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  • I've recently started reading a bunch and have mangas and manwhas I like, but the manhua I've tried so far was too heavy on the propaganda for my tastes. I'm not sure if that was specific to the one I was reading or if the CCP requires all art to be pro Chinese nationalist and imperialist.

    My top mangas:
    Hunter x Hunter (keeps going where the anime stopped, though it doesn't finish the story and I'm not sure it ever will)
    Dandadan (holy shit this one is so good, goes way past the one season of anime, which is very faithful to the manga, it's still ongoing with weekly updates)

    My top manwhas:
    Hero Killer (I love the characters and art, though the action and story can be difficult to follow)
    A Returner's Magic Should be Special (this one is the first one I found after deciding I wanted to read a completed story and it delivered)
    Solo Levelling (this one's pretty fun, especially early on)

    And the manhua I started but gave up on:
    Way to be the Evil Emperor (some speculated in the comments that the CCP friendly stuff was to gain some leeway with the rest of the story but it was just too overt for me to enjoy. And the writing isn't that great outside of the propaganda, too. The art was good though)

  • Same as any other form of media.

    I like some of it, and I REALLY like a few standouts.

  • In order, not a fan, what?, and what? Never even heard of the last two, but the manga/ anime craze didn't really take off until I was in my early 30s, so I never got the appeal.

  • I'm a huge fan of Nobuyuki Fukumoto's work.

    Akagi is the best series that I can't actually recommend, because if you don't know anything about Mahjong it will be completely incomprehensible. Or if you do know anything about Mahjong, you've already read it and didn't need me to recommend it to you. Akagi is peak, but only for a very specific niche audience.

    Kaiji is the one I can recommend. Kaiji gets conned by shady loan sharks and forced to gamble his way out of crippling debt, playing all kinds of bizarre games with high stakes. It's the same style of intense psychological warfare, but, like, accessible to the average reader.

    He's written a lot of other great stuff, and most of it is more Mahjong, but those are the big two from him.

26 comments