Kokou no Hito
The Climber
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Kokou no Hito

Alternative Titles

Japanese: 孤高の人
English: The Climber
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Information

Type: Manga
Volumes: 17
Chapters: 170
Status: Finished
Published: Nov 1, 2007 to Oct 27, 2011
Genres: Award Winning Award Winning, Drama Drama, Sports Sports
Theme: Psychological Psychological
Demographic: Seinen Seinen
Serialization: Young Jump
Authors: Sakamoto, Shinichi (Story & Art)

Statistics

Score: 8.801 (scored by 3875038,750 users)
1 indicates a weighted score.
Ranked: #402
2 based on the top manga page. Please note that 'R18+' titles are excluded.
Popularity: #109
Members: 120,745
Favorites: 7,251

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Resources

Recommendations

Make me feel similarly. Vagabond - about great samurai. Kokou no Hito - about great mountain climber. Both are loosely based on real people/story. Both arts are interesting and enjoyable. Though, Vagabond has more fine details (and is the best what I've seen in manga). Don't let Koko no Hito to let you think that it is a typical shounen sport manga if you start reading the first couple of chapters. It will become a real seinen story later. Closer to the end of the story: Both main characters are looking deep within themselves. They are trying to find why did they come to this almost perfection in what they do.  read more 
reportRecommended by GDL-URAHARA
The struggles of a young man who doesn't exactly fit into society and the personal drama of his life. Depressing yet rewarding reads. These manga also frequently use the greatly detailed art to depict a metaphorical scenery for the story, so althrough the plot is set in real world, the art definitely doesn't leave you bored. 
reportRecommended by abystoma2
Both depict how social misfits (The Climber - an introvert who distances himself from others due to his own personality and unfortunate past; REAL - people who need to rediscover their place in society due to their disability) who find solace in the passion of sports, to escape from the crushing loneliness as a result of their respective circumstances. They both showcase incredible depth in storytelling and breathtaking artwork. The Climber and REAL are mature, soul-searching dramas that are certain to grip the reader in more ways than one. 
reportRecommended by Hattori_Hanzo
Both leads are stubborn kids who have a natural talent for an extreme sport (free climbing/diving), but their reckless nature constantly puts them in danger as they over-evaluate their abilities 
reportRecommended by AfterGlow
While it may not seems like it at first, Ashita no Joe and Kokou no Hito have the same essence and try to convey the same things...through very different approaches. While Kokou no Hito tries to convey feelings in a very graphical and lyrical way, using (or abusing, depending of your view) a lot of visual metaphors, Ashita no Joe does it with dense storyteling, in a more "classical" way. In the end, they both can be summarized as this: "the travel through life of a young man, discovering a sport and dedicating his life to it, no matter the obstacles, no matter the meanness  read more 
reportRecommended by Dullboy
Both are about mountain climbing, show the possible outcomes doing such a climb. Both also delve into climbing techniques, and show the psychological effect of mountain climbing. If you enjoyed Peak, you will enjoy Kokou no hito. Vice versa. 
reportRecommended by RA_Jack
I just finished marathoning a hundred or so chapters of The Climber, and I must say, The Climber and Holyland are two great mangas that achieve their messages both strongly and similarly. Enter in two character that struggles with loneliness and identity. They are somewhat introverted, mysterious, quiet, but nonetheless different from others. To channel their concentration, frustration, relaxation, happiness, and essentially, their everything, they find an activity that they fall in love with. Both mangas strongly represent the loneliness aspect of each person's life, and both do so differently. And the characters--remarkably considering other stuff I'm sure we know of--grow throughout the story, and we  read more 
reportRecommended by WAXCHUG
Mature themes; Great artwork; Catharsis. 
reportRecommended by ggfty
To be fair, there are works a lot more similar to Aku no Hana and they have more differences than similarities but I think they might appeal to a particular niche of readers. In case you're looking for a manga that follows a main character that has a distorted view on society and can't establish healthy relationships with "normal" people, both have that. Aku no Hana MC also really reminded me of Kokou no Hito MC due to the tendency for both of them to picture the darkest side of society in their minds and at some point in the story be corrupted by a girl.  read more 
reportRecommended by INU4SH4
Both have surreal artstyles that really improve throughout their run, with examples of the most beautiful and creative panels I've seen in the medium. Moreover, while their themes aren't similar at all (gambling vs sports manga), they are both standouts of their respective genres, and both their protagonists are lonely (although in Usogui it's much less relevant than in the Climber). Oh, and neither has anime. 
reportRecommended by inazumera
Both manga belong to the psychological/sports/seinen genre. As such, they focus mainly on the psychology of their characters instead of the actual sport. Both have amazingly written, fleshed out and developed characters. They both have a unique artstyle, although Kokou no Hito looks gorgeous while Ping Pong looks eccentric. Even during the execution of the respective sport (Ping Pong and Mountain Climbing) the characters are given the focus, with lots of imagery and symbolism interrupting the actual sport Read both, you won't regret it! 
reportRecommended by NFMaster
Both feature incredibly naturally talented (in some sort of winter sport) protagonists who face competitions and have their own pasts to deal with. Nononono is more ecchi, however, and includes a cross-dressing element. 
reportRecommended by donut_jelly
The MC pursues his own dreams and objectives regardless of how many times people around him disagree. This is sort of an adventure with lots of ups and downs. *Beautiful how panels are stretched and not per se completely filled with text, meaning you're free to think what he'd do and think about in various situations.  
reportRecommended by RaviDavi
The story flow and particular manner of introspection is very similar in both of these manga. Sangatsu is basically what Kokou with more words would look like. 
reportRecommended by Druser
Both protagonists discover a passion in something and dedicate their life to it. , Kokou no Hito is about rock climbing and later about mountaineering. At first he surrounds himself with people who also enjoy rock climbing, but later is all alone. Has a lot of psychological elements.  
reportRecommended by cookie644
Both series exclusively centers around the protagonist and their life, there will indeed be a lot of side characters that will occur by itself, their presence will impact the protagonist but they are not all so important to the progression of the story. Similar to Gantz, The climber will start off as a more light and fun series but the more you go through each chapter, it'll get heavier. 
reportRecommended by Zestiria
-Mountain climbing as a common theme -Beautiful artwork focusing on the magnificence of nature -The idea of socially isolated individuals obsessively pursuing their passions (in both cases rock climbing) to resolve some internal issues) -Both based on novels concerning Japanese mountain climbers 
reportRecommended by Cloneable
Both Kokou no Hito and Shamo follow stories of social outcasts focused on one goal - mountaneering and fighting, respectively. Both offer extensive sports trivia, explanations and glossaries. Detailed art. 
reportRecommended by turelio
Both depict the struggle of the Main Character with his inner demons. Both authors draw violence and energy in a similar technique. 
reportRecommended by MesserMorfeo
The portrayal of a man from his younger day to an adulthood as he struggles to be a part of the society and deems himself unable to. Both feature high quality illustrations that metaphorically depict the protagonists's inner state. The Climber as well as No Longer Human are modern-day adaptations of older novels. 
reportRecommended by abystoma2
Same vibe. Male protagonist becomes infatuated with climbing mountains/salvaging ships. Same type of hurdles and atmosphere. 
reportRecommended by DarkAngelz
Wolf Guy and Kokou no Hito not only are akin in art style, but also their protagonists show some amazing similarities. Optically, but especially in their characteristics. Both are rather sociophobic and try to remain isolated, both partially have a very sinister and dramatic atmosphere. Wolf Guy feels like an "aggressive brother" to Kokou no Hito to me. 
reportRecommended by Roflkopt3r
These two are really similar. The hero of the story has basically never done the sport and falls in love with it, in both it seems as if they were meant to do the sport that they are doing since it comes natural to them.  
reportRecommended by TatsuoHiro
They both have an enthralling plot that focuses on rock and mountain climbing. The questioning of morals in life-threatening situations is also a common theme between the two. Unlike The Climber, Gaku doesn't have an ongoing plot. 
reportRecommended by Tefferss
Both series focus a lot on the psychological development of a main character obsessed with a goal and both have a romantic subplot.  
reportRecommended by tony007
They both focus on one character's very long journey to perfection and extremely in-depth understanding and mastery of their respective fields (Kokou no Hito - mountain climbing, Subaru - dancing). The protagonist is all that matters, Subaru gets a lot of people who help or try to hinder her in her task, recurring characters, while Kokou no hito much less, i literally cannot remember more of them than like 2 that show up for more than a few chapters. Both protagonists only care about achieving greater heights and understanding of what they do, neglecting social life whatsoever, feeling lonely, isolated and not understood by anyone.  read more 
reportRecommended by triske
Mature manga about mountain climbing and personal drama, combined with nicely done art fitting the tone. 
reportRecommended by abystoma2
Both mangas deal with extreme conditions of survival as an individual and fighting nature to grow stronger in order to reach their goals. 
reportRecommended by Throttlee
Both main protagonists have a very damaged and scared past which leads to them becoming anti social and being isolated from the world. Both manga's show the struggles and consciences the lead characters go through trying to erase the past they established. The two stories get really dark so much so that both main characters care little about their own life, not thinking things through to the end of dangerous situations. Both manga's share drama, Psychological genre elements.  
reportRecommended by Obeythealfa
Both Main Characters are lone wolfs and like to handle dangerous situations alone isolated from the world around them. Both Main Protagonists show amazing skill and natural talent in their stories. Both Manga's show amazing character development as the narrative starts to reach it's climax. These two manga's also have great art work and the detail for each page is awesome. 
reportRecommended by Obeythealfa
The portrayal of a man from his younger day to an adulthood as he struggles to be a part of the society and deems himself unable to. 
reportRecommended by abystoma2