Fullmetal Alchemist

Hiromu Arakawa

Pages

6000

Year

2001

Difficulty

Easy

Themes

sacrifice, brotherhood, war, equivalent exchange

The definitive entry point for Hiromu Arakawa. Fullmetal Alchemist follows two brothers, Edward and Alphonse Elric, on a quest to restore their bodies after a forbidden alchemical experiment goes horribly wrong. What begins as a straightforward adventure gradually expands into a sweeping story about war, genocide, political corruption, and what it means to be human.

Why Start Here

This is Arakawa’s magnum opus and, for many readers, the greatest manga ever completed. The genius of Fullmetal Alchemist is how it balances tone. One chapter will have you laughing at the characters’ banter, and the next will leave you genuinely shaken. Arakawa never lets the humor undercut the stakes, and she never lets the darkness snuff out the hope.

Unlike many long-running manga, this series was plotted from beginning to end. Every thread pays off. Every side character matters. The ending is one of the most satisfying in the medium.

What to Expect

A mix of action, comedy, political thriller, and philosophy. The world runs on alchemy, a science-like magic system with strict rules that Arakawa uses to explore real ethical dilemmas. The cast is enormous but every character is distinct and memorable. The pacing is brisk, especially for a 27-volume series.

If you’ve never read manga before, this is one of the most accessible starting points in the entire medium.

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