Duty After School
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Duty After School

Alternative Titles

Synonyms: Afterschool Military Activity, Banggwa hu Jeonjaeng Hwaldong, Afterschool War Activities
Japanese: 방과 후 전쟁활동
English: Duty After School
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Information

Type: Manhwa
Volumes: 5
Chapters: 50
Status: Finished
Published: Nov 17, 2012 to Dec 14, 2013
Genres: Action Action, Drama Drama, Sci-Fi Sci-Fi
Themes: Military Military, Psychological Psychological, School School
Serialization: Naver Webtoon
Authors: Ha, Il-Kwon (Story & Art)

Statistics

Score: 7.851 (scored by 36713,671 users)
1 indicates a weighted score.
Ranked: #11472
2 based on the top manga page. Please note that 'R18+' titles are excluded.
Popularity: #2035
Members: 10,617
Favorites: 189

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Recommendations

By the same author has a really deep and dark feeling to it. As good as ASWA 
reportRecommended by bartnova
The life that seemed peaceful before is suddenly turned upside down by a catastrophe that will disrupt everyone's life. The teenagers find themselves in the military corps to face this tragedy and try to save the world 
reportRecommended by Five
Afterschool War Activities is beautifully emotional in the same way as Aisopos, though they take up different genres, they are both manhwa from the same era of Webtoons. They both explore human nature in very different ways and I recommend Afterschool War Activities if you enjoyed the more philosophical side of Aisopos. If you enjoyed Afterschool War Activities, the apparent serenity and more melodramatic plot of Aisopos might not immediately speak to you. It's not war-filled (at first, this is Ancient Greece though...) nor is it starkly horrifying. Still, I think Aisopos has an interesting take on humanity that Afterschool War Activities readers might appreciate,  read more 
reportRecommended by vivere4242564
In both you will see people having to live in a dystopian world.  
reportRecommended by augustokch
Helping others to survive and fight against dangerous species (man-eating creatures at Eden no Ori, purple murderous orbs "cells" at Afterschool Wars Activities) at the risk of their own life. That's what you will get while reading Afterschool War Activities and Eden no Ori. The real human nature in front of a life or death situation, the terrifying 'fight if you want to live' line, thrilling action and romantic subplot. A couple of differences would be that AWA doesn't focus in what they're trying to fight, but the reason why are they fighting, boys and girls adapting to survival and strengthening relationships. They're also trained  read more 
reportRecommended by automnesouriant
Both of these stories are quite similiar where an unknown party invades Earth and the youth are drafted into the military to fight.  
reportRecommended by Juke16
Schoolchildren in an apocalypse in progress, while trying to maintain their school life. 
reportRecommended by Kanaev
The main difference is that in one of these, the students are all on the same side and in the other, they aren't. Despite this, they're very similar with how each scenario forces students into horrific scenarios that force them into acting as adult and cause them great trauma, in addition to those some of them already hold. 
reportRecommended by Surana