Attached: Inio Asano A Kino Master.png (1502x1558, 3.81M)
What does Any Forums think about Inio Asano?
Isaac Lopez
Adam Scott
One hit wonder.
Kevin Jackson
he's literally me
Angel Richardson
I don't care for some of his earlier works but otherwise I think he's great. Ozanari-kun is extremely underrated and short so I recommend it to you all. I still haven't read Dededede, how was it?
Julian Hall
He's shit. Overrated by children blinded by the superficial aspects of his works while ignoring the lack of a core.
Jace Wright
Yeah I like his work
Owen Jones
Define core
Nolan White
>t. Naruto fan
Austin Fisher
He is probably the only one out there that has the balls to roast his fans for calling him a genius dispite them not understanding his work. Respect for calling out sycophantic fans.
Matthew Long
I have read punpun, holograph and nigger on the shore and didn't like even one of them so asano is hard no for me.
Owen Russell
Solanin is pretty good
Gabriel Roberts
>lack of a core
??????????
Ethan Sullivan
For me he's like shonen writers but for people who wants to be mature. His works are ultra sad depressing and edgy, so "adults" that thinks sadness = depth, but in reality what he writes is rather superficial
Jayden Carter
Superficial how?
Ethan King
>let’s take Usamaru Furuya
>and remove all the creativity
>make the protagonist a self-insert
>and they have sex with every woman and underage girl in the manga
Wyatt Taylor
Just ask yourself: what is there beyond sadness and depression in most of his work?
The only one I think is good is dead dead demons, because there are actually some layers and interesting takes
James Reyes
You've asked yourself that and you came up short?
Joseph Smith
I realized how simple and shallow are his work by reading them. They have the same depth as average battle shonen
Zachary Torres
Any recommendations for some slice of life that has some genuine layers and introspection?
Aiden Allen
Dead Dead Demon's Dededede Destruction
It doesn't have "genuine layers and introspection" but it's good.
Brandon Reed
What makes his other works simple and shallow but not this one?