Manga Review: YOU CAN’T LIVE ALL ON YOUR OWN questions if happiness is attainable

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Cover to the manga YOU CAN'T LIVE ALL ON YOUR OWN featuring four busy women doing different things(c) 2025 TOKYOPOP

You Can’t Live All on Your Own, Volume 1
Story and Art:  Mizoko Tsuno
Publisher: TOKYOPOP (Print & Digital)
Translation:  Katie Kimura
Retouching and Lettering: Vibrant Publishing Studio
Publication Date:  July 8, 2025
Rating: Teen, age 13+
Genre: Manga, Slice of Life

Can happiness be found even when life seems to pass you by?

Four women with different goals, jobs, and personalities all live together in an apartment in Tokyo. They get along with each other well, and share food and drinks when they can, along with their latest problems and advice. 

Manga panel of different women sharing "cheers" together(c) 2025 TOKYOPOP

The story starts with Shuuko, who is a 29-year-old office worker feeling the clock ticking. It seems like everyone around her is getting married, and she questions whether or not she is happy being alone. Then there’s Eika, the career go-getter who works incredibly hard not only for herself, but to show the judgmental men in her office that she’s a highly capable woman. Misaki, a musician with a romantic personality, is brokenhearted when she discovers her boyfriend of two years didn’t think they were dating at all. This total misconception of their relationship brings about tears, then determination as Misaki vows to win her “boyfriend” over and make him commit to a serious relationship. Lastly, Shio works remotely in the apartment and shows her affection through the delicious food she cooks for the household. The only problem is, she is paid very little and can’t keep track of her spending. 

While each woman gets her time to shine with her own chapter in the manga, Shuuko’s story dominates and the most time is spent on her, so it would be safe to call her the main character. Her story feels more complete, too, even though it isn’t finished yet, as we see her attempts to change her life by going out to matchmaking events and dates. Her story is the connective tissue. 

Each roommate is at a turning point in their lives, where they have to figure out if they are happy or still pursuing happiness. They all have very different goals from each other, but also, they enjoy living together and have a hard time imagining what life would be like without roommates. They support and care for each other deeply. Doesn’t that make them happy? 

Panels featuring different women--at top, two in conversation, at bottom, two women lying down in bed. (c) 2025 TOKYOPOP

This manga is a successful examination of the limbo people can feel stuck in when they are no longer a child, teen, or even early adult. There’s this checklist of life events that you’re expected to have met within a certain timeframe that’s unfair and doesn’t consider everyone’s circumstances. Some people can’t learn to drive at sixteen. Some people don’t start college at eighteen. Some people never find a career or own a house or have kids, let alone all of that by their twenties or thirties. And yet the pressure is there to have things mastered by a certain point in life. This manga hits that hard as each character is striving to meet their goals but wonders if those goals are what will ensure happiness once they’re met. 

I’ve felt at times just like Shuuko in this panel:

A manga panel of a woman standing in a kitchen lost in thought.(c) 2025 TOKYOPOP

And that’s what makes You Can’t Live All On Your Own so appealing—you can empathize with the characters and their personal crises. As I mentioned before, a lot of people worry that they haven’t achieved certain goals by a certain point in their life, and experience that feeling of being “stuck” or unsure if things will get better or not. I think readers of this manga will know what it feels like to wonder if they should accept what they have, or strive for change, all for the sake of happiness. 

The art style is pretty simple. It’s not that the characters aren’t uniquely depicted or expressive, it’s just that there’s nothing unnecessary in their depiction, and characters aren’t overtly ugly or strikingly beautiful. The art feels honest, in that we see these characters for what they are–real people. The fact that the lines are rounded, thick, and smooth contributes to the art’s clarity. It’s a highly contemporary style of manga for adults reminiscent of other manga such as Hirayasumi and How Do We Relationship?

I enjoyed reading this manga quite a bit, but if there was anything I wished was different it’s the exploration of Misaki and her “boyfriend’s” relationship. I reacted just like how the other women in the manga did–how do you see each other for two years, kiss and sleep with each other, and not be considered dating? The whole premise seems ludicrous to me. But this is someone’s reality–someone out there has gone through this–so I can’t judge Misaki too harshly for the way she responds. I just think out of all of the relatability readers can have to the characters, this one may be a little harder to pull off. 

You Can’t Live All On Your Own is a solid addition to the slice of life genre for readers who can understand what it’s like to struggle with money, work-life balance, romance, and the “life checklist.” An entertaining manga with sweet moments, and relatable ones as well, this series makes you question what happiness could be for you, and if you can find it for yourself.


You Can’t Live All on Your Own Volume 1 is available in print directly from TOKYOPOP as well as a variety of online booksellers. The digital version is also widely available purchase. Look forward to You Can’t Live All on Your Own Volume 2, which is expected to release September 9, 2025. 

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