
Genres
Content Tags

Series Blurb
[DeepL Translation - needs review] Introduction to Volume 1: Golden Man, the hero who protects Neo York, the city of freedom, suddenly disappears. At the site of his disappearance, a young man with extraordinary strength and amnesia lies dead. In the absence of the hero, the support team sends the young man out as the Golden Man to fight the villains that have appeared. However, he has a big secret that could shake the peace of Neo-York--!
(Translator: DeepL)
Where to find help_outline
editBookWalker
ENinfo_outlined
Kinokuniya JP
info_outlined
Honto
info_outlined
CD Japan
Ninfo_outlined
Amazon Kindle JP
Einfo_outlined
Amazon JP
Ninfo_outlined
Reviews
(4/5)1 rating1 review
spaghettimansays
March 21, 2025
Activity
No activities


Another highly enjoyable volume, probably even more fun than the first since the introductions are out of the way and Moroboshi can get to the business of superheroing. Lots of hype action setpieces in this one. The first half finishes off his battles with the Oiran Trooper who has a very fun personality, and the second half is sort of a cross between the big train scene from Spider-Man 2 and the movie Speed (the arc is literally titled "Speed"). A new villain/group of villains (he makes robot clones of himself) is introduced and it's the first one that doesn't really have an immediately obvious DC or Marvel character that it's spoofing though I guess power-wise he calls Multiple Man or Dr Doom's Doombots to mind. They guys have a cool design and quirky sense of etiquette.
The broader theme across this volume is really Moroboshi developing his bond with the city and it feels very sincere and heartwarming. A good deal of attention is spent on how the citizens view him and even though the citizens don't realize this isn't the original Golden Man they do say things like "He used to feel more like a theme park mascot" in response to him actually going around meeting people. It's good stuff and there's some nice worldbuilding about how the town rebuilds after a villain attack.
Language-wise it's still a notch or two above what I usually read but approachable as long as I keep Kanjitomo up. The villains occasionally have odd ways of speaking and there's one or two sentences here or there I don't quite get, but it's enjoyable and a good way to stretch my brain, especially as my usual diet of Kirby novels is starting to feel easy. I would peg this higher than L22 but when I graded the first volume it was pitted against fairly low level stuff. I'd imagine it's maybe more of a 24 or 25 but it's accessible. The artwork really goes all out this volume with all the big exciting action scenes and the character work has definitely sunk it's hooks in now that we're into the plot a bit deeper. I think one or two of his teammates are still a bit under-utilized but maybe we'll see more of them in future volumes.