At the end of Vol. 1, Meguru’s debut fight captures the essence of MMA—brutal yet technical. The opponent overwhelms him early, exploiting his inexperience, but Meguru’s adaptability steals the show. His grappling transitions feel organic, like you’re watching a real match. The final sequence is a scramble where both fighters are exhausted, and the victory isn’t glamorous. It’s satisfying because it respects the sport’s authenticity.
The volume closes with Meguru reflecting on the fight, not as a triumph but as a lesson. His coach’s earlier words about ‘small steps’ hit harder now. It’s a solid setup for his character arc—less about becoming the strongest and more about mastering himself. The art style’s gritty lines sell every sweat droplet and strained muscle. Makes you appreciate how much research went into this.
Vol. 1 ends with Meguru’s first proper MMA match, and man, it’s a rollercoaster. The fight choreography is insane—every grapple and strike is drawn with such precision that you start picking up on the techniques yourself. The opponent’s taunts add this psychological layer, making Meguru doubt himself before he digs deep. The climax isn’t about winning cleanly; it’s messy, with Meguru barely scraping through. That realism is what hooked me. The aftermath shows him nursing bruises but grinning like an idiot, and that’s when you realize: he’s fallen in love with the grind.
Side note: the supporting cast shines here too. His training buddies react to the fight in ways that hint at future rivalries or alliances. The volume ends on this quiet moment where Meguru stares at his gloves, and it’s like the artist’s saying, ‘This is just the beginning.’ No cliffhanger, just a promise of more to come. Perfect for newcomers to sports manga—no prior knowledge needed.
The first volume of 'All Rounder Meguru' really throws you into the deep end of Meguru's journey as a mixed martial artist. The ending is this intense fight where Meguru faces off against a more experienced opponent, and it’s just raw adrenaline. You see him struggle, but also adapt—his growth isn’t some instant power-up; it feels earned. The way the artist captures the fatigue and desperation in those final panels is visceral. You can almost hear the crowd roaring. What stuck with me was how grounded it felt, like a real match where every punch matters. It left me itching for Vol. 2, no question.
What’s cool is how the story balances technical MMA details with Meguru’s personal stakes. His coach’s advice echoes in his head mid-fight, and you get this sense of tradition clashing with instinct. The ending doesn’t wrap things up neatly—it’s more like the first round of a bigger battle. The last page lingers on Meguru’s exhausted grin, and you just know he’s hooked on the sport now, same as the reader. Makes you wanna join a gym, honestly.
2026-03-21 04:51:39
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