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Drifters #1-3

Drifters Omnibus Volume 1

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From Kohta Hirano, creator of Hellsing , comes Drifters Omnibus Volume 1 , a supersized, value-priced collection of the first three Drifters volumes of the action-fantasy epic.

Warriors and warlords from Earth's history—"Drifters"—are transported to an alien world and employed to help the non-human races defend themselves in a worldwide civil war with legions of monsters led by the malefic Black King threatening the annihilation of both human and non-human races. Included in the menagerie of fighters from Earth are samurai warrior Shimazu Toyohisa, Joan of Arc, and Hitler! Drifters is a howling tornado of all-out action and staggering imagination.

Collects Drifters volumes 1, 2, and 3.

672 pages, Paperback

Published March 11, 2025

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About the author

Kohta Hirano

66 books284 followers
Kohta Hirano (平野 耕太 Hirano Kōta) is a Japanese mangaka most famous for his manga Hellsing. Starting his career first as a mangaka's assistant (self-described as "horrible" and "lazy" in said assistant position), and later an H manga artist, he went on to enjoy somewhat limited success with other relatively unknown manga titles such as Angel Dust, Coyote, Gun Mania and Hi-Tension. His first major success came with his manga series Hellsing, which got its start and was subsequently serialized in a monthly manga magazine, Young King OURs, towards the latter half of 1997.

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Ronald.
1,458 reviews16 followers
June 12, 2025
The idea of the creator of Hellsing manga / anime made a story where historic figures out of history show up in a world of Orcs, Elves & Dwarfs would be great. Sadly, while the art is great, the story has holes you could drive a truck through. Several of the characters are a bit over obsessed with "BOOBS" (sigh) and others are just dumb or annoying. Seeing the name drops is kind of interesting but many of the historical figures are nothing like they were in real life. While not actually that bad the story does read like some 12 year olds D&D game with guns and samurai.

Oh and Hitler, a bit of praise for hitler here in the story.

I found this when trying to find which local library had any of the Hellsing manga to read.
Profile Image for rowan.
258 reviews9 followers
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December 31, 2025
Why I read it: Kouta Hirano's Hellsing was everything to me when I was 15, and the premise here is very cool, plus it came in this neat MEGABRICK omnibus. I love megabrick manga.

Thoughts: The premise, in short, is that warriors throughout time get yoinked from our realm at the moment of their death and ploinked into another realm (where there's elves and dwarves and dragons and stuff), where they engage in adversarial conflict. Similar to Mortal Kombat, they end up aligned with one side of a conflict that will end this other realm: Drifters or Ends. To say that Drifters are good and Ends are bad is not entirely inaccurate (Ends want to... end it... and Drifters want Ends to not do their thing, though they don't explicitly want to save the realm until Toyohisa decides to), but it would be an overly simplistic take, since Adolf Hitler was a Drifter. Yeah. That bombshell dropped about halfway through the omnibus, I think, and I couldn't recover from that, personally. Turns out he also got yoinked/ploinked, and when he got to this new fantastical realm, he set up an empire of human superiority, relegated elves to slavery and farm workforce (and stole their women for brothels), and relegated dwarves to slavery and industrial workforce (complete with signs in the quarters that say "Work shall set you free"), and once all this was done, offed himself. Not sure what's happened with the halflings yet; they'll probably show up in future instalments, because the core character group has set themselves against the Ends and are now conquering/dismantling this empire of Man, so eventually they'll have to run into halflings.

There are definitely interesting elements. For example, I'm pretty sure the Black King who leads the Ends is Jesus Christ. I looked it up and that's a common theory, though it's not been confirmed yet, though it honestly would not surprise me. The details fit in a cool way (my fav is how he literally feeds his troops by multiplying grains). Having read and watched Hellsing, Kouta Hirano's irreverent takes on that sort of topic are not new to me.

I did like the Sengoku era warlords. Shimazu Toyohisa's straightforwardness and bloodthirst are entertaining and he makes for a good protagonist. Oda Nobunaga (yes, Oda Nobunaga is in this, too) and his love of the firearm and his practical knowledge of how to make gunpowder (apparently it's human waste and burned human corpses in a pit to make potassium nitrate/saltpetre and charcoal, add sulfur, handle very carefully) and his insistence that he should do all the "dirty" work like order executions while Toyohisa remains the "clean" face of their conquest effort were also really good touches. The rest of the big name characters, I genuinely don't care about, but here's a list of familiar names the reader can encounter throughout this omnibus: Nasu no Yoichi, Abe no Seimei, Jeanne d'Arc, Anastasia (she's no warrior, why is she even here?), Rasputin, Gilles de Rais, Count Saint-Germi who is def not Count Saint-Germain, Hannibal Barca, Scipio Africanus, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Naoshi Kanno, Hijikata Toshizo, Minamoto no Yoshitsune.

Would I read more: Eh. I'm good.

Would I recommend it: Did you enjoy Sengoku Basara but thought it needed more blood, gore, and boob jokes? Because have I got the series for you.

Keep or cull: Cull. Again, having previously read/watched/loved Hellsing, I wasn't surprised about the Hitler thing (other than the initial blindside) and I'm not too tender about it, considering that the protagonist/s clearly think his empire of Man is disgusting and needs dismantling, but I still hate it and wish it wasn't a thing, and the things I enjoyed are not enough to keep me going. Also, this manga has been ongoing since 2010 and it's at 96 chapters with no end in sight, and I just... I can't. Maybe I'll revisit this series when I'm 60 and it's complete and Google AI or whatever can beam it directly into my neural implant. Until then, I don't need to keep this megabrick volume on my bookshelf.
Profile Image for Chad.
10.4k reviews1,061 followers
May 22, 2025
Historical figures get sucked into a fantasy world where elves and dwarves have been subjugated by Hitler. It's a crazy scenario with terrific art by the creator of Hellsing. The writing isn't as good as the art though and Hirano has a dumb predilection with breasts that keeps coming up. Every once in a while it feels like a 12 year old boy is writing the book and just points over at a woman and says "Boobs" and giggles.
Profile Image for untitled lullaby.
1,054 reviews6 followers
May 22, 2025
I love the Sengoku era. And I love this idea to throw a bunch of historical characters together. I do not like the sexual assault is funny! Or the weird obsession around boobs (I love boobs! But this was weird!) frankly the idea that Hitler was a great leader or had good intentions is laughably incorrect. It is funny that he killed himself in that world. It’s so ridiculous it’s funny. Joan of arc and fucking Anastasia are bad guys? Huh?? What the fuck Anastasia gonna do?
Profile Image for Elwood Wilkins.
27 reviews
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April 1, 2025
Ever wanna read about Oda Nobunaga fighting Joan of Arc in a fantasy country of elves and dwarves conquered by Adolf Hitler, in part owned by Saint Germain?
626 reviews2 followers
June 9, 2025
Great opening volume that sets up the call concept along with Hirano's nice mix of action and humor. The idea of bringing historical figures into a fantasy setting to battle is quite interesting and fully explored, along with being fairly accurate to the actual characters (Nobunaga's hedonistic but brilliant mind is a prime example). It is matched by some awesome action pieces and gorgeous art, which also balances some of the ridiculous actions of the story. Overall, call story and a great read.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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