Gantz Panels Site
Oku doesn't use gray tones the way most mangaka do. His panels are stark: deep, crushing blacks against harsh white highlights. This isn’t just style—it’s storytelling. The darkness represents the unknown, the alien, the moral void of the Gantz room. When a character steps into the light, it feels earned.
One of Oku’s trademarks is tracing/photobashing real locations (Shinjuku, the subway, apartments) and then dropping his hand-drawn, slightly loose characters into them. The result? An uncanny valley effect. The world feels hyper-real, but the people inside it are panicking, bleeding, and dying messily. That disconnect is terrifying . gantz panels
When people talk about manga with incredible art, Gantz by Hiroya Oku doesn't always get the same spotlight as Berserk or Vagabond . But in terms of raw, visceral paneling? It’s in a league of its own. Oku doesn't use gray tones the way most mangaka do
Here’s what makes Gantz panels so unforgettable. The darkness represents the unknown, the alien, the