Alternative TitlesEnglish: Ours Synonyms: Bokura no, Bokurano ~Mou Hitotsu no Bokurano~ Japanese: ぼくらの
Information
Type: Manga
Volumes: 11
Chapters: 66
Status: Finished
Published: Nov 25, 2003 to Jun 25, 2009
StatisticsScore: 8.431 (scored by 2769 users)
Ranked: #2072
Popularity: #353
Members: 6,344
Favorites: 420 1 indicates a weighted score
My Info
Popular Tags
mecha psychological |
Similar Recommendations Submitted by Users
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An alien guide appears and tells a small group of humans that the fate of the world lies on them. A series of duels between them and foreign entities will take place, and loss will result in the destruction of the world. But this is a group of flawed humans, and they are neither united in their cause nor equal in their abilities. How they deal with the continuing battles while losing allies and finding out more about the nature of the fights is the focus of the story.
Samidare is more interesting to watch, as everyone participates in the battles, but they are similar in the degree to which they cover the psychological battles they all must face. The characters in Samidare are a bit more off the deep end though.
Both feature a group of people that end up being forced into a must-fight scenario in which, as a team, they must defeat the enemies that are beyond their comprehension one at a time with breaks before battles. Their loss results in the destruction of our planet. Both contain heavy character development while dealing with the psychological state of the participants.
Both are about a group of people whose life changes in one day. They start to fight against enemy and are the only hope of the world. Both have side stories about the character past and how they are connected to each others. Both also have nice psychological side on them which is made in same type of way. Both handle characters and them emotion in similar way and are somewhat dramatic. Atmosphere is really similar and art style is "light" in both manga. Recommended highly.
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Both are about children piloting giant robots, while dealing with their feelings of fear, loss and despair.
Take a bunch of kids with lots of personal problems, make them fight with huge mosters for unclearly reasons to save the Earth, add a backup group with great power politic and military to help them, put in Japan and mix. Eat while it´s still hot.
both are atypical mechas with kids piloting robots fighting giant things from other worlds, all these kids who ride mechas have their own personal problems
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Both of them deal with a situation where people face a soon and inevitable death. The main theme is the choices that people make under such circumstances, whether it's a revenge or an apologise. Both mangakas ask the same question - what will people do if they have few hours left to live? Of course each manga deal with it's own answers and it's own heroes, but the level of digging into dark human selves is almost the same. The plot structure is also pretty the same: small stories features the background of each character who's scheduled to die next and his or her final decision.
Both series involve characters that know they are going to die. For Ikigami, they find out with 24 hours (sometimes less) to go, with Bokurano they simply know it will be "soon". Both series also involve the deaths of young people and how they spend their remaining time. If you liked that aspect of one, you should check out the other.
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Both titles are very very depressing. Bad things just keep happening to the characters of the story, though Shadow Star (or Narutaru) is without a doubt much more depressing, so far...
Both are from the same mangaka.
Being done by the same author, both have the same feel, art, style and similar genres. Both start as a small, simple and apparently childish story, and develops to amazing plots of epic proportions. Definitely two of the best manga ever written.
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They both deal with themes of misanthropy and both are rather depressing to read. Bokurano, however, is better written and has better characters.
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Kind of has the same question of morality. Both have to choose to either kill or possibly be killed, though Judge is not really in the same scale. They both are pretty psychological and dark too.
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Both manga have teams of involuntary people formed to fight to save the world.
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Both are about the psychology of adolescents given terrible weapons of war--SaiKano focuses on the development of one relationship, while Bokurano follows a larger cast.
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Both are great "You will meet new people, get to know them well enough to sympathize with them, then they will die." manga with metaphysical and existentialist themes.
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Similar themes of children being forced to fight and die in events which are out of their control. The art is rather similar as well.
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Both deal heavily with the mentality of the characters and their inner conflicts.
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No they are not similar in plot or stlye but both talk deeply about human emotions, thoughts, psychology and the way we think. And of course, both are freaking awesome!
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Both are seinen manga with touches of sci-fi that focuses mainly on psychological conflits and character development. Also, their brilliant plots feature end-of-the-world and conspiracy ideas. Even the feel is the same.
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Kids fighting for their lives, knowing full well most of them won't make it out alive. While Mirai Nikki is a bit more violent, both have their fair share of nightmare fuel and horrifying revelations as the stories unfold.
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Done by the same author, also a character-driven work with a strong narrative and insightful observations about the nastier aspects of life. Not as cynical as 'Bokurano' but no less intelligent.
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