Why did it take two attempts for this manga to get an active thread, especially so misleadingly titled one? I'll never know.
Anyway, this is a solid Suzuki Nakaba read - and that alone implies a lot of enjoyment. Execution is what matters here, and, so far, it has been nothing but satisfyingly pleasant. The world is on its head, your only hope are your former diabolical enemies, their leader is but a wee lewd shota bartender nonchalantly defying any bit of common sense, and the ale has almost run out. Yes please, this is how I want my fantasy comics.
Hork is best character too.
@Strawhat:
Does anyone have an idea how the rankings in this magazine work? Because I just checked out the rankings in the mag.
Second chapter was ranked 6th, third was ranked 5th, 12th, fourth chapter has color pages so it doesn't count, fifth chapter ranked 1st.
Magazine, unlike Jack and Sunday, doesn't rely on questionnaires to set their rankings, even though the gather data in a similar way. Instead, they actively rotate their series so you can see hits in the back, and unpopular stories in the front of the magazine quite often. This way, Magazine are trying to give attention to a wider array of manga.
@Thousand:
Fairy Tail has made me wary of any new fantasy themed manga but this manga is legitmately well put together and emotionally deep from what I've gathered so far.
I don't know what this Fairy Tail is but it sounds like obsolete fanfiction.
@Thousand:
Original characters, fun setting, over the top manly combat physics which is pretty interesting given how it's juxtaposed with a fantasy setting where emphasis is usually on the magic powers rather than the DBZ levels of physical feats. I'm very interested by where this manga could go, it has a lot of potential.
This is Suzuki Nakaba. I think I'd be disappointed if he betrayed his nature and wouldn't focus on manly men, women and children performing extraordinary feats of physical power in the most badass ways possible. This is like a law of nature you can get around without warping the japanese comic book space-time continuum.
However, in one way or another, he is going to work with the concept of magic, and look forward to it.
@Aohige_AP:
And since he's back to shounen, no blow jobs for this shota this time I guess. Damn.
So Boku to Kimi Aidani was pretty wild as well? Well, Magazine usually is more accepting to fanservice, but Meliodas probably won't get as lucky, at least on screen.