- © Shigemitsu Harada © Issei Hatsuyoshiya © Akane Shimizu / Kodansha Ltd.
- Manga Score: 7.61
- Author: By SHIGEMITSU HARADA Illustrated by ISSEI HATSUYOSHIYA Created by Akane Shimizu
- Publisher: Kodansha
- Volumes: 8
- DB title: Hataraku Saibou Black
- Rating: 18 and up
- Genres: ActionAnthropomorphicEducationalMedicalSeinen
Cells at Work! CODE BLACK
Synopsis
In this new spinoff of the hit manga, a newbie Red Blood Cell is one of 37 trillion working to keep this body running. But something’s wrong! Stress hormones keep yelling at him to go faster. The blood vessels are crusted over with cholesterol. Ulcers, fatty liver, trouble (ahem) downstairs… It’s hard for a cell to keep working when every day is a CODE BLACK! THE CONTENT OF ADULTS There are trillions of cells in the human body, and they all have to work hard to keep that body alive. But what if that body isn’t taking great care of itself? What if that body smokes too much? Or drinks too much? What if that body forgets to use protection? Why, it might find itself with all manner of dysfunction, and who’s going to have to pick up the pieces? It turns out the same immune cells that fight off the common cold also have to deal with troubles of a distinctly more adult nature…
- Volumes
Review
TentacleTherapy
(All reviews)
0
people found this review helpful
|
Well, as the synopsis itself says, they are in a body in which humans drink alcohol, cigarettes, drugs, have a terrible diet, horrible hygiene, in addition to an addiction to masturbation.
A body in precarious health conditions, where, thanks to all this, diseases, germs, and serious health problems directly affect the main characters, causing many deaths and enormous psychological pressure on the protagonist, unlike Hataraku Saibou, Black brings a more "dirty" of the work and much heavier read more
Machete-kun
(All reviews)
0
people found this review helpful
Spoiler
|
its a good read for those interested to know the different things happening to the body that were not explored much from the original.
Characters are okay, if you're already familiar with the original roles each cell had in the first one, read more