Chainsaw Man fans have been eating well for a minute now with its weekly manga chapters continuing to be short, sweet, and impactful; Mappa’s Reze Arc film being good kino you can watch at home before that other anime award-nominated film; and season two now in production. But you can’t consume one piece of media forever and call it a good diet, which is why I’ve been recommending new material to diversify folks’ palates with something similar to Tatsuki Fujimoto’s vibe. Today, however, I’m not gonna recommend not one, but two manga folks should read: Dorohedoro and Dai Dark. Not because they’re similar to Chainsaw Man, but because their creator inspired its whole flow.
I’ve long held the belief that female mangaka, by and large, have a way better batting average with dropping certified classic manga than their male counterparts. Look no further than Rumiko Takahashi, who is making works like Inuyasha, Ranma 1/2, and Urusei Yatsura; or Hiromu Arakawa, making Fullmetal Alchemist. Takahashi’s works continue to influence the modern landscape of manga, with series like Gokurakugai and Dandadan paying homage to the series in their very DNA. Meanwhile, Arakawa’s FMA is still widely and rightfully regarded as a masterpiece that fans readily recommend to folks at the start of their manga and anime journeys, to give them a taste of what the medium has to offer.
But one thing that’s exceedingly rare to see is a mangaka who can bridge the chasm that exists between fans of sci-fi and fantasy with works that excel at both. So far, no one is doing that quite like Q Hayashida with her dark fantasy series, Dorohedoro, and her sci-fi epic, Dai Dark.
In fact, the former is what Fujimoto himself jokingly said Chainsaw Man was a ripoff of (alongside Jujutsu Kaisen) when his series was adapted into an anime by Mappa. While the two share Mappa as an animation studio, Fujimoto’s joke has a lot of truth in it when you look at the series itself and how it jumps from being macabre to hilarious on a dime. So, in that spirit, let’s dive into what Dorohedoro is all about first.
Dorohedoro is best described as a manga with a split personality, veering between ultra-violent dark fantasy and deadpan comedy. It follows Caiman, a man who wakes up with no memories, a giant lizard head, and a mysterious person living inside the void of his mouth. Convinced his current predicament is the work of sorcerers, who’re notorious for crossing through dimensional doorways to the Hole, a grimy, dense city Caiman calls home, to test on humans, he teams up with his best friend Nikaido to hunt down every sorcerer they can find.
Their plan: shove a sorcerer’s head into Caiman’s mouth and let the man inside declare whether they’re the one who cursed him. Their investigations (if we’ll call them that) put them in the crosshairs of En, a powerful sorcerer crime boss whose subordinates keep winding up dead. So, En sends his enforcers, Shin and Noi, to eliminate them, kicking off a chaotic cat-and-mouse war between two worlds that only gets stranger, bloodier, and funnier as it unfurls.
While Mappa’s anime adaptation of the series is great, with a unique fusion of 2D and 3D CG animation, a soundtrack that’s a real bop, and a second season due later this year, there’s honestly no comparison to the artistry of Hayashida’s manga. Pound for pound, Dorohedoro is leagues more gnarly a read than Chainsaw Man when it comes to the huge wipeouts its sorcerers experience. Like, we’re talking Mortal Kombat-level gore. Plus, its panel work is truly a marvel to behold, giving sharp clarity on every gruesome unaliving on par with the late Kentaru Miura’s penmanship on Berserk.
Don’t let the series’ grimdark imagery fool you. Dorohedoro is overflowing with as much grotesque body horror as it is cutesy, disarming charm. In fact, it might be the closest thing in manga to a physical embodiment of that razor-thin line between horror and comedy. Just as often as either side of the aisle is beating the lights out of each other, they’re also shooting the shit, cooking gyoza, eating under the loving warmth of a kotatsu, or making movies of their exploits. Its cast is irresistibly cool, from its gentlemanly himbo bruisers, Caiman and Shin, to its statuesque muscle mommies, Noi and Nikaido.

You’re bound to find someone to like in its ensemble (I’m partial to En) because while the series has a lot of spinning plates, it never fails to give everyone play as characters worth rooting for and white-knuckling when they inevitably cross each other’s paths. Plus, its grimy world, teeming with sorcerers, bounty hunters, giant bugs, and devils, feels so vividly lived-in, with world-building so engrossing that it feels like a miracle to witness it get even better with every chapter.
🦎Dorohedoro Season 2
Worldwide streaming starts on April 1!
Check out the brand-new chaotic and stylish key visual.Season 1 will be available on even more platforms on March 8, so catch up before Season 2 begins!
Stay tuned for more updates!#Dorohedoro #TOHOanimation pic.twitter.com/m93P8Rhh8T
— TOHO animation EN (@TOHOanimationEN) February 8, 2026
It’s no wonder fans have been losing their minds for years, begging more people to read it and praying that Mappa puts down all of its other projects and gets back to it as soon as possible. Thankfully, there’s more than enough time for curious folks to check out its manga and watch the first season of the anime, which’ll soon leave Netflix jail, by the time season two arrives in April. But if you’re looking for something with more of a sci-fi edge, look no further than Dai Dark.

While Dai Dark‘s cover gives the impression that it’s another dark fantasy series, this one actually takes place in outer space while maintaining the winning quality of Dorohedoro‘s unique art style in a different story, in a similar fashion to mangaka Hiro Mashima reusing his “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” character designs from Fairy Tail. Like Dorohedoro, it too follows a teenager named Zaha Sanko. Only this time, instead of hounding for answers to an overarching mystery, Sanko is the one being hunted across the galaxy. You see, legend has it Sanka is built differently. More specifically, there’s a rumor that’s spread across the galaxy that whoever collects his bones, Dragon Ball-style, will have any wish granted to them.

Sanko teams up with Avakian, his sentient skeleton backpack; Shimada Death, the gender-ambiguous physical embodiment of, well, death; and Hajime Damemaru, an immortal man. Together, they’re “four little shits.” They trek across the stars, battling religious cultists as they hunt down whoever cursed him. Yes, that sounds pretty much like Dorohedoro‘s premise, but trust me when I say that Dorohedoro in space is as cool a premise as Dorohedoro is on its own.

While Dai Dark is a touch more aimless fun than Dorohedoro‘s clearer logline for where the story is going, the series spending so much time dedicated to its misfits’ downtime to goof off is a huge part of its charm. If anything, their ignoring the main quest for sidequest funsies—like making “meapwiches,” arguing over naming a pet spider, or haggling over selling the bones of their would-be assailants as currency to their Resident Evil 4-looking-ass merchant, Misetani Box, as they blast off in their dog-shaped spaceship—has big Farscape energy, wrapped in a scary-cute manga package.

The only caveat to Dai Dark is that it’s still ongoing (and is currently on hiatus). So if you have any interest in getting in on the ground floor with a creator Fujimoto has jokingly admitted to “ripping off,” we’d recommend checking out Dorohedoro first, what with it having more going on, and then switching lanes to check out Dai Dark before hitting hiatusville. Though if you’re more partial to sci-fi than fantasy, by all means crack open the spine of Dai Dark first. The more people know how goated Hayashida is, the better.
Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.
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#Love #Chainsaw #Man #Read #Dorohedoro #Dai #Dark #Immediately





![‘The Ghost in the Shell’ Director, Character Designer on Keeping Motoko True to the Manga
Dan Da Dan anime studio Science SARU’s adaptation of The Ghost in the Shell is finally streaming on Prime Video, and its pilot episode looks like a ’90s anime fever dream in the best way possible. Major Motoko Kusanagi kicks all the ass, its soundtrack is a bop, and its action sequences are a chef’s kiss. Don’t just take our word for it; check out the trailer below and see for yourself how Science SARU cooked once again. [embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ahZn4dVCbvs[/embed] Ahead of its premiere, io9 got to chat with director Mokochan and character designer Shuhei Handa at Anime Expo about how their vision for Masamune Shirow’s seminal cyberpunk manga came to be, as well as a couple of pointed fandom-centric questions for fans who’ve been dying to see Major Motoko Kusanagi realized in all her goofy glory. Left: Shuhei Handa, right: Mokochan. © Isaiah Colbert/io9 This interview was edited for clarity. Isaiah Colbert, io9: From Keep Your Hands Off Eizouken!, Devilman Crybaby, Inu-Oh, Scott Pilgrim Takes Off, and Dan Da Dan to Sanda and Jaadugar: A Witch in Mongolia, Science SARU has built an impressive portfolio and reputation for making bold, expressive, and experimental anime. What about The Ghost in the Shell made it feel like a natural fit as the studio’s next project?
Mokochan: For all of the works done by Science SARU, using animation to do storytelling is very important. That’s why we use a lot of hand-drawn animation in it. For The Ghost in the Shell, the most important thing is to use the visuals to capture its world. It’s the same policy with other series as well.
TVアニメ「#攻殻機動隊 THE GHOST IN THE SHELL」⋱ご視聴ありがとうございました⋰ ◤◢◤◢◤◢◤◢◤◢◤◢◤◢ 第01話より草薙素子と荒巻大輔の出会い 👩🏻 🐵迫力の原画を大公開! 原画|小島崇史 さん ◤◢◤◢◤◢◤◢◤◢◤◢◤◢https://t.co/wICYD3OlUm pic.twitter.com/6rNlJdXZZk — サイエンスSARU (@sciencesaru) July 7, 2026 io9: From the jump, The Ghost in the Shell marks a stark tonal shift—a return—towards Masamune Shirow’s lighter, more mischievous vision of the cyberpunk epic. What led Science SARU to pivot away from the austere, military tone that Mamoru Oshii’s 1995 film would go on to cement as the franchise’s vibe for decades? Mokochan: We didn’t intentionally try to change the tone from how director Mamoru Oshii did previously because the concept for making this new series is to base it on the original manga, so we already had our own way of making this one.
© Masamune Shirow/Kodansha io9: In an era when people often use AI to cheaply mimic retro anime aesthetics, the new Ghost in the Shell feels like a deliberate rejection of AI’s pervasiveness in the arts—where every frame in the trailers looks unmistakably hand‑crafted. It’s a phenomenon that’s certainly paradoxical, considering that the manga prophesied how such technologies would be utilized in the not-so-far-off year of 2029. What’s Science SARU’s stance on AI, and what specific animation techniques did it use most to capture the show’s aesthetic through the power of collective human artistry? Mokochan: One of the concepts of the original manga is about the mysterious part of the human being. So we wanted to honor how the original creator captured the world and how we express all of the story in the original manga. So we wanted to follow the same concept using the same method to show humanity by using hand-drawn art. We prefer to just use our arms to draw all of the animation. Handa: It’s because the main concept is about the human body, so that’s why we prefer hand-drawn art over AI.
© Science SARU io9: Major Kusanagi has long been read as a bisexual icon in the West, especially because of Shirow’s famous island-escapade chapter with her gal pals, which has been lost in some Western reprints of the original manga. She’s also considerably goofier in the manga, a trait fans lovingly call a “bisexual disaster.” In what ways was it important for Science SARU to depict Kusanagi’s inherent goofball nature and her queerness in this adaptation, and what does portraying that side of her mean for a global audience in 2026? Mokochan: During the process of making the new series, we were actually very surprised by it because, compared to the original manga, a lot of the thoughts about sexuality are very advanced, exploring many possibilities. It’s not just about sexuality; it’s also about the human being, technology, and many other things. [The manga] accepts everything in the world. That was a very big surprise. We didn’t intend to modernize the content to make it fit the new era.
© Science SARU [The Ghost in the Shell producers’ note in regard to Science SARU’s adaptation of Motoko’s vacation scene from the original manga: “We had to adjust the depictions in the original work to match the rating.”] Handa: When we portray Kusanagi’s character, we like to bring out all the comical parts because they’re in the original manga. It’s kind of different how director Oshii portrays her in the previous series because, in those series, Kusanagi was not that expressive. We prefer to keep the authentic parts of the original manga, so we thought we definitely needed to keep the comical parts in the character, so that’s why we included that content. © Science SARU © Science SARU © Science SARU © Science SARU io9: As a fan of the series, I’ve seen Ghost in the Shell go through different iterations, reinterpretations, and reboots. And in that, Motoko’s design has changed in a way that reflects how different people interpret her. But while her outer shell is different, the themes—the ghost in the original story—remain in each adaptation. For Science SARU’s newer adaptation of The Ghost in the Shell, which themes from the original manga feel more prescient now than when it first came out?
Mokochan: Because the original intent of this project is to follow the original manga—not just Kusanagi, but also all the content and the world’s concept—we didn’t try to modernize any part of it. The creative team, all of whom are also big fans of the original manga. So, for the world, the story, the characters, and the theme, it’s all the same because we want to honor the original manga. ウオオオ攻殻機動隊1話にLOと作画監督で参加させていただきました!憧れの攻殻機動隊に関わることができて感激です🔥LOはセンターの子供が撃たれるあたりから脱走するところまで、作監は冒頭からOP前あたりまでです。少佐かっこよくて可愛かった〜!こちら担当LOのうちの1カットです🙏🏻#攻殻機動隊 pic.twitter.com/zUlxgD9fin — 宮かなえ (@miyakanae_) July 7, 2026 The Ghost in the Shell is streaming now on Prime Video. io9 is on the ground at Anime Expo 2026. We’ll be bringing you updates on all the biggest panels, screenings, and announcements, plus exclusive one-on-one interviews with the people behind some of the best and most popular anime around. You can check out all of io9’s Anime Expo coverage here. Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who. #Ghost #Shell #Director #Character #Designer #Keeping #Motoko #True #MangaAnime,Anime Expo,Science Saru,The Ghost in the Shell ‘The Ghost in the Shell’ Director, Character Designer on Keeping Motoko True to the Manga
Dan Da Dan anime studio Science SARU’s adaptation of The Ghost in the Shell is finally streaming on Prime Video, and its pilot episode looks like a ’90s anime fever dream in the best way possible. Major Motoko Kusanagi kicks all the ass, its soundtrack is a bop, and its action sequences are a chef’s kiss. Don’t just take our word for it; check out the trailer below and see for yourself how Science SARU cooked once again. [embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ahZn4dVCbvs[/embed] Ahead of its premiere, io9 got to chat with director Mokochan and character designer Shuhei Handa at Anime Expo about how their vision for Masamune Shirow’s seminal cyberpunk manga came to be, as well as a couple of pointed fandom-centric questions for fans who’ve been dying to see Major Motoko Kusanagi realized in all her goofy glory. Left: Shuhei Handa, right: Mokochan. © Isaiah Colbert/io9 This interview was edited for clarity. Isaiah Colbert, io9: From Keep Your Hands Off Eizouken!, Devilman Crybaby, Inu-Oh, Scott Pilgrim Takes Off, and Dan Da Dan to Sanda and Jaadugar: A Witch in Mongolia, Science SARU has built an impressive portfolio and reputation for making bold, expressive, and experimental anime. What about The Ghost in the Shell made it feel like a natural fit as the studio’s next project?
Mokochan: For all of the works done by Science SARU, using animation to do storytelling is very important. That’s why we use a lot of hand-drawn animation in it. For The Ghost in the Shell, the most important thing is to use the visuals to capture its world. It’s the same policy with other series as well.
TVアニメ「#攻殻機動隊 THE GHOST IN THE SHELL」⋱ご視聴ありがとうございました⋰ ◤◢◤◢◤◢◤◢◤◢◤◢◤◢ 第01話より草薙素子と荒巻大輔の出会い 👩🏻 🐵迫力の原画を大公開! 原画|小島崇史 さん ◤◢◤◢◤◢◤◢◤◢◤◢◤◢https://t.co/wICYD3OlUm pic.twitter.com/6rNlJdXZZk — サイエンスSARU (@sciencesaru) July 7, 2026 io9: From the jump, The Ghost in the Shell marks a stark tonal shift—a return—towards Masamune Shirow’s lighter, more mischievous vision of the cyberpunk epic. What led Science SARU to pivot away from the austere, military tone that Mamoru Oshii’s 1995 film would go on to cement as the franchise’s vibe for decades? Mokochan: We didn’t intentionally try to change the tone from how director Mamoru Oshii did previously because the concept for making this new series is to base it on the original manga, so we already had our own way of making this one.
© Masamune Shirow/Kodansha io9: In an era when people often use AI to cheaply mimic retro anime aesthetics, the new Ghost in the Shell feels like a deliberate rejection of AI’s pervasiveness in the arts—where every frame in the trailers looks unmistakably hand‑crafted. It’s a phenomenon that’s certainly paradoxical, considering that the manga prophesied how such technologies would be utilized in the not-so-far-off year of 2029. What’s Science SARU’s stance on AI, and what specific animation techniques did it use most to capture the show’s aesthetic through the power of collective human artistry? Mokochan: One of the concepts of the original manga is about the mysterious part of the human being. So we wanted to honor how the original creator captured the world and how we express all of the story in the original manga. So we wanted to follow the same concept using the same method to show humanity by using hand-drawn art. We prefer to just use our arms to draw all of the animation. Handa: It’s because the main concept is about the human body, so that’s why we prefer hand-drawn art over AI.
© Science SARU io9: Major Kusanagi has long been read as a bisexual icon in the West, especially because of Shirow’s famous island-escapade chapter with her gal pals, which has been lost in some Western reprints of the original manga. She’s also considerably goofier in the manga, a trait fans lovingly call a “bisexual disaster.” In what ways was it important for Science SARU to depict Kusanagi’s inherent goofball nature and her queerness in this adaptation, and what does portraying that side of her mean for a global audience in 2026? Mokochan: During the process of making the new series, we were actually very surprised by it because, compared to the original manga, a lot of the thoughts about sexuality are very advanced, exploring many possibilities. It’s not just about sexuality; it’s also about the human being, technology, and many other things. [The manga] accepts everything in the world. That was a very big surprise. We didn’t intend to modernize the content to make it fit the new era.
© Science SARU [The Ghost in the Shell producers’ note in regard to Science SARU’s adaptation of Motoko’s vacation scene from the original manga: “We had to adjust the depictions in the original work to match the rating.”] Handa: When we portray Kusanagi’s character, we like to bring out all the comical parts because they’re in the original manga. It’s kind of different how director Oshii portrays her in the previous series because, in those series, Kusanagi was not that expressive. We prefer to keep the authentic parts of the original manga, so we thought we definitely needed to keep the comical parts in the character, so that’s why we included that content. © Science SARU © Science SARU © Science SARU © Science SARU io9: As a fan of the series, I’ve seen Ghost in the Shell go through different iterations, reinterpretations, and reboots. And in that, Motoko’s design has changed in a way that reflects how different people interpret her. But while her outer shell is different, the themes—the ghost in the original story—remain in each adaptation. For Science SARU’s newer adaptation of The Ghost in the Shell, which themes from the original manga feel more prescient now than when it first came out?
Mokochan: Because the original intent of this project is to follow the original manga—not just Kusanagi, but also all the content and the world’s concept—we didn’t try to modernize any part of it. The creative team, all of whom are also big fans of the original manga. So, for the world, the story, the characters, and the theme, it’s all the same because we want to honor the original manga. ウオオオ攻殻機動隊1話にLOと作画監督で参加させていただきました!憧れの攻殻機動隊に関わることができて感激です🔥LOはセンターの子供が撃たれるあたりから脱走するところまで、作監は冒頭からOP前あたりまでです。少佐かっこよくて可愛かった〜!こちら担当LOのうちの1カットです🙏🏻#攻殻機動隊 pic.twitter.com/zUlxgD9fin — 宮かなえ (@miyakanae_) July 7, 2026 The Ghost in the Shell is streaming now on Prime Video. io9 is on the ground at Anime Expo 2026. We’ll be bringing you updates on all the biggest panels, screenings, and announcements, plus exclusive one-on-one interviews with the people behind some of the best and most popular anime around. You can check out all of io9’s Anime Expo coverage here. Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who. #Ghost #Shell #Director #Character #Designer #Keeping #Motoko #True #MangaAnime,Anime Expo,Science Saru,The Ghost in the Shell](https://gizmodo.com/app/uploads/2026/07/The-Ghost-in-the-Shell-Mokachan-Shuhei-Handa.jpg)







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