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Shaman King Kanzenban · review

★
Top reader Apr 1, 2018 · 5 min read
↓ Not recommended
3 /10

Spoiler warning

This review may discuss plot details.

(Check out my profile for a link to my site containing more up-to-date reviews and bonus media!) At the end of my review for the original printing of Shaman King, I wrote that it was perhaps a blessing that Takei wasn’t able to give the series a proper ending under the assumption that it would only lead to further disappointment from the manga’s declining quality. Four years after Shaman King ended, Takei resurrected the series with Complete Collection (Kanzenban) and proved me right. Shaman King’s downward spiral picks up right where it left off—if anything, it accelerates. This makes the rushed, progressive train wreck of the manga'ssecond half look like a Machiavellian masterpiece. There’s so much to go over here in the broad strokes, but to avoid laying down the same bricks, just apply absolutely everything I said negatively about the original series to this one, and then add the following.

The most immediate assault from this manga on your senses is, of course, directed at your eyes. Takei’s initial graffiti-inspired art style of the original manga deteriorated over the course of its run into something blander, but it remained distinctive and pleasant to look at. In these additional chapters, it’s as if Takei’s hands have gotten amnesia.

It’s one thing to lose your tempo a bit after not drawing these characters for a few years, but this art looks like it was drawn by an entirely different person. It’s practically sketchbook quality; something you’d find on storyboards rather than a final publication. The shading, if it can be called such, is truly horrendous. Nearly every page is illustrated in only pitch black and the blinding whites of the background. The old images of Shaman King look like “bootleg” variations now, and seeing the fights we missed is actually a curse considering their incomprehensible "ink blot" choreography.

If one thing hasn’t changed, it’s that describing these action sequences as “fights” is still very generous. Takei gets the great opportunity to not have to rush the finale of his popular manga, and he takes full advantage of that opportunity by rushing it harder than ever before. It’s downright comical at this point how rote this series has become for its author, with foreshadowed conflicts being settled in a single chapter or skipped in their entirety.

The payoff in this revised climax is every bit as unsatisfying as it was originally, only far longer in its delivery. Numerous supporting cast characters never get their motivations or previous actions properly explained, if at all, and bearing special mention is the central villain. Hao’s entire motivation being explained in a side chapter is an absolute joke, and his actions in the final chapters of this series contradict a hundred things he said or did prior. Hao's subtle guidance or support of Yoh and any possible nuance to his morality is thrown out the window in order to indulge in a stock, maniacally evil antagonist.

The final battle between Hao and Yoh’s group after he has literally become God, and the justification for how everything is resolved doesn’t even deserve to be called “nonsense.” We have plenty of time to realize how undeserved and forced it all is as we see Takei draw every single character in the entire series, looking uglier than ever, spouting platitudes about the power of love defeating actual omnipotence. It’s a true family reunion.

This is truly awful. If I can’t persuade someone to not read the entirety of the Shaman King manga, hopefully I can at least persuade them to not read the Complete Collection. It’s not worth it. This fails to live up to any standards of the original series. It’s ugly, stupid, meandering, redundant, and a complete waste of an opportunity to set things right. It’s impossible for me to believe Takei put the passion behind this that he claims in the afterword, as it fails and cuts corners in every way conceivable. Any goodwill I had towards the original manga for its likable cast and better moments is utterly sapped by this addendum. Don’t spend your valuable time on this one. After all, the author seemingly didn’t.

Despite my borderline hatred for this entry, props to Mankin-Trad for picking up Viz’s slack and translating the remainder of the franchise. It’s a fine translation, though far from ideal. It was frustrating going from Viz’s high-quality localization to this. After 32 officially translated volumes, it was somehow found fit to throw readers a curveball by using completely different terminology, name spellings, and untranslated bits such as honorifics. Sound effects are left untranslated, which makes following the hideous action scenes even more difficult. But above all else, the most egregious thing was the embarrassing addition of harsh swearing to all of the characters. And with all that goddamn shit, I’m fucking out.

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