Slime Life
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Slime Life

Alternative Titles

Japanese: スライムライフ


Information

Type: Manga
Volumes: 11
Chapters: 312
Status: Finished
Published: Aug 23, 2017 to Nov 1, 2020
Genres: Comedy Comedy, Fantasy Fantasy, Slice of Life Slice of Life
Demographic: Shounen Shounen
Serialization: Shounen Jump+
Authors: Megasawara (Story & Art)

Statistics

Score: 6.901 (scored by 10001,000 users)
1 indicates a weighted score.
Ranked: #103612
2 based on the top manga page. Please note that 'R18+' titles are excluded.
Popularity: #5246
Members: 3,836
Favorites: 20

Available At


Resources

Recommendations

Despite being of nigh entirely different genres, both Slime Life and Kubo-san wa Mob wo Yurusanai start with a girl, a dark elf black magician and a dense high schooler respectively, taking interest in and teasing a guy, a child slime and a dense high schooler respectively. In both manga it starts almost as bullying but soon mellows out and the girl's affection is revealed and comes through. Afterwards, both pairs slowly start developing their relationships and recognise their feelings and responsibilities. Also, both girls are extremely adorable. 
reportRecommended by -TACHYON-
Both Neko to Chiyo and Slime Lie are centered around the life of a child (a little nekomimi girl and a slime respectively) and its parent figure who is a young woman. With their short chapters, at their beginning they both focus on the relationship of the two main characters which is full of fluff. While Slime Life starts with the protagonists getting to know each other (and Darrul learning how to parent), Neko to Chiyo begins as a family unit, exploring the adorable life of a cat-like child (or a cat in a child's body?). 
reportRecommended by -TACHYON-
Both these Slice of Life manga start when an adult becomes the de facto guardian of a child. From there the protagonists learn to coexist and forge a relationship, meet new and old friends and adventure through the setting. However, where Slime Life relies on the cuteness of both protagonists and relies on estabilished tropes, Yotsuba to! walks the path of realism and genuine characters. Nevertheless, despite the differing styles, both stories are primarily about a curious and (mostly) lovable child enjoying its life under the umbrella of a (mostly) reliable guardian The fact that both manga feature a characer related to the guardian that the  read more 
reportRecommended by -TACHYON-
I'm just going to run in head-first with this one. Both are about females(who use magic)and somehow find a pet-like companion. Neither of them knew just how much they were going to fall when they got their new helper. They seem to grow a romantic-like attachment to their new helpers the more they live with and get to know them. By no fault of the helper, might I add? Though in Behemoth it is from the 'helper's' point of view more often then not and he seems to like his... female magic user companion just as much as he likes her. In Slime Life, tsundere  read more 
reportRecommended by Nicholenekko
Both are wholesome, slow-paced series that focus around a cute witch and the developing relationships with her assistants and friends 
reportRecommended by elvenbog
The everyday life of a shopkeeper running a shop in the middle of nowhere and the bonds she forms with the people she interacts with. Both titles are heavy on fantasy and are very slice-of-life with mono no aware themes (much stronger in Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou, the pinnacle of mono no aware). 
reportRecommended by Quintessence