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Berserk (ベルセルク) is a heroic fantasy manga and anime by mangaka Kentaro Miura(三浦 建太郎).
Berserk mixes horror, fantasy and medieval warfare, with tons of violence and gore (even for the rather high manga standard): this and the occasional sex scenes and nudity make the manga most definitely not appropriate for young readers.
Despite this, the plot and the drawing style (at least past the first few volumes) are excellent, and involve very interesting characters with well drawn personalities. In fact it is astonishing how, although many events in the story are prophetized early, they still manage to surprise the reader. One gets a sense that even though the story is already incredibly long and drawn out, Miura is following a well-drafted plan approaching some final resolution. At present, however, with 27 full volumes of manga released on the Japanese market, the story shows no signs of slowing down, or concluding any time soon.
The main character is an almost unbeatable mercenary named Guts. Almost his equal on the battlefield is his love interest, Caska. She is the only female member of the White Hawks, a mercenary band led by the mysterious Griffith. These two are either good or evil at various points in the story (and often both at once, or not expressly one or the other).
The first episode of the manga was released in 1989. A new episode is released every other week in Young Animal. It is still running, and about half of the story is told. The anime series covers only a small portion of the manga (about 10 volumes out of currently 27, shortened). Only the first four volumes of manga have been released in the United States so far, with a relatively well-done translation and overall transition done by Dark Horse Comics. In addition to the manga and anime, the story was brought to the Sega Dreamcast.
Spoiler warning: Plot or ending details follow.
The series opens with an epilogue. In a dark time, a pack of the king's guards are harassing a young lady in distress when all of a sudden, they are attacked and slaughtered. The Black Swordsman has returned. He swings a humongous sword large enough to cut people and horses in two.
The remainder of the series is a flash back, where the Black Swordsman, (later introduced as Guts), looks back into his past. He sees years of trials and tribulations in the Band of the Hawk, a successful band of mercenaries under the charismatic leadership of Griffith, a man driven by the ambition to become king. The series covers all these years and shows the rise and fall of the Hawks through Guts' eyes. Griffith's impressive rise to power and fame through the Hawks is soon cut short by the bane of uncontrolled ambition, and the man follows his twisted fate at the cost of his loyal troops, including Guts and Casca, leaving the story off where it began, near the first episode.
There are numerous plot twists and superb character development that keep the series fresh and exciting for the viewer, but there is some nudity and a lot of blood that would make this series inappropriate for younger viewers.
The anime covers the first third or so of the first volume in the first episode of the anime. It opens in an epilogue, showing the present-day Guts, a man fighting a losing battle against his own fate, and a world infested by devils and demons, before moving on to a 25-episode flashback to what made Guts the man he is, and why he hates the man called Griffith with every fiber of his being.
In the manga, this segment begins at the end of the third volume, and ends in the 13th with the Eclipse. Besides being only a fraction of the full story, the anime also has a number of cuts related to characters such as Puck or the Skull Knight, who play very little if any role at the point in the story where the anime ends. One problem with this approach is that it leaves the possibility of a direct sequel season almost impossible, unless the writers further alter Miura's story, or some sort of retconning is done.
Note: All subsequent names come from the American translation, and Miura's statements about the official names of the characters in an English setting.
The bad guys, messengers of "the god not created by men".