When Tite Kubo’s Bleachfirst arrived in the early 2000s, it anchored the shonen boom. As one-third of the legendary "Big Three" alongside Masashi Kishimoto’s Narutoand Eiichiro Oda’s One Piece, it helped define an era of supernatural action storytelling, even though Bleachhad a slightly different tone than its peers. It was always less concerned with the linear, "train-to-get-stronger" hero's journey popularized by Dragon Ball Z, leaning instead into a moody, punk-rock aesthetic and focusing on the strange weight of duty that comes with death itself.
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