The magazine was first published in 1989. When the magazine emerged in the late 1980s, it was part of a new wave of josei magazines like Young Rose and Cutie Comics, publishing manga like the ones of Kyoko Okazaki that distanced themselves from the soap-opera "Ladies Comics" of the 1980s and kept more elements of shōjo manga in their style.[3]Rachel Thorn explains that the magazine is considered more artsy and progressive than other josei magazines like the more conservative You or the more mainstream Chorus.[4] Some women who got works published in the artistic manga magazine Garo, like Erica Sakurazawa, Kiriko Nananan and Shungicu Uchida, published their works also in Feel Young. The manga artist Milk Morizono described that she felt like her work was sometimes out of place, because it was too dark for the light pages of the magazine.[5]
In 1995, it had a circulation of 250,000, in the following year 150,000.[6] In 2004, an issue of the magazine had a circulation around 72,000.[7]
In 2024, a website counterpart called Our Feel was launched.[8]
^"Women's Manga" (in Japanese). Japanese Magazine Publishers Association. September 2016. Archived from the original on October 6, 2017. Retrieved November 6, 2016.