Tokyo Ghoul is quickly becoming one of my favourite manga series of all time, as well as one of my favourite stories as a whole. Therefore, I’m obviously going to read all of the content available set in this world, seeing I’m a completionist.
Tokyo Ghoul Jack is one of the main spinoffs from the series, and it focuses on Arima’s past, being established as a prequel to the main events of the series. I’ve heard that this one can be better appreciated by the end of Re, since you’re more attached to the characters that you meet here, but I already liked them quite a lot. I really appreciate that Sui Ishida is giving us many different points of view for both the ghouls and the CCG, and how even characters that are downright evil you end up feeling a tiny bit sad for.
On the other hand, something that clearly sets this standalone volume apart from the others is the art style, which is more simplistic and has a more unfinished look. I don’t know how to feel about it, because even if it made some of the action scenes easier to follow (one of my biggest complaints for the series), it also was left in need of more details and strokes, especially in the facial expressions and characters in general.
Overall, this broadened the scope of the Tokyo Ghoul story, something that I will always love, but the art style took me out of the story at certain points, and some of the plot points felt a smidge unrealistic.
3.7