran from February 13th, 2019, to August 19th, 2021. It was later adapted to manga form in 2020, with illustrations provided by Harutsugu Nadaka. The manga is currently ongoing, with four volumes out so far.
Are you interested in watching this series? Why do isekai stories always have extremely long titles? Let us know in the comments below.