
Links go to search results. Availability varies by region.
俺はまだ本気出してないだけ
36
5
Finished
Jan 25, 2007 to Jun 25, 2012
9.0/10
Average Review Score
100%
Recommend It
2
Reviews Worldwide
This is a manga written for adults. If you are going through a quarter life crisis or mid life crisis, hate your job or plain lost in life, this manga is for you. It depicts the challenge of everyday struggles most people can identify with and makes you feel like less of a failure by pretty much saying everybody around you feels the same way, fighting their own battles and suffering alone. And then it shows the story of how someone (who friends and family have pretty much relegated to the loser basket) can achieve a small success through sheer determination and self-belief, and how muchof a motivation this is to the people around him. And that small successes can be as important and inspiring as big ones. This manga has a good message to spread about life. The art is hilarious and so are parts of the story. It will keep surprising you.
This is the story of a forty-year-old salary man who quits his job to pursue his dream of becoming a manga artist—and the family that has to put up with him. While not terribly unhappy, Shizuo Oguro can't fight the feeling that something in his life just isn't right, so he walks away from his stable (yet boring) day job to embark on a journey of self-discovery. Unfortunately for his family, this journey also involves playing video games all day while his teenage daughter and elderly father support him. Will Shizuo succeed in creating a true manga masterpiece or will he be just another drop-out living a life of slack? (Source: SigIkki)
I think there are quite a few mangas that portray the middle-aged salaryman having a mid-life crisis, but perhaps not one quite like this. Perhaps that is because, for all the talk about pursuing dreams, the main character is not a very admirable man that you would expect from these kinds of stories. Rather, he is a self-absorbed slacker and all-around loser, with a passion that fades as quickly as it burns. The other main characters are equally amounts pitiful, chasing happiness that almost seems unattainable. There is a very dark comedy to these aspects of the story, as well as a general melancholy thatfollows every character. In some ways, that makes the story feel more "real," but it also makes it feel like you're just reading a story about hopelessness. That's why when the story itself chooses to end on a more obvious hopeful note, I am not sure if that was the correct decision. Perhaps it would have been better to keep the implications subtle, but that I just a personal opinion on my part.