Not really. Several moments in the series where it takes a break from laughs to develop the story. The newest webcomic chapters as examples. There was like maybe one or two gags in between all the exposition regarding theThe comedy was always at the forefront.
False. Garou had more interaction with Tareo than in the webcomic along with some small dialogue here and there to make him more sympathetic as a character. Sweet Mask had some small characters moments added. The connection between Drive Knight and Bofoi was expanded upon even further in the adaption. There was also more humorous antics included between Flash and Saitama.at this point the manga has become mainly focused on the battles, not on the character moments, not on the joke, not on development.
Quite an exaggeration. 3 chapters while switching in between Saitama and Flash, Garou and Darkshine, King and Tareo. With some extra scenes in the lifting of the base to mesh in some parts of the continuity.What was a 1 chapter fight in the webcomic has now devolved into a 10 chapter confrontation between tatsu and psykos.
Garou's character doesn't revolve around "power creep", at least not in the mocking sense. If you're referring to point towards the endwith the Monster Asoc arc ending with joking on Power Creep, which was represented by Garou.
Once again, hardly any of the gags in the series have to do with parodying battle manga tropes and that's not the story's purpose. That misinterpretation largely came from English speaking audiences at the height of the series popularity and it somehow stuck. From ONE himself.The manga has become everything the webcomic mocked.
WSJ: What inspired you to draw a bald average looking superhero like Saitama?
ONE: The world is full of cool looking heroes, so I didn't think that was something I wanted to write about. Plus, I believe that heroes coolness comes from their spirit and not their looks. I don't think how a hero looks is that important.
Where did you get your ideas?
ONE: To start with I simply tried to draw the sort of manga I’d want to read myself. I’ve read loads of Shonen manga throughout my life, and am particularly fond of battle manga. Generally speaking those types of stories are all about growth, meaning that by the last chapter the main character has grown stronger than anyone else and lives happily ever after. So I wondered what would happen if I started the story off with the main character already in peak condition. That became my jumping-off point.
ONE: I also love it when a series creates friction between drama and humor. With One-Punch Man I wanted to try doing that through the worldview itself, rather than through specific plot points. The series is set in a dangerous, monster-infested world, but since Saitama’s there you don’t really notice just how bleak the world is. I think it’s that friction between Saitama and the rest of the world that makes things interesting.