If you liked
Blame!
|
...then you might like
Shoujo Shuumatsu Ryokou
|
While Girls Last Tour is more calming (lack of action) and more moe, they've both similiar artistic of Post Apocalyptic vibes. They both have journey through the remnant of their ancestor. The building on both manga are also interesting.
Very similar post-apocalyptic vibes and themes.
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Recommended by triton6783
Blame! was a big influence for Girls' Last Tour as stated by the creator herself in an interview, even borrowing ideas like calling the world a 'megastructure' or 'city'. They both share similar atmospheres, art and the main concept of a pair travelling through a bleak, unexplained post-apocalyptic future, but Blame!'s an action-packed story with few dialogues, whereas Girl's Last Tour has a more soothing, slow feel to it tinged with existential musings.
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Recommended by Satyr_icon
Both are very atmospheric, using the full potential of their scenery, which are mostly huge buildings that emphasize how frightening their worlds are and how lonely and helpless the characters be in their journey. Blame is more vague and subjective while Girls' Last Tour discuss deeper his themes, but both visually deliver a great immersion into their worlds and in the journey of the characters.
Mostly empty megacity
MC(s) basically always alone traveling
actually meet other characters a few times though
Obscure goal for the journey
Turns from slice of life travelling to grim suddenly towards the end
art is focused a lot on mechanical designs and the sheer size of the megacity
Not much text, more art (Blame having even more art/text ratio)
Not very long to read the entire thing
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Recommended by Comander-07
Travelling through remnants of long go civilizations and their encounters with its inhabitants make up most of the series.
Both stories involve a pair moving through an apocalyptic world, they don't explain the cause of the Apocalypse but instead show how the characters live through it, where they learn and craft their own journey. Blame! differs being a hardcore violent cyberpunk built around the idea of escapism. While Girls' Last Tour is a much gentler iyashikei manga that goes to focus more on the characters interaction with the world as they learn and discover things of the past. Overall, if your looking for a story built from a journey through an apocalyptic world, you will likely enjoy both series.
A melancholy post-apocalyptic series about a pair of wanderers amidst the vast ruins of a long-dead civilisation.
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Recommended by ghoulsteak