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Berserk #1
March 25, 2025
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If you have the time, please give this dated gem a shot. You won't regret it. And you won't need to read fifty other volumes to realize that.
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Berserk #2
March 27, 2025
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Artistically speaking, volume two is a step up to what came before, but speaking to everything else, it's more of the same. But here you are partially desensitized to the horror since you've seen so much already, so it's milk and water.
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Berserk #3
March 29, 2025
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Even if you haven't read the previous volumes, I urge every reader who sees it to buy this volume immediately. It stands alone as a work of sheer genius. And this is only the beginning.
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Berserk #9
April 6, 2025
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When you're last volume was so good, it's more than expected to not live up to it. If the opening is concerned, he failed to live up to it, but putting that aside, he has succeeded all expectations. When you look further into this volume, you realize Miura is at the top of his game.
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Berserk #10
April 7, 2025
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While there are staggering feats of writing accomplished here, they can be lost in the indulgent fight scenes that cram up this volume.
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Berserk #11
April 8, 2025
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Generally, this volume disappoints but the majestic art and clever writing here and there should make up for what is one of the weaker volumes of Berserk.
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Berserk #13
April 14, 2025
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Miura did not hold back, and even though it was sometimes unbearable with it's unflinching horror and emotion it can bring out of you, Berserk's thirteenth volume is a must-read.
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Berserk #14
April 15, 2025
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Berserk delivers again in volume fourteen, though don't expect anything as shocking as volume thirteen or twelve. Here, Miura settles things down and opens the door to a new arc that will take us practically everywhere. Additionally, he makes very clear that Golden Age is not all Berserk is. As we really have seen nothing yet.
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Berserk #15
April 17, 2025
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An entertaining, but disenchanting volume. The story is tolerable, but pales in comparison to what Miura can achieve with more inspiration.
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Berserk #16
April 18, 2025
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Thankfully, we are done with the Lost Children arc, and we are onto Farnese and her interesting religious practices. On top of that, Lost Children ended remarkably.
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Berserk #17
April 19, 2025
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Miura does a excellent job of crafting Farnese already, and he will only take her character further with time. With par-for-the-course excellent art and a fabulous job of plot progression, volume seventeen of Berserk is not made for the faint of heart and it's surely not one to miss.
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Berserk #18
April 20, 2025
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While Isidro held parts of this volume back, Farnese advanced it forward and has easily made herself the most engrossing character yet.
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Berserk #19
April 21, 2025
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A quite bizarre and deeply satisfying volume of Berserk. If this is what the best of Conviction can offer, I want more.
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Berserk #20
April 22, 2025
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Even though this volume didn't succeed in making up it's lack of plot for an excessive amount of action, it's hard not to read with an unusual intensity. At making you read on at a rapid pace, this volume reigns supreme.
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Berserk #21
April 24, 2025
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And that concludes Conviction. What a time. A fear most Berserk fans had, that I share myself, was that after Golden Age the manga would never be the same. And, in regards to narrative similarities, it's not the same. In reference to quality, it is not as good, but it's extremely close. Conviction had it's downfalls, but as this volume proves, it's superior parts go toe-to-toe with the greatest Golden Age had to offer.
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Berserk #23
April 26, 2025
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This is a re-invigorating volume that properly establishes the new dynamic going forward, and makes me anxious to read more.
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Berserk #25
April 29, 2025
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Characters like Farnese and Griffith are polished and refined and new characters are given at an avalanche, opening our eyes to how big Berserk's world truly is, while opening us up to the magic of this world. Which works as a good way of self-defense against forces like the God-Hand. In that way, magic is a necessary tool that Berserk did a brilliant job of slowly integrating. The problem is that magic is something that Miura is clearly a big fan of, and his persistent indulgence into it causes major parts of the arc to feel immoderate. This is most evident in volume twenty-five. Entire parts of this volume I would deem 'unreadable' if any reader is attempting a re-read. So much of this volume is uncurbed and low-price in it's execution that I find little to compliment in it's writing, with the exception of a few notable moments. Aside from mentions of Griffith, how magic is integrated into combat, and the scene in which Farnese tries to protect Casca, there is little char
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Berserk #26
May 1, 2025
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Despite how emotional this volume is, it's oddly the most relaxing. A vast improvement to the previous volume that rectifies any grievance I had going forward.
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Berserk #27
May 2, 2025
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Change can be a good thing. If Berserk didn't change, never would it have been this good. Did I say it yet? This is the best Berserk offers. From art to storytelling, this volume is unmatched.
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Berserk #28
May 3, 2025
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Compared to volume 27, Miura slows the pace down, for better and for worse. While I am fond of all he tries here, a faster, more organized volume would've been preferred.
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Berserk #30
May 5, 2025
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If you are a fan of Farnese's character, this volume is your magnum opus for all things Berserk. For myself, I was glued to the page.
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Berserk #31
May 6, 2025
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If you're an action or worldbuilding geek, this volume suits you well. If you're a story fanatic, like me, then you are going to be very disappointed.
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Berserk #33
May 10, 2025
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Volume thirty-three doesn't have much action, but makes up for that by becoming more attentive to it's characters.
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Berserk #34
May 11, 2025
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Even if you erase every speech bubble, this volume is still a masterpiece. In fact, I think the word I'm looking for is 'chef-d'uvre'.
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Berserk #38
May 18, 2025
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In this volume we get Rickert slapping Griffith. That is worth the price of admission alone, but if you want more, Miura offers us one great chapter with Guts and the crew.
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Berserk #42
May 29, 2025
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To every Berserk fan, we worried about the art, the quality, but upon revisiting I think it's clear: we're still in really good hands.
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Hunter x Hunter #1
July 1, 2024
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Hunter x Hunter Volume 1 is an exciting start to a brilliant series that doesn't hold back its aurora off for a minute. From the jump, you know this is Togashi's opus and creative peak, and he never holds your hand to tell you that you are in his world, a natural one. One that gets on with itself and just embraces what it is. Togashi no longer feels held down in his writing by expectation or limitation; he realized and opened the doors to limitlessness in his writing, a true sense of whimsical wonder that makes one realize they are in for the ride of their life. Hunter x Hunter, Volume 1 is like a burning sensation that hooks you in and makes you itch to read every single chapter you can find after, thanks to Togashi's biting vision, personality, and freedom that he will never let you forget.
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Hunter x Hunter #2
July 2, 2024
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Hunter x Hunter's second volume's pacing may be a bit too fast, looking at all that ensues and all that could've been expanded into its own volume, but it mostly doesn't disappoint. This is mainly due to the addition of so many characters to its universe and a compelling, almost, arena that brings a level of cleverness right to the spotlight that the series only vaguely showed with each character being tested in unique ways.
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Hunter x Hunter #5
July 8, 2024
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Hunter x Hunter Volume 5 is quite strong at just being quite good and never meandering, but that comes with some of the bigger moments being quite disappointing. Though the art is still amazing, and some storylines are quite stellar.
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