
Links go to search results. Availability varies by region.
ă€ăłăăčăżăŒZ
187
21
Finished
Jun 13, 2013 to Jun 15, 2017
8.0/10
Average Review Score
100%
Recommend It
1
Reviews Worldwide
There is plenty of clever manga. Manga that have wisdom however, there is considerably less of these. But I would count Investor Z among those. It is clever, sure, it wouldnât work without it, but one of its charms is how itâs applicable to real life. One could think of Investor Z as a self-help book about success that has a story, though that would be a bit disservice to Investor Z considering the average quality of those self-help books. The story is woven quite naturally and is grounded in reality â it doesnât require much belief suspending. One of the most important parts ofthese âbattle of witsâ kind of manga are the stakes. You could either have the protagonist wager their lives or bodies, or you could have them already starting with huge fund they are going to risk. But if you want to have a protagonist that is young, and the battles being realistic (so no death games), how would you go about that? Investor Z has a nice solution â talented younglings are picked out and handed out money to manage by wealthy geezers, who have already build their fortune and this is something of a pet project for them. Curious but functional setting right from the start. What is also curious is how the story does not get boring. You would think that 21 volumes would be too much, but honestly the moment I finished the manga I wished for more. Every arc has some meaning, value, message. The story stays on theme but doesnât get stale, with multiple views and areas being shown to the reader. Well, technically I canât factcheck how accurate it is, but given how much the manga goes in depth regarding the matter, itâs either well researched or the author does great work at making shit up and making it sound believable. Considering there are various real world people shown throughout the manga, from western personalities like Steve Jobs, Elon Musk or Warren Buffett to for us less known personalities of the Japanese side, Iâd wager the info presented is reliable. Itâs not just those celebrity appearances that make the second cast interesting though, as rarely a character will be just one use and then discarded. More often the characters will get their own mini arc that show their tales. This is how the manga introduces the additional point of view into the matters and how it keeps from being stale. These are of course not fillers, as the writing quality does not drop even if itâs not the protagonist that the story currently follows. Of course, this manga wonât appeal that much to you if the economics and investing totally bore to you, but even if youâre not directly interested into these, consider giving Investor Z a try anyway if you enjoy manga with intellectual cast. Iâve said this manga is not only clever but also has wisdom, right? This doesnât mean youâre ready to go make your own investing just by reading Investor Z, unsurprisingly, but it means you will read about some interesting viewpoints at life and money, not to mention actual knowledge at how things work in business. The art might seem simple with the character design somewhat atypical, but thatâs just the authorâs style. It might take a moment to get used to, like with for example Fukumotoâs drawings, yet it definitely works for the purposed of this kind of manga, where dialogue is the majority of content and you might encounter pages that are more text than illustrations anyway. Which isnât to say the art is bad of course, it has its own charm. Investor Z is the epitome of hidden gem, both underground and underrated, so I wholeheartedly recommend picking this up if it seems even slightly interesting to you.
Zaizen Takashi passes his entrance exams at the top of the heap, and starts his first year in junior high school at Dojuku Gakuen, a 130-year old super-advanced institute of higher education. The day after the entrance ceremony, "the secret" of the school is revealed to him, which concerns the existence of an "investment club," consisting only of the top student from each of the 6 grades. Its club members have a mission. They must invest from a capital of 300-billion yen and yield a profit of 8%, which is their annual goal. This is why Dojuku Gakuen, boasting the highest standards of education in all of Japan, is tuition free. "The most exciting game in the world. The ultimate game of ultimate thrill⊠In other words, money⊠Investments!" Here begins the story of the genius Zaizen, who bets the entirety of his youth on money. Learn, Zaizen... and make a bundle!! (Source: Crunchyroll)