MrDollarBills wrote:MHA's cast being so big was a disservice to its self. In terms of endings, MHA definitely ended on a higher note than JJK, even with the expanded ending for JJK.
It was just very sloppy and I think the author was glad to have been done with it.
I think that's just kind of the problem with weekly manga, guys get burnt out by the end and just want to wrap things up which leads to sloppy endings and rushed conclusions, even if it makes sense that's where the story was going anyways. Very Game of Thrones in a way (the show not the books)
But the core issue there is like with all things capitalism, so long as it's profitable for the corporations to squeeze authors for all they're worth rather than do what is best for the art itself, they will do so
Exceptions exist like Oda of course, but even he's basically a bi-weekly author at this point, he hasn't drawn more than 40 chapters in a year since 2012, and the quality of One Piece is really improved by him being able to take breaks to rest and I assume to plot out the story to make sure things work which is why he gets so much praise for foreshadowing
I haven't kept up with Sakamoto Days in a couple months, but I felt like it was heading down that same path of rushing towards an unsatisfying ending too. I think more manga need to take a page from Demon Slayer's book and just set out to write a decently long story but one that gets to the point so you don't get burnt out by the end. It's definitely not the best manga, but I think it'll hold up over time because the story is consistent and feels like it was plotted out from the beginning instead of trying to find reasons to justify itself continuing until the author grows tired of it
Bleach is probably the worst example of that though, and I really like Bleach.























