Favorite manga thread
Posted: Feb 18th, '26, 04:37
What are your favorite manga? Be sure to keep spoilers properly tagged!
SOIL by Atsushi Kaneko is my absolute favorite. It's a mystery story centered around the disappearance of a family from an idyllic little town. There's twist after twist here, and it gets pretty dark. Kaneko said once that he didn't draw a lot of influence from other manga and primarily watched American TV shows and films for inspiration, and it shows when you realize that SOIL is Kaneko's personal spin on
Berserk by Kentaro Miura feels obligatory to mention; it's ostensibly a revenge story set in a sort of fictional late-medieval warring Europe. I haven't read beyond chapter 364 as of posting, but the art and the characters are simply too good. I'm convinced that Miura, at his peak, was one of the best artists in the history of the world, at least with pencil or pen-and-ink. You could tell by the end that Miura and his assistants were still adjusting after transitioning from traditional to digital art, though.
Claymore by Norihiro Yagi is a story that I fell off of the first time I attempted it, I couldn't really get on board with it until I shifted my perspective on it a little; shounen is a hard sell for me and it gets a little tropey in places. The story's about these mercenaries that go around villages getting paid to slay shapeshifters hiding among humans. The art is extremely good and it does a superb job conveying movement, characters I thought I wouldn't care about actually ended up leaving lasting impressions for me, and without giving anything away I just adore the manga's ending.
Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou by Hitoshi Ashinano is a wonderful iyashikei story about an android who owns a little cafe. The characters are incredibly sweet and the story is calming and tender; it can be sweet and endearing or it can be quietly mournful at times. It's the kind of story that says to the reader that, come good or bad, everything will be okay. By the way, Ashinano's method for illustrating cloth is fantastic, it's my second favorite cloth in any manga just behind Battle Angel Alita by Yukito Kishiro. I love me some beautiful hand-drawn baggy clothes.
Edit: I can't believe I forgot to mention this one! Takemitsuzamurai by Issei Eifuku and Taiyou Matsumoto is my favorite samurai manga. The story follows a ronin trying to live a peaceful life, but trouble continues to find him. Matsumoto's art is beautiful, striking, and super stylized, it's the kind of art where if you see any of it you know right away who made it.
SOIL by Atsushi Kaneko is my absolute favorite. It's a mystery story centered around the disappearance of a family from an idyllic little town. There's twist after twist here, and it gets pretty dark. Kaneko said once that he didn't draw a lot of influence from other manga and primarily watched American TV shows and films for inspiration, and it shows when you realize that SOIL is Kaneko's personal spin on
Spoiler
Twin Peaks.Claymore by Norihiro Yagi is a story that I fell off of the first time I attempted it, I couldn't really get on board with it until I shifted my perspective on it a little; shounen is a hard sell for me and it gets a little tropey in places. The story's about these mercenaries that go around villages getting paid to slay shapeshifters hiding among humans. The art is extremely good and it does a superb job conveying movement, characters I thought I wouldn't care about actually ended up leaving lasting impressions for me, and without giving anything away I just adore the manga's ending.
Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou by Hitoshi Ashinano is a wonderful iyashikei story about an android who owns a little cafe. The characters are incredibly sweet and the story is calming and tender; it can be sweet and endearing or it can be quietly mournful at times. It's the kind of story that says to the reader that, come good or bad, everything will be okay. By the way, Ashinano's method for illustrating cloth is fantastic, it's my second favorite cloth in any manga just behind Battle Angel Alita by Yukito Kishiro. I love me some beautiful hand-drawn baggy clothes.
Edit: I can't believe I forgot to mention this one! Takemitsuzamurai by Issei Eifuku and Taiyou Matsumoto is my favorite samurai manga. The story follows a ronin trying to live a peaceful life, but trouble continues to find him. Matsumoto's art is beautiful, striking, and super stylized, it's the kind of art where if you see any of it you know right away who made it.
