
Links go to search results. Availability varies by region.
RaW HERO
41
6
Finished
Sep 25, 2018 to Aug 11, 2020
6.3/10
Average Review Score
54%
Recommend It
13
Reviews Worldwide
Raw Hero is a work that alot of people reading it probably have an in-grained bias towards, as Akira Hiramoto lost a great deal of good will among fans after the controversial ending to Prison School. This being his first project since PS ended, readers tend to hold that ending against Raw Hero. Putting aside real life events, is Raw Hero any good? It is one of the weirdest works ive ever read, with bizarre plot plots, insane character motivations and backstories, extremely over the top fanservice, and you're basically more than halfway done the manga before the plot even starts. Point by point: Story: Superweird. Sets itself up as kind of an X-Men superhero story, before becoming a crossdressing harem romance, with some chapters of pure sex comedy and some chapters of shonen fight scenes. I'm honestly not sure it even has a plot, given how seemingly random everything is. At the very least, the ending is extremely dissapointing, giving zero resolution to the romance, the superhero plots, and literally not mentioning what happened to a few of the major characters. The manga might be trying to make some kind of point that fixating on the larger plot is pointless and you should just have fun along the way, but it just comes off as disjointed and unsatisfying. I'd give it 4/10. Art: Looks very similar to Prison School, which is to say really great. It emphasizes a sense of photorealism, which really highlights the clash between the insane events and the realistic visuals. Hiramoto also draws maybe the most fetishy manga women I've ever seen outside of Hentai, so if you enjoy that style you'll like this. 9/10 Character: Characters are polarizing, since they're not very fleshed out and seem to more be tools for comedy than actual human beings with personalities. I wanted to avoid making this whole review a comparison to Prison School, but the characters in PS had fleshed out personalities and were easy to become emotionally invested in, which I can't really say was the case for Raw Hero. Enjoyment: Despite having so many flaws on a technichal level, the work is so idiosyncratic its hard not to at least have some fun with it. Hiramoto has a weirdly philosophical sense of humor and an earnest approach to life, so there are parts of it that are fun to read, but you have to get through the thick layer of bizarre crap and unexplained plot points to get to it. Overall: 5/10. Its a work with alot of flaws, but at the very least it will stand out in your memory. Final thoughts: Prison School's ending pissed people off because it was a manga they loved and the ending robbed them of a satisfying conclusion. While this ending was also rushed and unsatisfying (it may have been axed prematurely) I don't actually care enough about the story to be that upset by it. Thanks to AloneScans for making it available in english
In a world where some of humanity possesses special abilities, those who use their powers for truth and justice are called "heros," and those who use them for evil are called "fiends." In the midst of all this, the unemployed youth Chiaki, who is taking care of his younger siblings, is looking for a job. One day, on his way to a job interview, he notices the presence of a pervert and without thinking twice, jumps in to help the victim. This sense of justice is what leads Chiaki into a battle between good and evil, truth and deceit, and light and darkness. (Source: MU)
HOLY SHIT this manga is fucking awesome as hell an ecchi, action packed, emotion masterpiece definitely check this out if you're fans of series like gantz and gigant. The story: 9 honestly just go into this series blind, this series is action packed and EXTREMELY ecchi, (same author as prison school, so duh) also has amazing pacing. The Art: 10 Brilliant art, makes the story flow so well. As good as some other works like berserk, gantz vagabond etc..The characters: 10 The characters are probably the most compelling part of this manga, the mystery of Jelly E Fish is fucking awesome. Enjoyment: 10 WORDS CANT DESCRIBE HOW ENJOYABLE THIS SERIES IS JUST READ IT Overall:10 Just brilliant, masterpiece
I have never read such a bad work from any author that clearly has several mental and personal issues that he needs to work on before committing himself to a manga, as they clearly leak into the story creating a completely apalling experience when reading it, as you can only feel the mental issues of the mangaka hidden behind a layer of irony called plot. You can clearly see that the author is not trying to write a coherent plot, nor trying to develop a set of characters and making a character focused manga (like for example, Vagabond), but he's just trying to dump as many'bizarre' sexually-inspired situations. The manga reads as a outlet for a sexually repressed male. Expanding on the characters - the manga could have benefited much more from a multi-focused approach, developing more the main character brothers, as well as the recruiter with glasses. In short - this work is not to be considered a 'real' manga perse, but just the ramblings of a starting mangaka.
tl;dr: A manga with fantastic art and great comedy, but a nonsensical plot and absurdly awful ending. RaW Hero is a superhero manga I guess, but that’s not quite right. Rather, it’s a really difficult manga to describe because it’s entirely nonsensical. It’s world building is centered around how in Japan people with special abilities had appeared, but the government was covering it up. As a result a group called the Special Ability Liberation Front (SALF) came into being demanding the release of information on special abilities. They became incredibly aggressive in their demands and somehow gained the ability to gain special abilities through surgery, thoughin the process becoming what are called Monsters. As a result the government put together a team called the Justice Management Team (JMT) composed special ability users called Heroes to combat SALF as well as fight crime in general. OK, so that sounds like the set up to a standard superhero vs supervillain story with the supervillains possibly having a point, though barely. The thing is that it makes absolutely no sense within the context of what SALF actually does. SALF literally never does anything except hand out flyers and throw around paint. They’re pretty much just protesters and not even violent ones. It makes absolutely no sense how they gained the technology to give their members special abilities. It also makes no sense why they would use said technology because nothing they do ever requires it. And thus it makes no sense why the JST was made to combat them. Especially considering how extreme JST gets in trying to stop them, generally doing far more harm than SALF ever does. I suppose you could it a parody of superheroes but that doesn’t quite fit either because the superhero aspect is pretty much never relevant. The story actually focuses on a regular guy named Chiaki, who desperately needs a job to take of his two younger brothers. Thus, he accepts a job request from JMT to go undercover as a part of SALF. On top of that due to various circumstances he ends up going undercover as a woman, and thus needs to cross dress whenever he goes to work. But once again, his work doesn’t involve any of what you would expect from the henchman of an evil organization. Rather, the vast majority of work he does do involves printing out, folding flyers, and putting them in mailboxes. He occasionally gets swept in other things, but they’re really random without any sort of cohesiveness. As such, the overarching plot in general doesn’t matter whatever it is. Rather, what’s important is more so the characters, their interactions, and their relationships. The characters certainly aren’t written all that deep. Rather, they’re all pretty flat with no real character arcs or anything like that. Despite that, they’re still a lot of fun because the manga is jam packed with humor and unexpected nonsense. Even when things are supposed to be kind of serious they’re still wrapped up in comedy. This results in things at a lower level also making as much sense as they do at a higher level, which is to say not a lick of sense at all. But it’s still amusing to read. On top of that, the art is fantastic to the degree that this is a manga that might just be worth reading just for the art. It’s incredibly high quality throughout with a unique style that’s used incredibly well in such a way that characters come through really well. All of that’s enough to make you like a few of the characters and get invested in them and where their stories, however little sense they make, will go. That’s what makes the ending such a gut punch. The manga definitely got rushed into an ending. That isn’t that big of a deal as it’s pretty common and often out of the mangaka’s control. Thus, I don’t blame the mangaka for it being rushed. What I do blame him for however, is that the ending felt intentionally malicious to it’s characters and thus an F you to the readers that got invested in them. Yes, I know this author is known for bad ending, but this is definitely his worst, or I suppose I should say his worst so far. This was a manga that never made sense in the first place. Plot wise it could have done anything at all and it wouldn’t have felt out of place. But what it chose to do was an ending that did incredibly wrong by the manga’s best character. Seriously, one of the panels in the last chapter is going to haunt me forever. I suppose that’s an achievement in and of itself, but it’s one that a manga like this should not have.
All of the elements that usually make manga bad (over the top fan service, unexplained and inconsistent plot, bizzare character choices, off the wall progression of events and so on) somehow work brilliantly here. At moments I was laughing so hard my stomach hurt afterwards. It should not work, but it does. I guess it's necessary to read it with a certain mindset to enjoy it. A lot of people hated the ending of Prison School, I on the other hand loved it, because I saw the whole series as a troll-job from the start. There is always a certain point that makes youquestion the author. Am I being trolled here? Is the manga bad, and the author thinks it's actually good, or is it bad on purpose? That was what the ending of Prison School felt like, the author trolling the audience. With Raw Hero I got that feeling right from the start. Certain red flags that would make me drop other manga series never made me drop Raw Hero. I felt that I was in good hands. That is what Raw Hero is as well a - troll job, a very well done and executed troll job, with great art, and a healthy pinch of insanity. I don't recommend it for everyone, but it's worth at least checking out. I am looking forward to further works from Hiramoto.