MasterDias wrote:How clear an action scene is will probably depend on the author's general style and skill level. The most successful/skilled authors will have reasonably clear and welldrawn fight scenes.
Out of curiousity, what series were you reading?
Maokun: Ninjas or Pirates? (Vikings are not a valid answer, sorry)
EricTheFred: Vikings are always a valid answer.
Puguni wrote:Then I noticed that most shounen manga action shots are like this
EricTheFred wrote:Much of the action in Bleach
Maokun: Ninjas or Pirates? (Vikings are not a valid answer, sorry)
EricTheFred: Vikings are always a valid answer.
[SIZE="7"][color="MediumTurquoise"]Cobalt Figure 8[/color][/SIZE]UC Pseudonym wrote:For a while I wasn't sure how to answer this, and then I thought "What would Batman do?" Excuse me while I find a warehouse with a skylight...
uc pseudonym wrote:[color="Black"]I read a considerable amount of manga and I think that most shonen (Trigun is definitely an exception) is clear enough to tell what is going on the majority of the time. It is mostly shojo series (anything at all by CLAMP) that have confusing action panels.[/color]
uc pseudonym wrote:Fight choreography is a big interest of mine, so this is one of the criteria I use to judge a series. Blade of the Immortal, for example, has excellent action.
Puguni wrote:Also, I stand corrected. The shounen series I'm reading is done by a woman. D: Hopefully that doesn't say too much about women and action series. Usually she does them quite well.
It's just when lots of magicky stuff and other non-physical aspects get involved does it seem to get annoying.
Psycho Ann wrote:On a random note, Nobuhiro Watsuki came to mind in the way he puts these huge straight on splatters on any and every impact. Sometimes the splatters would be so huge that it seems the person's head exploded only to reveal in the next panel he only got a small cut with a thin trickle of blood. I dunno if that has anything to do with the topic, but it bothered me a bit for making it hard to tell if someone was really injured or not.
Fish and Chips wrote:I second this. Blade of the Immortal has exceptional action scenes.
MasterDias wrote:Arakawa(Full Metal Alchemist) is a woman and her action scenes are well-drawn generally, so no, gender doesn't matter here.
Psycho Ann wrote:Norihiro Yagi, who did Claymore, is one I really like too in making action scenes. Though, I'm a bit more familiar with the work he'd done in a earlier manga called Angel Densetsu. The way he choreographed the hand-to-hand fight scenes in that is really nice.
jon_jinn wrote:i think the fights are extremely vivid and detailed. some of the fights can take up many pages though...
Psycho Ann wrote:Norihiro Yagi, who did Claymore, is one I really like too in making action scenes. Though, I'm a bit more familiar with the work he'd done in a earlier manga called Angel Densetsu.
uc pseudonym wrote:Really, do we need another two page panel every single time Guts cleaves a bunch of people in half?
uc pseudonym wrote:I'd prefer them with somewhat smaller panels so more happens per chapter, but I like Claymore's fights as well (with obvious objections about the identical uniforms - thankfully the main characters now wear black).
Angel Densetsu has action? The synopsis struck me as uninteresting and slow, but perhaps I'll have to give it another look.
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