
12 Horror Manga to Terrify You All Year Long
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When you think of Japanese horror, you may picture a creepy girl wearing a white dress with long black hair covering her face. While this image does have its roots in Japanese folklore—specifically the yurei, or vengeful ghost—it is limiting. Japanese horror has a rich tradition that goes well beyond the popular trope so pervasive in the U.S. J-horror movie fad from a decade ago. You need only look at a shelf of horror manga to see that variety in action.
But like other manga genres, it can be difficult to figure out where to start. Thankfully, there are many kinds of horror manga out there—ranging from action horror to downright disturbing “I can’t go to sleep at night” horror—so I firmly believe there’s something out there for everyone. Here, I’ve collected 12 titles that you should give a try if you’re interested in reading a horror manga, whether you’re new to the genre or even if you’re a bit of scaredy-cat. (No shame in that!) And if you’re well-versed in your horror manga series, maybe you’ll find something new to you.
This classic from the early 1970s follows the students of a school that is mysteriously teleported into a post-apocalyptic wasteland. Not a great turn of events, especially when the children discover that this is the future. The Drifting Classroom delves into the ways this stressful environment affects people. Some teachers turn into homicidal maniacs. Others abandon their main responsibility of looking after the kids. Left on their own, the children must band together to survive this wasteland filled with monsters, plagues, and limited resources, in the hopes of finding a way home again.
Parasyte is an alien invasion story gone awry. In this manga, the aliens are Parasites, worm-like creatures that take over human hosts by entering their brains. Thankfully, this process is not fool-proof. High school student Shinichi wakes up while an alien is attempting to take over his brain. The interruption causes the Parasite to take over his arm instead. Now Shinichi must learn to co-exist with the alien invader in his hand while protecting the human race from other Parasites and keeping the source of his new abilities a secret. Sounds like a tall order, if you ask me.
The horror genre is filled with stories about what happens after death. You go to some type of afterlife. You get reincarnated. You become a vengeful ghost. In Gantz, you are recruited to hunt down aliens who have infiltrated the earth. That is the opposite of restful. To make matters worse, this existence is structured like a video game where hunters accumulate points based on the number of aliens they kill. Gain enough points and they can obtain a powerful weapon, go back to a normal existence and forget that these alien hunting missions ever happened, or bring back someone who died.
Imagine being hit by a truck and then discovering you can’t die. That’s what Kei learns in Ajin. In this manga, immortal people—or Ajin—are wanted by the government because they’re considered dangerous when they mingle with the general population. Alas, the government also wants to experiment on them, often in horrifying ways. As a result, Ajins who have been captured by the government want to escape and, if they succeed, become very determined to seek revenge. You reap what you sow and all that. Kei wants no part of this but finds himself drawn into the conflict anyway when one escaped Ajin named Sato begins a violent campaign to rule Japan.
No horror manga list would be complete without the master himself, Junji Ito. In fact, you could make a list dedicated solely to Junji Ito’s works. His entire catalog is vast and brilliant. It was difficult to choose one title, but I ultimately settled on Uzumaki because if there’s one Junji Ito series you must read, it’s this one. Uzumaki tells the story of a town plagued with a supernatural curse involving spirals. If you like the atmospheric terror of Lovecraft’s works (without the rampant racism), Uzumaki is the horror manga for you.
What about you guys? Have you read any of these titles? What do you think is the best horror manga out there? Can’t get enough horror? Check out our recommendations for horror comics. Want to read more manga in other genres? We have some posts about that too.