Platinum End

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Platinum End
File:Platinum End Volume 1.jpg
Volume 1 of Platinum End, published on February 4, 2016.
プラチナエンド
(Purachina Endo)
Genre Action, Supernatural
Manga
Written by Tsugumi Ohba
Illustrated by Takeshi Obata
Published by Shueisha
English publisher
Demographic Shōnen
Magazine Jump SQ
Original run November 4, 2015 – present
Volumes 2 (List of volumes)
Anime and Manga portal

Platinum End (Japanese: プラチナエンド Hepburn: Purachina Endo?) is a Japanese manga series written by Tsugumi Ohba and illustrated by Takeshi Obata. It has been serialized in Shueisha's monthly Jump SQ magazine since November 4, 2015. The series follows Mirai Kakehashi, a student who attempts suicide but is rescued by his guardian angel, Nasse, who not only has vowed to protect him, but bestows him special powers as he is also one of 13 candidates chosen by different angels to take the role of God, who is to retire in 999 days.

Platinum End is licensed by Viz Media in North America and the United Kingdom, with its chapters released digitally in English as they are published in Japan.[1]

Plot

Mirai Kakehashi is a young student fed up with a life of abuse from his uncle and aunt who raised him since his parents' death, but is saved by a Guardian Angel called Nasse (ナッセ) after attempting to commit suicide. Upon learning from Nasse that his foster parents were responsible for the deaths of his father and mother, Mirai uses the powers she bestowed him in order to confront them and enact justice. However, Mirai's ordeals are just beginning as Nasse soon after informs him that God will retire in 999 days and thirteen candidates to replace him were selected including Mirai himself. To make matters worse, not only can Mirai not refuse to take part in the contest to decide the next God, but among the other candidates there are those capable of anything to win, including killing all the competition as soon as possible.

Characters

Main Characters

Mirai Kakehashi (架橋 明日 Kakehashi Mirai)
The main protagonist. He was raised by his abusive uncle and aunt after his family were killed in a car crash. The abuse he endured resulted in him trying to commit suicide by throwing himself from a tower block, but he is saved by Nasse. Using the arrows he discovers that his uncle and aunt murdered his family, he accidentally kills his aunt and then makes his uncle turn himself in.
Nasse (ナッセ)
Mirai's angel. She is an angel of the Special class, capable of bestow him with a pair of wings, a white arrow to kill his opponents, and a red arrow to make anyone he shoots with it to fall in love with him. Her main desire is to make Mirai happy.
Saki Hanakago
Saki is Mirai's classmate, his love interest, and coincidentally, a God candidate as well. Once she learns that he does not intend to kill her, Saki joins forces with Mirai to deal with Metropoliman.
Lepel
Saki's angel. She is overly greedy and manipulative, a trait that is considered by Nasse the reason why she was relegated to be a class two Angel, capable only of equip Saki with the red arrow.

God Candidates and Angels

Kanade Namaryu (Metropoliman)
The main antagonist of the series who intends to become God by all means necessary, including killing all other candidates. He is the grandson of the principal of the prestigious Joso Academy and wishes to become God in order to bring his dead sister back to life. So far he had killed four other candidates using the alias "Metropoliman" and had claimed their wings and arrows, becoming even more dangerous upon realizing that several arrows can be combined to increase their range.
Misa
Kanade's angel of the special class, also known as the "Angel of Lust".
Tonma Kyosuke (Tonma Rodriguez)
A god candidate who is a failed comedian. He uses his red arrows to make women fall in love with him so that he can have sex with them. He is the first God candidate to be killed, being murdered by Kanada as Metropoliman.
Luta
Tonma's angel of the second-rank.
Shogo Hatateyama and Saburo Tabuchi
Two god candidates who disguises themselves as different versions of Metropoliman when Kanada asks the God candidates to attend a gathering at a baseball stadium. They are friends who want to help each other after doing badly in examines, and are saved from committing suicide by their guardian angels. However, the gathering is a trap and both are killed by Kanada as Metropoliman.
Emaka and Egura
Shogo and Saburo's angels respectively, both of the first-rank.
Chiyo "Chi" Nakayama
Chi is the youngest God candidate. She is a young girl who was bullied at school. She attends the gathering and asks Metropoliman for help. Kanade first strikes her with a red arrow, but then uses her as a hostage saying he will kill her if no other God candidates reveal themselves. As no-one does, Kanade kills Chi.
Jami
Chi's angel of the second-rank.
Nanato Mukaido
Nanato is a God candidate working as the product planner for an apparel company. He is suffering from terminal cancer, and first uses his red arrows to secure enough money for his family after he dies, then to hire private detectives to find more God candidates. He decides to team up with Mirai and Saki in order to prevent Kanada from becoming God. Mirai agrees on the grounds that Nanato continues his treatment.
Baret
Nanato's angel of the first-rank, also known as the "Angel of Knowledge".
Muni
An angel of the special class, whose God candidate is currently unknown.
Balta
An angel of the first-rank, whose God candidate is currently unknown.
Penema
An angel of the first-rank, whose God candidate is currently unknown.
Yazeli
An angel of the second-rank, whose God candidate is currently unknown.
Ogaro
An angel whose rank and God candidate are currently unknown.

Release

Platinum End has been serialized by Shueisha in its Japanese monthly shōnen manga magazine Jump SQ since its December 2015 issue, which was released on November 4, 2015.[2] They began collecting the chapters into tankōbon volumes with the first published on February 4, 2016.

On October 5, 2015, Viz Media announced that it has licensed Platinum End for release in North America and the United Kingdom.[2] In March 2016 Viz confirmed that they would start releasing print editions of Platinum End, with the first volume released in Fall 2016.[3] The manga is licensed by Kazé in France.[4]

Volume list

No. Japanese release date Japanese ISBN English release date English ISBN
1 February 4, 2016[5] ISBN 978-4-08-880637-2
  1. "The Angel's Gift" (天使の贈り物?)
  2. "Man's Instinct" (男の性?)
  3. "Hero of Justice" (正義のヒーロー?)
2 May 2, 2016[6] ISBN 978-4-08-880709-6
  1. "The Person Who I Admire" (憧れの人?)
  2. "The Big Reveal" (発表の瞬間?)
  3. "Private Conversation" (内緒の話?)

Chapters not yet in tankōbon format

  1. "Death Announcement"

Reception

The first volume of Platinum End debuted at number two on Oricon's weekly list of the best-selling manga, with 105,213 copies sold.[7]

When reviewing the opening chapter, Ian Wolf writing for Anime UK News compared Platinum End to Ohba and Obata's earlier series Death Note, saying: "the central character is a teenage boy fed up with life, who is guided by a supernatural force and given great power. Both leads seemingly find themselves on the path to becoming a deity. However, while Light Yagami uses his powers for diabolic ends, killing anyone he suspects of doing anything wrong while being observed by a shinigami, Mirai Kakehashi is guided by an apparently more benevolent force."[8] He also writes that the series is an example of a death game, citing the death of one of the God candidates in the second chapter.[9]

Writing for The Fandom Post Jarius Taylor gave the series a B+ rating and compared Platinum End to Future Diary writing: "while I don't have too much doubt it'll be stronger overall, the overt edginess here isn't something I was quite expecting from Ohba. Still it's a pretty interesting read from beginning to end, and there's a lot of potential in terms of both thriller aspects and the overall theme. Hopefully, it'll be able to differentiate itself from Future Diary more going forward, but for now the idea of Ohba and Obata taking a crack at their own version of it seems pretty good to me."[10]

References

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External links