Akira Toriyama



If Osamu Tezuka is the father of Manga in general, then Akira Toriyama is the father of Shonen.

Akira Toriyama is one of the most famous manga-ka out there, and also does work on character designs in video games.

He started off in 1979 with the story Wonder Island published by Shonen Jump and gained popularity in Japan for his Breakthrough Hit gag manga Doctor Slump, but became world-famous for his Dragon Ball series. Ironically, it was meant to only be about two volumes, but we know how that ended up.

Around the same time as his Dragon Ball series was taking off in Japan, Yuji Horii approached him to work on Toriyama's most influential and famous work, the character designs and art for Dragon Quest, the game that would introduce computerized role playing games to the mainsteram Japanese market and set the standard for all console RPGs to follow. He has continued to do every single piece of artwork, monster and character design alongside the same 3 person team (Yuji Horii (story) and Koichi Sugiyama (music) ) for every single Dragon Quest game since then, including each and every spinoff.

On the comics side of things, after Dragonball he went on to do Sandland, Neko Majin Z and Kajika, as well as several one shots -- although he has not put out an omnibus style tankoubon since Neko Majin Z in 2005. With his rather infamous trouble with producers and his income from the Dragon Quest series, it is unlikely that he will ever do another manga series similar to Dragonball, almost all of his recent works have been short one shots.

Toriyama is known largely for his art style; while Toriyama suffers heavily from being able to draw Only Six Faces, his artwork is very stylized, and thus is hard to imitate without lots of careful study and practice.

Notably, a lot of the Mangaka that first started in The Nineties were inspired by him, including Yoshihiro Togashi (Yu Yu Hakusho, Hunter X Hunter, Level E), Masashi Kishimoto (Naruto), Hiro Mashima (Fairy Tail), and even Eiichiro Oda (One Piece). In fact, Akira Toriyama and Eiichiro Oda worked together on a Manga in 2006 called Cross Epoch, a crossover that contains Dragonball and One Piece characters. Considering that some of these Mangaka have already started to inspire others to join the Shonen industry, you could call him the God of Shonen manga


 * Only Six Faces: Which he mocks in Dr. Slump
 * Reclusive Artist: He was actually rumoured dead in 1998 due to a disappearance... Still around.
 * Vitriolic Best Buds: With Artist Masakazu Katsura, just look at their interview on their joint project Jiya and notice how they nag each other to death.
 * In Dr. Slump, Katsura makes a quick appearance, and is portrayed as a sort of country bumpkin...
 * Writing By the Seat of Your Pants: Which actually works.