Nightmare Maker |
Escrever análise
Se tornar senhor
|
Alternativas:
Synonyms: Sekai wa Subete Kimi no Mono, Balance
Japanese: NIGHTMARE MAKER
Autor:
Cuvie
Modelo:
Mangá
Volumes:
6
Capítulos:
48
Status:
Finished
Publicar:
2008-02-19 to 2012-08-21
Serialização:
Young Champion Retsu
Lendo Quero ler Ler Retirar |
Lendo
Quero ler
Ler
Retirar
4.5
(2 Votos)
|
50.00%
50.00%
0.00%
0.00%
0.00%
|
0 Lendo
0 Quero ler
0 Ler
Alternativas:
Synonyms: Sekai wa Subete Kimi no Mono, Balance
Japanese: NIGHTMARE MAKER
Japanese: NIGHTMARE MAKER
Autor:
Cuvie
Modelo:
Mangá
Volumes:
6
Capítulos:
48
Status:
Finished
Publicar:
2008-02-19 to 2012-08-21
Serialização:
Young Champion Retsu
Pontuação
4.5
2 Votos
|
50.00%
50.00%
0.00%
0.00%
0.00%
|
0 Lendo
0 Quero ler
0 Ler
Resumo
Uchida is a high school student genius who created a device that is supposed to make people have good dreams but he always had bad dreams when he tried it on himself. One day, he caught the school doctor sleeping at the clinic and decided to try the device on her. It turned out that it works surprisingly well on her and that she wanted to buy the device from him. He then tries it on his classmates and it became quite popular with the rest of the class as people start lining up to borrow it. Meanwhile, there isgrowing concern that users of the device are starting to have difficulties differentiating dreams from reality...
(Source: MangaHelpers)
Included one-shots:
Volume 1: Sekai wa Subete Kimi no Mono, Balance
(Source: MangaHelpers)
Included one-shots:
Volume 1: Sekai wa Subete Kimi no Mono, Balance
Personagens
Avaliações (2)
Escrever análise
Nightmare Maker review
A mixed feeling about this manga. This work explores the theme of reality vs expectation/dreams/hopes, but the authors' stance is poorly supported. The author certainly concludes with a statement, but I think that this conclusion wasn't concluded well throughout the work.
Story (POSSIBLE SPOILERS): a simple story of boy wanting girl, but girl doesn't want boy, so boy wants to impress girl. A definitive resolution to this, with clear conflict and resolution. Characters: back-story and background of the boy (Uchida) is not very well established, and just given by the author as something we're supposed to accept. The girl (Akari) is established much better. The most likely antagonist (Maki; I say "most likely" because there doesn't seem to be a particular antagonist, but Maki says, behaves and does things that would classify her as an antagonist) comes out of nowhere and her development and arc are poorly handled. This is not a deal-breaker, as what's happening during the work is what is interesting and what we're supposed to care about. Art: clearly 2000s art. I believe that comics, cartoons and manga are fundamentally a visual form of art/communication, therefore art style is critical. All-in-all, I like the art. |