• Hikaru No Go

    From Kenneth M. Lin@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 16 09:14:22 2016
    Art by Obama Takeshi of Death Note fame.

    Okay, I am averaging two volumes a day and just finished Vol. 16.

    This is about a sixth-grader (at the start of the series) that was
    "possessed" by the ghost of a go master who lived one thousand years ago and became interested in go, eventually turning pro by fourtheen.

    You will not learn how to play the ancient game of go and after first few volumes, they wouldn't even bother to explain the terminology, which is something they should do even if a term appeared before. I am reading it straight through and still cannot remember a term that might have been explained one volume ago so I wonder how a reader reading this on weekly installment could understand the game.

    But pretty much nobody without a substantial prior knowledge of this board
    game would be able to tell who's winning despite (I assume) Obama's
    assistants meticulously reproducing the current state of a duel. In fact, I feel sorry for whoever is asked to just draw the boards from different
    angle. Go has 19 by 19 grids so there could be more than one hundred pieces
    on the board as the game progresses. It doesn't help that the matches are taking places in the shared room with several duels going on simultaneously.
    I assume that the writer provide the layout but still...

    I just got through with Vol. 16. In Vol. 15 Ishi, the ghost grandmaster's
    time on Earth is over and he fades away suddenly and Hikaru travels to
    Ishi's birthplace looking for him. The subsequent depression caused Hikaru
    to not show up for his professional matches.

    Vol. 16 is dedicated to another student go player who lost his nerve in last year's professional exam and contemplating his future. He had an
    opportunity to visit China and its go school and found his grooves back.

    And in Japanese, five is pronounced as "go," just like the board game so you will see the main character wearing number five a lot. I wonder this could cause confusion to readers of the translated editions. Also, Hikaru's front hair is inexplicably dyed blond. Just like nobody know what those lines on Naruto's cheeks are, I don't know if Hikaru actually dyes his hair or it's
    just the artist being dramatic. (Actually, Naruto has blond hair but he's
    not European.) In anime and manga, many characters have pink, purple, or
    other hair color even though the character is implied to be Japanese.

    Obama is also a very fortunate artist. I don't think there have been many artists in Shonen Jump that do not write their own materials but Obama is almost exclusively artist only after his debut series. Hikaru No Go was a massive hit he followed this up with Death Note and Bakuman.

    Ken

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Kenneth M. Lin@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 28 11:15:26 2016
    The story petered out as soon as Sai disappeared from Hikaru's life. The
    only thing left was this huge international youth tournament against China
    and Korea.

    Even then, there was one volume devote to one-shots of side characters and
    one issue devoted to another side character visiting China and finding new motivation to turn pro.

    "Kenneth M. Lin" wrote in message news:o317al$h3e$1@dont-email.me...

    Art by Obama Takeshi of Death Note fame.

    Okay, I am averaging two volumes a day and just finished Vol. 16.

    This is about a sixth-grader (at the start of the series) that was
    "possessed" by the ghost of a go master who lived one thousand years ago and became interested in go, eventually turning pro by fourtheen.

    You will not learn how to play the ancient game of go and after first few volumes, they wouldn't even bother to explain the terminology, which is something they should do even if a term appeared before. I am reading it straight through and still cannot remember a term that might have been explained one volume ago so I wonder how a reader reading this on weekly installment could understand the game.

    But pretty much nobody without a substantial prior knowledge of this board
    game would be able to tell who's winning despite (I assume) Obama's
    assistants meticulously reproducing the current state of a duel. In fact, I feel sorry for whoever is asked to just draw the boards from different
    angle. Go has 19 by 19 grids so there could be more than one hundred pieces
    on the board as the game progresses. It doesn't help that the matches are taking places in the shared room with several duels going on simultaneously.
    I assume that the writer provide the layout but still...

    I just got through with Vol. 16. In Vol. 15 Ishi, the ghost grandmaster's
    time on Earth is over and he fades away suddenly and Hikaru travels to
    Ishi's birthplace looking for him. The subsequent depression caused Hikaru
    to not show up for his professional matches.

    Vol. 16 is dedicated to another student go player who lost his nerve in last year's professional exam and contemplating his future. He had an
    opportunity to visit China and its go school and found his grooves back.

    And in Japanese, five is pronounced as "go," just like the board game so you will see the main character wearing number five a lot. I wonder this could cause confusion to readers of the translated editions. Also, Hikaru's front hair is inexplicably dyed blond. Just like nobody know what those lines on Naruto's cheeks are, I don't know if Hikaru actually dyes his hair or it's
    just the artist being dramatic. (Actually, Naruto has blond hair but he's
    not European.) In anime and manga, many characters have pink, purple, or
    other hair color even though the character is implied to be Japanese.

    Obama is also a very fortunate artist. I don't think there have been many artists in Shonen Jump that do not write their own materials but Obama is almost exclusively artist only after his debut series. Hikaru No Go was a massive hit he followed this up with Death Note and Bakuman.

    Ken

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)