Justy (ジャスティ, Jasuti) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Tsuguo Okazaki which ran in Shōnen Sunday Zōkan.
With this device, which acts only as a psychic damper, he can finely attenuate his powers to prevent collateral damage.
Viz translated part of the manga into English and released nine out-of-order issues[5] in North America between December 6, 1988 and April 4, 1989.
Astaris begins attacking the policeman, destroying Justy's ship and using more and more power to try to break through his defenses.
The criminal espers believe they have destroyed him, so they take the transport with all the hostages and warp away, leaving Astaris floating in space.
After the shuttle leaves, Justy appears and rescues the sleeping Astaris, promising to bring the criminal espers to justice for using her in their ploy.
The characters of Justy, Jelna, and Bolba previously appeared in Okazaki's debut manga 2nd Year A Class Hoshiko-sensei.
Shōnen Sunday Comics imprint from Shogakukan Burger SC imprint from Scola Studio Pierrot released a single 44-minute OVA, titled Cosmo Police Justy (Cosmo Police ジャスティ, Kosumo Porīsu Jasuti), on July 20, 1985, directed by Motosuke Takahashi, the director of the Fire Tripper OVA.
He stated the OVA had a "heavy over-the-top cheese factor", but said "the film is one that simply can't be dismissed entirely."
He especially liked the ending theme song, performed by Miki Asakura, calling it a "[guilty] pleasure", and pointed out that Astaris was the "closest any character ever got to being moë in 1985".
Thompson also wrote that Okazaki's "characters' childlike, cute faces [foretold] the anime style of the 1980s."