Read Apocalypse of Devilman if you want to witness the primordial scream of dark manga. But steel yourself. This is not a story about saving the world. It is a story about standing alone in the ruins, realizing that the devil you should have feared was already standing beside you all along—holding a torch and a pitchfork. “A devil who cries… isn’t that the saddest thing in the world?”

Apocalypse of Devilman is not a comfortable read. The art is raw and unpolished by modern standards, the pacing can feel breakneck, and the violence is relentless. But that rawness is its power. It bleeds desperation.

The story follows Akira Fudo, a gentle, timid young man whose life is shattered when his childhood friend, Ryo Asuka, reveals a terrifying truth: demons are awakening to reclaim the Earth. To stand a chance, Akira must undergo a dangerous merger—allowing the demon Amon, the Lord of Flies, to fuse with his own flesh. The result is Devilman: a being with the unstoppable power of a demon and the fragile, loving heart of a human.

Here’s a write-up for Apocalypse of Devilman (often considered the original Devilman manga by Go Nagai), broken down for a review, analysis, or synopsis. A Cataclysmic Descent into the Abyss of Human Nature

Armed with this brutal duality, Akira wages a secret war against the demonic invasion. But Apocalypse of Devilman is not a monster-of-the-week action fest. It is a slow-burn psychological horror story that asks a single, devastating question: What happens when the monsters you’re fighting are less dangerous than the terrified mob behind you?

The infamous, soul-crushing climax remains one of the most devastating sequences in all of graphic literature. Without spoiling the specifics, Apocalypse of Devilman argues that the true apocalypse isn’t the arrival of hellspawn—it’s the moment civilized society chooses savagery over solidarity.

Long before Evangelion deconstructed the mecha genre, and before Berserk painted its canvas in gore and despair, Go Nagai’s Devilman —collected and often referred to as Apocalypse of Devilman —unleashed a seismic shockwave upon manga and anime. This is not a simple story of a boy who gains demonic powers to fight evil. It is a harrowing, nihilistic, and tragically beautiful treatise on fear, paranoia, and the monstrous potential that sleeps within humanity.