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  • Yabako Sandrovich Writes Brutal Martial Art Fights & Cute Girls Exercising
  • Clamp Created a Popular Magical Girl Series & a Story About The End Of the World
  • Riichiro Inagaki Writes an Exciting Sports Series & a Scientific New World
  • Negi Haruba Created AaFan-Favorite Harem & a Subversive Rangers Story
  • Yoshitoki Oima Created a Story About Bullying & a Philosophical Adventure
  • Tsugumi Ohba & Takeshi Obata Changed Shinigami For a Duo Of Manga Creators
  • Muneyuki Kaneshiro Went From Horror & Dark Coming-Of-Age Stories To a Sports Series
  • Hiromu Arakawa Explores Different Genres In Her Iconic Works
  • Takehiko Inoue Goes From School Basketball To a Samurai’s Epic Journey
  • Osamu Tezuka’s Thematic Evolution Created a Legacy That Redefined the Industry

There are several manga artists known for recycling their own material in their next works, like story themes, characters, or even the same universe. The countless similarities between their works make it easy for fans to identify the author.

An example of this is Hiro Mashima, the creator of the popular series Fairy Tail, who took a lot of inspiration from his previous work, Rave Master. However, some manga artists are not afraid of changing genres and going beyond the themes of their other popular series.

Image Created By Anna Williams

While some mangaka deliver masterpieces while sticking to the same genre and demographic, like Junji Ito’s horror stories or Mitsuru Adachi, who created several hit sports series about baseball such as Touch, H2, and Cross Game, some manga authors create wildly different works that stand on their own and achieve success.

Iconic mangaka collage image featuring the main character from Pluto, Vagabond, and Junji Ito's Cat manga. (1)

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15 Best Mangaka of All Time

Over the history of the manga industry, these 15 creators have risen above the others for various reasons to be the best mangakas of all time.

10

Yabako Sandrovich Writes Brutal Martial Art Fights & Cute Girls Exercising

Contrasting Works: Kengan Ashura & How Heavy Are the Dumbbells You Lift?

Yabako Sandrovich is a manga writer best known for his work on Kengan Ashura, a series that exudes adrenaline from every panel. Kengan Ashura is a work loaded with energetic and brutal sequences, showing martial arts’ different styles in an extensive range of combats and situations of savagery at their maximum splendor in sync with the aggressive nature of his art. The characters are often compared with Baki Hanma‘s figthers for their brutality, which inspired a recent crossover from Netflix title Baki Hanma Vs. Kengan Ashura.

Despite the author’s love for martial arts, Sandrovich later wrote a completely different manga, How Heavy Are the Dumbbells You Lift?, a slice-of-life about cute girls who attend a local gym to exercise and lose weight. An odd series that explains exercise routines as well as nutritional tips to live healthily was adapted into an anime that went viral for its catchy opening. The themes of both series are light day and night. However, the author includes cameos that confirm that both series happen in the same universe.

9

Clamp Created a Popular Magical Girl Series & a Story About The End Of the World

Contrasting Works: Cardcaptor Sakura & X/1999

Cardcaptor Sakura

Any manga fan has heard of CLAMP, the most famous quartet of Japanese authors best known for the popular magical girl series Cardcaptor Sakura. The genre of their work is fantasy and science fiction with a little romance, and while some are more childish and innocent, like Cardcaptor Sakura and Kobato, others are more adult with mature themes, such as Chobits, Tsubasa: Reservoir Chronicles, and xxxHolic. One work that stands out from the others for its themes and violence is X/1999.

X/1999 touches themes like free will, predestination, and sacrifice. A dark mosaic for which CLAMP is inspired by diverse esoteric disciplines and beliefs: feng shui, Christian eschatalogy, Buddhism, Shintoism, etc., bringing together many very diverse philosophical, religious, and cultural references that display all their writing abilities but also deliver graphic scenes that fans wouldn’t expect from the same creators of the sweet Sakura Kinomoto.

8

Riichiro Inagaki Writes an Exciting Sports Series & a Scientific New World

Contrasting Works: Eyeshield 21 & Dr. Stone

Riichiro Inagaki is a manga writer who gained popularity with his sports manga about American football, Eyeshield 21, illustrated by Yusuke Murata, who’s currently adapting ONE’s webcomic One-Punch Man. Eyeshield 21 is a fun spokon with a little drama that combines football with an excellent narrative in which the main character, Sena Kobayakawa, overcomes many challenges to achieve his dream of playing in the Christmas Bowl.

Inagaki’s later hit manga was Dr. Stone, a science fiction series about a teenage genius who uses his knowledge to rebuild civilization after being petrified. The premise of the series itself is fantastic and bizarre, but consistent with the spirit of science, something that always advances, opens new paths for humanity, and makes the planet a better place than it was. Both works are so distinctive that it’s not easy to tell they came from the same mind; however, both are exciting and optimistic mangas.

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Negi Haruba Created AaFan-Favorite Harem & a Subversive Rangers Story

Contrasting Works: Go! Go! Loser Ranger! & The Quintessential Quintuplets

The Quintessential Quintuplets (2017)

Writers

Negi Haruba

Penciler(s)

Negi Haruba

Publisher(s)

Kodansha USA

Negi Haruba was inspired by Ken Akamatsu’s works to the point that his pen name is based on Negima! Magister Negi Magi’s protagonist. This influence can be seen in Haruba’s most popular manga, The Quintessential Quintuplets, a harem manga about a tutor teaching quintuplets with the subsequent romantic developments, since Akamatsu’s Love Hina is considered by many to be the work that popularized the sub-genre.

However, Naruba’s next manga, Go! Go! Loser Ranger!, showed a totally different side of the author. Loser Ranger is inspired by Sentai, like Power Rangers, but with a dark twist reminiscent of what The Boys already did with superheroes. Far away from a romcom about quintuplets, Loser Ranger demonstrates Naruba’s great ability to mix humor, violence, and action.

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Yoshitoki Oima Created a Story About Bullying & a Philosophical Adventure

Contrasting Works: A Silent Voice & To Your Eternity

A Silent Voice

Yoshitoki Oima surprised the world with her series A Silent Voice, which won her the prestigious Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize for a New Creator in 2015. Oima’s A Silent Voice is a drama about bullying and redemption, showcasing how children are rejected by their own peers for being different through a premise that seeks to call for reflection and teach about forgiveness.

Although the story was a success, which gained A Silent Voice an anime film adaptation, Oima decided her next work would be a fantasy, distanced from the modern world. To Your Eternity is a drama and adventure with its fair share of action, featuring an immortal being’s journey of self-discovery while experiencing grief and loneliness. Despite the difference in themes and plots, Oima’s abilities are displayed in both stories, creating a complex portrait of human feelings.

5

Tsugumi Ohba & Takeshi Obata Changed Shinigami For a Duo Of Manga Creators

Contrasting Works: Death Note & Bakuman

Death Note

Created by

Takeshi Obata
, Tsugumi Ohba

TV Show(s)

Death Note (2006)

Tsugumi Ohba and Takeshi Obata are a manga creator’s duo primarily known for their famous series Death Note, acclaimed for its deep exploration of ethical and moral themes, focusing on the psychology and motivation of the characters. Ōba’s narrative style and Obata’s artistic skills made Death Note one of the most striking and memorable manga; however, the duo of authors took a radical turn with their next work, Bakuman.

While Death Note is about a student who receives a mysterious book from a Shinigami and develops a god complex, becoming obsessed with power, Bakuman is a more realistic story, showing a manga within a manga. Bakuman stars two students whose dream is to become professional manga artists, explaining the process behind it, from the storyboard to meeting the editors, to the operation of Japanese publishers, all with multiple references to classic works of the genre. From the dark and sober atmosphere of Death Note to the more optimistic, classic shōnen style of Bakuman, these stories highlight the author’s versatility.

4

Muneyuki Kaneshiro Went From Horror & Dark Coming-Of-Age Stories To a Sports Series

Contrasting Works: We Did It!, Jagaaan, & Blue Lock

Blue Lock

Animation
Sports

Streaming Service(s)

Crunchyroll

Writers

Taku Kishimoto

Directors

Tetsuaki Watanabe
, Shunsuke Ishikawa

Muneyuki Kaneshiro is mostly known for his unique sports manga Blue Lock, inspired by the style of a death-game series like his previous work As The Gods Will. However, he also created two other series quite unique in their own: a horror series about a police officer whose life changed after frogs began to fall from the sky and enter people’s bodies, transforming them into monsters; Jagaaan; and We Did It, a coming-of-age drama about guilt, regrets, and facing the consequences of one’s actions.

Both are dark stories, really far away from the classic sports genre. While Jagaaan touches themes like humanity, reminiscent of Parasyte, with a setting and aesthetic more like Gantz, We Did It shows, in the style of crime and punishment, the worst of human beings and what it means to hit rock bottom, displaying uncomfortable situations derived from unhealthy decisions. These different and varied stories showcase Kaneshiro’s talents and skills and confirm that he is certainly a very prolific manga author.

3

Hiromu Arakawa Explores Different Genres In Her Iconic Works

Contrasting Works: Fullmetal Alchemist & Silver Spoon

Fullmetal Alchemist

Created by

Hiromu Arakawa

TV Show(s)

Fullmetal Alchemist
, Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood

Hiromu Arakawa’s legacy is irreproachable, and she constantly shows her versatility by not being afraid to radically change the genre and themes of her new works. Although her most emblematic work to date is undoubtedly Fullmetal Alchemist, the artist also shines with realistic manga such as Silver Spoon, a slice of life about an agricultural school that has nothing to do with battles or fantasy themes like alchemy. The story is a reflection of the author’s connection to life on a farm, following day-to-day life in the field with a feeling of realism.

Arakawa can also write comedy manga, as demonstrated by her autobiographical story Noble Farmer, and swift to a totally different genre with her most recent work, Daemons of the Shadow Realm. However, whatever the genre, Arakawa has the ability to create deep characters and mix elements of comedy and drama in the same story while exploring complex themes, making every manga an incredible experience.

2

Takehiko Inoue Goes From School Basketball To a Samurai’s Epic Journey

Contrasting Works: Slam Dunk & Vagabond

Takehiko Inoue’s mangas stand out for their meticulously detailed art and emotional narrative. While Slam Dunk remains his greatest completed work, Inoue’s love for basketball is reflected in his other series, Buzzer Beater, which includes science fiction elements, and in Real, a more personal story where the heroes under the basket are in wheelchairs, whose problems go from regrets to thinking about what could have been, going far beyond just youthful love.

Even if they are all dramatically different, these three stories share basketball as a premise. However, Inoue went to the other side of the specter with Vagabond, undoubtedly his best work, even if unfinished, for his amazing drawing, without fear of violence or blood, and as wild and cruel as the fearful and erratic period where it is set. Vagabond is about going along one’s path, where Musashi fights against himself, his doubts, and the past that torments him. Inoue’s works, though different, share the message of overcoming the obstacles in life.

1

Osamu Tezuka’s Thematic Evolution Created a Legacy That Redefined the Industry

Contrasting Works: Astro Boy & Dororo.

Astro Boy (1963)

Astro Boy (1963)

Creator(s)

Osamu Tezuka

Osamu Tezuka is known as the Godfather of Manga for creating some of the most memorable series of all time, such as Astroboy, Black Jack, Jet Marte, and Kimba the White Lion. Although his works are primarily known for their comedy and cartoonish character design, inspired in part by Walt Disney, during his career, Tezuka slowly transitioned towards more adult stories, shifting to series with critical portraits of certain Japanese social issues among his more than 700 works, going through two marked phases of artistic and thematic evolution

While his most famous series, Astroboy, is a science fiction manga dealing with themes like technology, space-time conflicts, war, the risks of weapons, and the exploitation of nature and its resources, Dororo is the most particular, being the darkest and most violent manga of the author, with the story of the protagonist’s tireless search to complete his humanity set in the Japanese feudal era, in a world of superstitions and civil wars. The variety of genres in the series he authored prove that Osamu Tezuka is certainly the best manga author who created wildly different works.