Tengoku Daimakyou
Heavenly Delusion
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Tengoku Daimakyou

Alternative Titles

Synonyms: Heaven's Great Magical Barrier
Japanese: 天国大魔境
English: Heavenly Delusion
More titles

Information

Type: Manga
Volumes: Unknown
Chapters: Unknown
Status: Publishing
Published: Jan 25, 2018 to ?
Genres: Adventure Adventure, Mystery Mystery, Sci-Fi Sci-Fi
Demographic: Seinen Seinen
Serialization: Afternoon
Authors: Ishiguro, Masakazu (Story & Art)

Statistics

Score: 8.111 (scored by 75327,532 users)
1 indicates a weighted score.
Ranked: #5922
2 based on the top manga page. Please note that 'R18+' titles are excluded.
Popularity: #569
Members: 31,239
Favorites: 612

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Resources

Recommendations

Both stories take place in a post-apocalyptic world with young adults as protagonists. Mangas tell story about the world with new formations, violence, and the search for something missing. Both have mature content. 
reportRecommended by Edaniel
A manga about a boy and a girl's trip through an post-apocalyptic Japan. Both mangas feature death themes and lots of violence. Even so, while Dragon Head tells a story about survivance in an hostile world and how this kind of situation can push people over the edge, Heavenly Delusion is an adventure full of mysteries with a stream of questions and answers in each volume. Give it a shot if you want to read something with similar vibes. Spanish: Un manga sobre el viaje de un chico y una chica a través de un Japón postapocalíptico. Ambos mangas presentan temas relacionados con la muerte y mucha violencia. Aun así,  read more 
reportRecommended by LazzyCorner
When I first started reading Tengoku Daimakyou I was halfway convinced the author had to be the same guy behind Fire Punch( and Chainsaw Man) and I was a bit surprised when I discovered this wasn't the case. There's a lot of overlap in themes between the two beyond the mere fact that both are set in a post-apocalyptical world. Foremost the exploration of the nature of humanity, human existence, identity and the shape human behaviour might take after society as we know it has collapsed. Beyond that we also get religious and deeply philosophical questions (although arguably the former might be more  read more 
reportRecommended by ArtemisSato
Post-apocalyptic nihilism, flawed characters who just want to survive, sick monster designs, morally ambiguous fan service. Somewhat of a visual parallel too.  
reportRecommended by yubarii
Kids wearing white clothes live in a special orphanage. Neverland's first arc was surely more intense and mysterious, and the plot itself is more serious and "epic", however for me Tengoku Daimakyou is better because the narrative feels more honest and trying less to surprise you or make you shocked, it's just slowly telling an interesting story, the intrigue part is not so menacing but instead seemingly has more aspects than Yakusoku no Neverland  
reportRecommended by fifty-one
Both stories are set in a post-apocalyptic Japan, where teenage protagonists navigate a perilous world. Some sheltered kids appear to possess unusual abilities. 
reportRecommended by K-san
A boy and a girl travel treacherous landscapes together to find a missing person, fighting off bizarre creatures using a mysterious raygun. Body horror, violence, gore, and underage nudity coincide with an uncharacteristically cutesy art style. Probably not the best book to read on the commute unless you enjoy the weird looks and an occasional sigh of disapproval.  
reportRecommended by moozooh