Manga 651 Kaze No Tani No Nausica%c3%a4 Userrecs

Kaze no Tani no Nausicaä

Alternative Titles

Synonyms: Kaze no Tani no Nausicaa
Japanese: 風の谷のナウシカ
English: Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind
German: Nausicaä aus dem Tal der Winde
Spanish: Nausicaä del valle del viento
French: Nausicaä de la vallée du vent


Information

Type: Manga
Volumes: 7
Chapters: 59
Status: Finished
Published: Oct 9, 1982 to Feb 10, 1994
Genres: Action Action, Adventure Adventure, Award Winning Award Winning, Fantasy Fantasy, Supernatural Supernatural
Serialization: Animage
Authors: Miyazaki, Hayao (Story & Art)

Statistics

Score: 8.851 (scored by 1715517,155 users)
1 indicates a .
Ranked: #302
2 based on the top manga page. Please note that 'R18+' titles are excluded.
Popularity: #274
Members: 58,918
Favorites: 3,504

Resources

Recommendations

For those who've only seen the movie of Nausicaa may question this reccomendation. however the manga is completely different from the anime. Both Berserk and Nausicaa are bloody, there's a lot of wars, fighting and action. also a lot of wierd and interesting shit happens. with berserk its demons and monsters, in nausicaa its monsters, giant bugs that have a great link to the earth and immortal kings that breed unhuman warriors. Most importantly they both have a very, very great plot and storyline. 
reportRecommended by DarkRoseOtaku
Young protagonist from a tribe, nature themes, pretty much the same design and artstyle and overall vibe. 
reportRecommended by abystoma2
The world is ending, facing its imminent demise in the form of a major natural disaster caused by the wrongdoings of humanity. Meanwhile, a considerable amount of characters struggle to survive, understand and restore the world before the imminent Apocalypse takes place, all the while crossing their paths and reflecting about the meaning of life and the faults of human beings, with not-so-subtle religious and philosophical themes and the bellic setting enriching the stories. 
reportRecommended by Valefor
I know, it may not seem similar but again looks may be deceiving. On a surface level, Akira and Nausicaa were the two momumental animes and mangas of the 1980's with their historical importence almost eclipsed only by the rise of Gegika, Osamu Tezuka, and Neon Genesis Evangelion. On the story, both are layed with socialogical and political themes imbedded into the story. The themes are different, but that really doesn't matter sense since mangas with social commentary are few and far between. The scale of both of them are epic with headscratching ending that are surprisingly dense and the culmination of all of the   
reportRecommended by Pierre_Bezukhov
After the apocalypse there are still oppresors, refugees, greed and life-missions that will make Killy (BLAME!) and Nausicaä (duh) experience countless of battles in worlds beyond our imagination. Blame! is more action-oriented and defenetly more nihilist while Nausicaä more idealistic and misantrophic 
reportRecommended by UnoPuntoCinco
Even if they belong to different genres, Nausicaä is centered around action (Hayao Miyazaki style mind you), and YKK is a slice of life meditation, they both share the same post apocalyptic theme about how to deal with the humanities dark sides. Both are incredible masterpieces that I can not recommend enough.  
reportRecommended by txrxgxu