# 10 Greatest 2010s Manga Still Running In 2026
Screen Rant celebrates manga series that launched during the 2010s and continue serializing into 2026, proving their staying power in an industry dominated by short-lived properties. These titles represent some of the most commercially and critically successful properties of the past decade and a half.
The 2010s marked a golden age for manga. Series like My Hero Academia, Attack on Titan, and Jujutsu Kaisen launched during this period and became cultural phenomena that transcended print. These properties spawned massive anime adaptations, theatrical releases, and global merchandising empires. Attack on Titan wrapped its manga serialization but maintains cultural momentum. My Hero Academia and Jujutsu Kaisen continue to dominate sales charts and drive viewership to Crunchyroll and other streaming platforms.
Beyond the usual suspects, the list acknowledges deeper cuts that maintained consistent readership. Fire Force, The Promised Neverland, and Chainsaw Man each found their audience through Weekly Shonen Jump and sister publications, translating serialization success into anime deals that introduced them to Western audiences. Chainsaw Man's anime adaptation by MAPPA became a cultural moment in its own right, despite pacing controversies that plagued the second arc.
What distinguishes these 2010s properties from earlier manga is their global synchronization. Viz Media and other English publishers released these series simultaneously or near-simultaneously with Japanese serialization, building international fanbases in real time. This approach contrasts sharply with how 1990s and 2000s manga required years of translation delays.
The persistence of these titles speaks to changing manga demographics and content preferences. Shonen properties with strong character development and serialized storytelling outperform standalone works. Publishers learned that long-form narrative investment keeps readers engaged
