Manga: Bakuten
Kikuchi’s art solves this through a masterful use of . Unlike action manga that relies on impact frames (a fist connecting, a ball hitting a glove), Bakuten!! uses a cinematic technique: the breakdown of a single, one-second skill into three, five, or seven panels. A single backflip (the "bakuten") is captured not at its peak, but in the curl of the spine, the arc of the legs over the head, the fingers reaching for the floor, and the soft, absorbed landing.
The manga, illustrated by Yūki Kikuchi and based on the original anime by ZEXCS, is not merely a "tie-in" adaptation. It is a meticulous translation of motion to the static page, a study in how to make silence sound like a roaring crowd, and a quiet, profound meditation on ephemeral beauty and fleeting youth. The greatest challenge of the Bakuten!! manga is its subject matter. Rhythmic gymnastics (for men) involves apparatuses like the rope, hoop, clubs, and ribbon, fused with tumbling, acrobatics, and ballet. It is fluid, continuous, and three-dimensional. A printed page is none of those things. bakuten manga
The manga also excels at drawing . In most sports manga, a failed move is a plot point—a setback to overcome. In Bakuten!! , a fall is drawn as a collision of forces: a sudden jagged line, the disruption of a graceful arc, limbs splayed against the clean geometry of the floor. It is jarring, ugly, and real. These panels are often wordless, giving the reader time to feel the thud in their own chest. Narrative Structure: The Summer That Breaks You The plot of Bakuten!! follows the classic "underdogs to nationals" trajectory, but the manga deepens the interiority of that journey. Because it lacks the audio cues of the anime (the music, the impact sounds, the breathing), the manga leans heavily on internal monologue and the visual metaphor of weather and light . Kikuchi’s art solves this through a masterful use of
But the true genius lies in what is not drawn. Kikuchi frequently uses —vast, empty white or grey backgrounds—to isolate the gymnast. In these moments, the panel becomes a blank sky, and the character is a bird. The physical "world" (the gymnasium, the audience, the other competitors) falls away, leaving only the pure geometry of the human form in motion. This is the manga’s silent poetry: the weight of the body is replaced by the lightness of the line. The Architecture of the Body: Character Art as Physicality Character design in Bakuten!! serves a functional, almost anatomical purpose. The protagonist, Shō Fujisawa, is drawn with softer, rounder lines—his limbs slightly looser, his center of gravity depicted as lower. This reflects his natural, untrained talent; he doesn’t execute perfect form yet, but his joy is visible in every off-balance reach. A single backflip (the "bakuten") is captured not