Don't watch entertainment, watch inspiration! A list of JUMP comic masterpieces that can teach you useful things in life

Don't watch entertainment, watch inspiration! A list of JUMP comic masterpieces that can teach you useful things in life

In the decades since the publication of Weekly Shonen Jump, countless fantasy adventures have been born. So what else is more important than entertainment? Of course, it is inspirational! As a shonen comic, it is impossible to say that it has not had an impact on the rapidly growing minds of young people. Let's take a look at the ranking of JUMP comic masterpieces that can teach us useful things in life.

20th: The Prince of Tennis

"The Prince of Tennis" is a comic with tennis as its theme by Japanese cartoonist Takeshi Konomi. The handsome protagonist and his superb tennis skills make him an idol-style ambassador for promoting tennis. I believe that countless friends have started playing tennis because of this work.

19th: Yu Yu Hakusho

This is Togashi's masterpiece. Putting aside the creativity, setting, and the terrifying Kusanagi style of painting, the classic setting of a bad-looking boy with a kind heart is believed to have touched countless readers, especially the protagonist's initial cause of death. It was a successful start but still ended with "Devil May Cry".

18th: City Hunter

It's another common routine used in Japanese works. The super exquisite painting style creates a romantic protagonist who looks lustful but is actually upright. He lives a free and easy bounty hunter life in a world full of beauties. If you have to say what he has learned, it's probably the skills to tease various beauties.

17th place: "Kui!! Boys' School"

I guess not many of my friends in China have read this classic hot-blooded comic, of course because it is too bloody and violent. However, unlike Beidou's Cheat Man, this work describes more of brotherhood and teamwork. Although there are many bloody plots, they are always just right and not so annoying.

16th: Rurouni Kenshin

The fresh painting style, delicate brushstrokes, and a romantic adventure at the end of the shogunate attracted countless fans who were not familiar with the Japanese shogunate culture at that time. "No killing" is no longer the axis deliberately maintained in some American film and television works. This work has redefined "no killing" and risen to a certain high level. Of course, you have to experience it with your heart.

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