Panel — Gantz Best
That single, silent panel captures the entire thesis of Gantz better than any explosion: violence doesn’t make you a hero. It just makes you a ghost who hasn’t stopped breathing yet.
Kurono has just returned from the Osaka mission. He saw vampires, a 100-point boss the size of a building, and watched his own mentor, Izumi, get bisected. He’s back in his mundane Tokyo apartment, but he’s not the whiny teenager from chapter one. He’s a killer. He’s numb. gantz best panel
Hiroya Oku draws it in stark, brutalist lines. No speed lines. No aliens. Just a dirty room, a discarded Gantz suit, and a young man who has realized that death is cheap, resurrection is a curse, and the “game” will never end. He isn’t crying. He isn’t raging. He’s just hollow . That single, silent panel captures the entire thesis
The consensus among Gantz fans for the single best panel isn’t just a fight scene or a monster reveal. It’s a quiet, terrifying moment of psychological collapse. He saw vampires, a 100-point boss the size
Kei Kurono, after being resurrected, standing alone in his empty apartment, staring at the ceiling where his own blood still splattered from his first death.