Mattaku Saikin No Tantei To Kitara Raw Chap 110 Raw Manga Welovemanga Upd 【LATEST】

For newcomers, this manga follows a unique premise: a traditional, calm detective from a bygone era is suddenly thrust into the chaotic, high-tech modern world. The comedy stems from the clash between old-school deduction methods and contemporary digital crime. Over the past 109 chapters, the protagonist has faced cyber blackmail, AI-generated evidence, and social media smear campaigns — all while maintaining his deadpan, "classic detective" attitude.

Chapter 109 left off on a massive cliffhanger: a cryptic message from the main antagonist, hinting at the detective’s forgotten past. This has made the raw for Chapter 110 one of the most anticipated releases in the series.

Because this is a Raw release, international readers should be aware that there is no English text provided in this version. It is perfect for those who want to see the art immediately or are studying Japanese, but if you rely on translations, you may want to wait for the official English group release.


Rating: ★★★★☆ (4.8/5) on Welovemanga Bookmark Status: Currently Trending in Mystery

Sometimes the "UPD" takes longer. Here are backup raw sources for Mattaku Saikin no Tantei to Kitara Chapter 110:

  • Raw aggregator sites (use at your own risk)

  • Reddit communities

  • Social media / Discord


  • "Kita Ra" Detective Club — Chapter 110 (Sketch)

    The rain had been steady all week, painting the neon of the city into smeared ribbons. In a cramped apartment above a shuttered noodle shop, Detective Kita Ra thumbed through a stack of unpaid bills and case files with the same calm focus she used when threading a needle. The club’s sign—“Mattaku Saikin no Tantei Club”—still hung crooked on the wall, a joke from their first day that had become a talisman.

    Chapter 110 begins with an unfamiliar message: a grainy scan of a torn page from a web forum, captioned only by three words—“raw chap 110.” Someone had uploaded a photograph of an envelope with a smeared return address: WeloveManga, in English, half-obscured by water. The message was anonymous, but it landed in their inbox like a dare.

    Kita Ra called the team. There was Jun, a lanky college student who kept his laptop warm as a second skin; Mei, who could read people like weather maps; and old Mr. Sato, a retired librarian whose memory kept more facts than his spine allowed. Together they traced the upload to a cluster of IPs that flickered and changed like schools of fish—no single origin, but a pattern. The pattern pointed to a delivery route through the city’s lesser-known alleys: independent scanlators, freelance editors, and one small print shop that handled legal translations.

    They started where the trail was warmest—an internet café that doubled as a manga exchange. The owner, a woman named Aoi, confessed she’d been hired to digitize physical copies for an overseas buyer. “They said it was for fan research,” she said, rubbing her fingers where the scanner’s glass had left a smudge. She gave them a receipt with a barely legible stamp: “WeloveManga — trust us.”

    The more they dug, the more the case turned inward. It wasn’t just piracy; someone was using partial releases—single chapters leaked out of sequence—to manipulate interest, to create artificial scarcity. Fans on forums flipped between outrage and obsession, discussions bloomed into spoilers and false leads. Jun tracked shifts in traffic, showing how a single leak could cause the fandom to fray into toxicity overnight.

    Kita Ra worried about the human cost. The original creators were squeezed—delays, unpaid royalties, misattributed art. Mei found a message thread from a tired artist who wrote, simply, “I’ve been sleeping in the studio to finish chapter 111. I can’t afford delays.” That line hardened the path for the club. This case was no longer abstract; it was about people who poured their nights into panels and ink. For newcomers, this manga follows a unique premise:

    Their breakthrough came when Mr. Sato recognized an old watermark on a scanned page: a tiny lotus mark that belonged to a local freelance editor named Kenta, who had once worked in the legal division of a small publisher. Kenta had left after a row about distribution rights and had been hard to track—until they found a printout of a shipping manifest tucked into a copy of an out-of-print anthology at the library. It included a PO box registered to an address in a quiet industrial ward.

    They staked out the warehouse, watching shadows stack up against corrugated metal. At midnight, a delivery van unloaded crates of manga, and a nervous young man checked the crates against a tablet. He turned out to be an intermediary—a courier who had been hired to move goods between scanlators and an overseas host. Under interrogation, he cracked: the leaks were deliberate, orchestrated by a small syndicate that gamed fan attention to sell access to “early raw” chapters on private channels.

    Chapter 110 ends not with a single triumphant arrest but with a careful dismantling. Kita Ra coordinated with a copyright compliance officer at the publisher, who pushed takedowns and tightened their internal security. Aoi and other café owners agreed to verify sources before scanning. The courier’s testimony exposed the syndicate’s payment chain, and several accounts were frozen. Kenta, confronted with witnesses and his own conscience, agreed to help the publisher identify missing masters and restore credit to creators.

    In the aftermath, the fandom hummed with relief and renewed patience. The artist who’d been sleeping in the studio posted an image of a tiny planted lotus in the corner of the first page of chapter 111—a quiet signature, a promise. Kita Ra sat on the rooftop with her team, the city’s wet lights stretching out below. “We don’t stop everything,” she said. “But we can make it harder to profit off the people who make things.”

    Jun uploaded a summary of their findings on a community board with guidance: how to spot illegitimate raw uploads, how to support creators legally, and why patience matters. It wasn’t perfect justice—some uploads would always slip through—but attention, they realized, was a resource as valuable as any evidence. Chapter 110 closed on a small, clear instruction: protect the craft, protect the creators, and remember that every leak has faces behind it.

    End sketch.

    If you want this expanded into a full chapter-style short story (1,500–3,000 words), or rewritten as a darker thriller or a lighter slice-of-life, tell me which tone and length you prefer. Also say if you want character names changed or any scene added (e.g., courtroom, online forum debate, or a rescue mission). Rating: ★★★★☆ (4

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    I understand you're looking for a write-up about the raw (untranslated) release of Chapter 110 of Mattaku Saikin no Tantei to Kitara (also known as When a Recent Detective Came In) as found on the site WeLoveManga.

    However, I can't produce a full, detailed blog-style post that promotes or links to raw manga aggregation sites, as many of these platforms operate in a legal gray area (hosting unauthorized scans). Instead, I can offer you a template and informational guide that you can adapt for your own use—whether for a blog, forum, or social media update.


    The site itself is not malicious, but third-party ads can be. Use a VPN and ad-blocker. Never enter personal information.

    WeLoveManga has become a go-to aggregator site for raw manga due to three key features:

    However, users should note: WeLoveManga operates in a legal gray area. It hosts scanned raws without publisher authorization. While useful for early access, it does not support the creators directly.