She entered the industry and spent the first chapter of her career working exclusively under the Maxing label before choosing freelance — a move that, in JAV, typically signals either ambition or a desire for more control over what you do and who with. She maintained a public Twitter presence for most of her career, which is how fans tracked the slow fade before the official announcement: the account went quiet, new releases dried up, and people who followed her closely could feel the ending coming before she said anything.
When she did speak, she spoke carefully. The retirement post named her agency, thanked her fans by name, and disclosed that she had already stopped filming the previous year — meaning the last stretch of releases were a kind of controlled exhaust, titles already in the can rather than new work. She signed off as Jun Mizukawa, not Kana Yume, and that distinction felt intentional: a woman stepping back into a name that belongs entirely to her. What she is doing now, she has not said.
The Ten
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