This is remarkable comics (or manga, to be precise). There is a reason why it's a close or broader inspiration to many other (comics) works. It's a shining example if you want to a good, or even great story, no matter how small or big, you need to have perfect characters for it. Characters are your foundation. If you have shitty characters, just like the building, the story eventually crumbles. The faster the ambitious you are with it. An in boundaries of the comics medium, you have all the tools you need to create great characters. Because with great characters, the readers care. Care if they'll win, get punished, get straight, save their ass or burn in hell. If I write about how I do not chare about characters and their destinies in some comics? The reason is not that I'm unempathetic, cold-hearted or something. The reason is their just crappy ones. Those foundations are as good as sticky mud. Only dragging everything build on them to doom.
But that's not the case of Lone Wolf and the Cub. No. There is so much going on, I love that "zen" calmness and aesthetic following frenetic and chaotic action. The "Lone Wolf", Ogami Ittō, is a great character. Dedicated, deadly, cunning and stone cold. He takes a great risk but he does not rush to them. He has refined his skills and he's very powerful. But still, he's not superhuman. He's just embodiment of Bushidó. refined, polished but still with human imperfection. And Daigorō is a perfect companion for him. As stories come and go, they hone their relationship as their solemn path is death and they're following it both together and as one. I love "Cub's" development. From pure soul taciturn child who just absorbs the darkness of their path to something more profound.
I'm through 600 pages of this and it's fantastic. I love "samurai stuff" but I feared the manga originally from 1970. But now I'm absolutely hooked up.