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Touring After the Apocalypse (終末ツーリング, Shūmatsu Tsūringu) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Sakae Saito. It began serialization in ASCII Media Works ' seinen manga magazine Dengeki Maoh in September 2020.
Eden: It's an Endless World! is a Japanese science fiction manga series written and illustrated by Hiroki Endo. It was published monthly in the Japanese magazine Monthly Afternoon . Eden is set in the near future, following a pandemic called closure virus which killed 15 percent of the world's population, crippled or disfigured many more, and ...
Post-apocalyptic anime and manga, set in a world or civilization that has been ravaged by nuclear war, plague, or some other general disaster.The time frame may be immediately after the catastrophe, focusing on the travails or psychology of survivors, or considerably later, often including the theme that the existence of pre-catastrophe civilization has been forgotten or mythologized.
Post-apocalyptic anime and manga (11 C, 108 P) S. Snowpiercer (7 P) ... Pages in category "Post-apocalyptic comics" The following 94 pages are in this category, out ...
Desert Punk (Japanese: 砂ぼうず, Hepburn: Sunabōzu) is a Japanese post-apocalyptic manga series written and illustrated by Masatoshi Usune, serialized in Enterbrain's Comic Beam from August 1997 to October 2020. The published chapters have been collected in 22 volumes.
Based on the 1982 manga, this animated film skips over the world war that led to apocalypse and takes viewers directly into a rebuilt, futuristic metropolis called Neo-Tokyo.
Manga series containing post-apocalyptic elements and taking place in a highly futuristic dystopian world Game 1990 War Rifts: A nuclear exchange triggers the return of Ley Lines and Interdimensional Rifts or portals. These Ley Lines and Portals subsequently cause several natural and supernatural disasters. Film 1990 Disease A Wind Named Amnesia
Ishiguro aimed to properly write "evil" in contrast to And Yet the Town Moves, so the post-apocalyptic world of Heavenly Delusion is far darker than his previous works'. [5] After drawing sketches of young characters suitable for the shōnen manga demographic, editorial members from Afternoon asked Ishiguro to write for their seinen magazine ...