Life's too stale. So let's spice it up by letting someone random EVERYDAY that in twenty-four hours, they will die. While that seems incredible, that's only 365 people a year. Japan's population is around 128 million, so if death rates and birth rates are about the same, it'd take a shade over 350,000 years to kill everyone. Probably wouldn't happen.
Story: 7/10
Plot drives this manga, and I love it for this. Too many manga try to get by using cool, likable characters and a lame story concept or plot. The manga consists of three chapter segments that tell the story of a person's last day on
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Alternative TitlesSynonyms: Death Paper, Death's Notice: The Ultimate Limit Japanese: イキガミ More titlesInformationType: Manga
Volumes: 10
Chapters: 60
Status: Finished
Published: Jan 27, 2005 to Feb 6, 2012
Theme:
Psychological
Demographic:
Seinen
Serialization:
Young Sunday (Weekly) Authors:
Mase, Motoro (Story & Art) Statistics Ranked: #13532 2 based on the top manga page. Please note that 'R18+' titles are excluded. Popularity: #791
Members: 23,943
Favorites: 447 Resources | Reviews
Filtered Results: 8 / 8
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Your Feelings Categories Apr 24, 2018
Story: 9
The story expressed in Ikigami is done in two parts, first is the episodic form which follows a separate person during the last moments of their life and how they cope with their newfound mortality. These each are taken from a unique perspective and give a great amount of character and world building all expressing the morose themes of the series in a natural fashion without blatantly spelling it out to the reader. The second follows the man who delivers said ikigami and how he copes with his work. Each chapter begins and ends with his thoughts on each case and the over ... Dec 31, 2009
If you, like many other people on this website, are a fan of psychological drama, then I think this is the right manga for you. Really! It's a great choice for anyone into this genre.
Story: 7/10 In my humble opinion, when you see the chapter start splash for the first chapter, you pretty much have a clear example of what this manga is about. The children are like the people of Japan in this series-- they're afraid. Some of them don't really seem to be afraid, some seem angry or maybe just slightly concerned or perhaps just questioning. But for the most part, they're afraid. And ... Jun 2, 2016
Say you were a 19 year old like myself and after getting home from work one day someone at your door hands you a piece of paper that informs you that you’re going to inevitably die in the next 24 hours. How would you react? What would you do with your remaining time? Who would you spend it with?
In this series ‘Ikigami’ we follow the main character a deliverer of these death notices and the various receivers. In this Japanese dystopian society a National Prosperity Act has been passed in which one out of one thousand people between the ages of 18-24 will die ... Jul 25, 2020
no spoilers
this is my first read for this mangaka mase Motoro and boy i did not expect it to be this good, i just kept reading i enjoyed it a lot. it was a surprise because i never heard of it before but i stumbled on it by a coincidence. the art is very good to look at and the characters are well build and what makes it even more enjoyable to me is that he separated the main theme into episodes three chapters each built around the main theme about the value of life and how to build a good society and to be a ... Aug 28, 2020
I used to have a friend described by another friend as "better in doses". He was okay, but volatile; basic neutral evil archetype. "Ikigami" is certainly in that category.
If you thought the reasoning behind Battle Royale was the most extreme measure you've ever heard of, you've not heard of Ikigami. Think government lottery Death Note. The art is very good, a nice style that is easy to take in. Usually. The story can get very dark at times, humanity at it's least human dark. Themes like that are best taken alongside something cute and funny to decompress, and ... Nov 22, 2020
tl;dr: An episodic story that tells stories about the value of life in an interesting manner but that doesn’t land the ending in terms of wrapping up the overarching story.
This manga certainly has an interesting concept. That people prize their lives more strongly and truly live when they think they’re going to die isn’t that novel, but that being tied into a dystopian system with the goal of achieving such an effect certainly is. A work where the government arbitrarily kills off 1 in 1000 citizens, I would normally expect to be about fighting the system. And while that does play a part, primarily towards ... |