“The stories told in Japanese manga and anime are incredibly powerful. I often find myself wondering, ‘What is missing in Western comics, and why aren’t they able to achieve the same flavor?’ Also, I think manga has an ‘advantage’ over American comics, which are mostly about superheroes, and that’s where the majority of sales and readers are concentrated.“

  • dance_ninja@lemmy.world
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    26 days ago

    As much as I have enjoyed DC/Marvel superhero comics, they feel restricted in what they can do. They need to still make their world tied to ours in some fashion. There’s no real change. Characters come back to life after a decade. Writers rotate off after their arc is done. Crossovers complicate everything. Things usually feel politically safe.

    That gap seems to be addressed by Image comics, like Saga and Monstress. That being said, they’re geared more towards adults, while manga publishers are usually marketing towards a younger, broader audience.

  • Guy Ingonito@reddthat.com
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    26 days ago

    The problem is the DC/Marvel characters are ageless and immortal beings trapped in an endless cycle of death and reboots.

  • Goldholz
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    26 days ago

    Im happy with my little gaule from aremorica

  • weirdo_from_space@sh.itjust.works
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    26 days ago

    I think it mainly comes down to price and marketing. There is way more to comics than big two and superheroes in general. But they are only known to the comic enthusiasts, they very rarely manage to reach mainstream pop culture.

    Manga is great at making itself known, either through anime or some other means. Most American comics don’t have the means for that and European comics probably don’t care very much.