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Berserk, Volume 1 (2003). Collects “Black Swordsman,” “The Brand,” and “The Guardians of Desire,” chapter 1. Introduces Guts. The volume features the hero’s first nemesis and foreshadows his destiny to perpetually fight evil and exact revenge.
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Berserk, Volume 2 (2004). Collects “The Guardians of Desire,” chapters 2 and 3. Features the first appearance of the Beast of Darkness and introduces Puck.
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Berserk, Volume 3 (2004). Collects “The Guardians of Desire,” chapter 4-6, and “The Golden Age,” chapter 1. Features the conclusion of the battle with the Count and introduces the egg-shaped Behelit, the talismanic entity of great demonic power.
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Berserk, Volume 4 (2004). Collects “The Golden Age,” chapters 2-6. Explores Guts’s psychological makeup.
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Berserk, Volume 5 (2004). Collects “The Golden Age,” chapters 7 and 8; “Sword Wind”; “Nosferatu Zodd,” episodes 1-4; and “Master of the Sword,” chapter 1. Guts seeks revenge against God Hand demon Griffith. Introduces the good-versus-evil construct with the appearance of Nosferatu Zodd.
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Berserk, Volume 6 (2005). Collects “Master of the Sword,” chapter 2; “Assassin,” chapters 1-4; “Precious Thing,” “Departure for the Front,” and “Engagement” episodes; and “Casca,” chapters 1 and 2. Features elements of medieval kingly favoritism, princess flirtation, and dual jealousies of the feudal-era kind.
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Berserk, Volume 7 (2005). Collects “Casca,” chapter 3; “Prepared for Death,” chapters 1-3; “Survival” and “Campfire of Dreams” episodes; and “The Battle for Doldrey” chapters 1-4. Features the culmination of a century-long feudal rivalry and focuses on Guts and his sword.
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Berserk, Volume 8 (2005). Collects “The Battle for Doldrey,” chapters 5 and 6; “Triumphant Return” and “Moment of Glory” episodes; “Tombstone of Flame,” chapters 1 and 2; “One Snowy Mist” episode; and “The Morning Departure,” chapters 1-3. Features courtly, political competition and power battles.
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Berserk, Volume 9 (2005). Collects “Knight of the Skeleton,” “Start of the Everlasting Night,” “The Fallen Hawk,” “Demise of a Dream,” “Arms Tournament,” “The Fugitives,” “The Fighter,” “Comrades in Arms,” and “Confession” episodes, as well as “Wounds,” chapters 1 and 2. Demonstrates the consequences of romantic involvement with royal offspring and includes the deus ex machina rescue of Griffith by Guts.
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Berserk, Volume 10 (2006). Collects “Sparks from a Sword Tip”; “Infiltrating Windham,” chapters 1 and 2; “Festival’s Eve,” chapters 1 and 2; “Thousand-Year Fifedom,” “Reunion in the Abyss,” and “A Way Through”; “Bakiraka,” chapters 1 and 2; and “Flower of the Stone Castle.” Features a strengthening of the bonds between Guts and Casca.
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Berserk, Volume 11 (2006). Collects “Devil Dogs,” chapters 1-4; Roar of the Wild Beast” and “Forest of Tragedy”; “Mortal Combat,” chapters 1 and 2; “Armor to the Heart,” “The Flying One,” and “The Immortal Once Again.” Introduces Wyald of the Knights of the Black Dog.
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Berserk, Volume 12 (2006). Collects “Requiem of the Wind,” “The Warriors of Twilight,” “Back Alley Boy,” “Eclipse,” “The Promised Time,” “Advent,” “The Inhuman Host,” “The Castle,” “Parting,” and “The Feast” episodes. Emphasizes themes of camaraderie and what makes for a strong team. Introduces Guts’s temptation to stray to the dark side.
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Berserk, Volume 13 (2006). Collects “Storm of Death,” chapters 1 and 2; “God of the Abyss,” “Lifeblood,” “Quickening,” “Birth,” “Afterglow of the Right Eye,” “Escape,” “Awakening to a Nightmare,” “The Sprint,” and “Vow of Retaliation” episodes. Features the misuse of the Behelit by Griffith, the summoning of the God Hand demon lords, and the fire walk through Hell.
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Berserk, Volume 14 (2006). Collects “Demon Infant,” “Armament,” “He Who Hunts Dragons,” “The Black Swordsman, Once More,” “The Elves of Misty Valley,” “Jill,” “By Air,” “Elf Bugs,” and “Berserk: The Prototype.” Emphasizes the original vendetta undertaken by the Black Swordsman.
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Berserk, Volume 15 (2007). Collects “Queen,” “Elf Fire,” “Red-Eyed Peekaf,” “The Recollected Girl,” “The World of Winged Things,” “Cocoons,” and “Pursuers”; “Guardians,” chapters 1 and 2; and “The Misty Valley,” chapters 1 and 2. Features a side trek into a deceptively quaint country village.
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Berserk, Volume 16 (2007). Collects “Monster,” “Sky Demon,” “A Bloody Night Sky,” “The Space Between Demon and Man,” “Firefly,” “The Way Home,” “Blue Sky Elf,” Conviction Arc: Binding Chain Chapter, “The Beast of Darkness,” “The Hollow Idol,” and “The Holy Iron Chain Knights,” parts 1 and 2. Introduces a version of Puck’s genotype that perhaps explains the elf’s dark side.
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Berserk, Volume 17 (2007). Collects Conviction Arc: Chapter of the Birth Ceremony,“The Unseen,” “Night of Miracles,” “Past and Future,” “Morning of Truth,” “Cracks in the Blade,” “A Feeble Flame,” and “To Holy Ground,” parts 1 and 2. Features an enchainment of the hero by the Knights of the Holy Iron Chain.
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Berserk, Volume 18 (2007). Collects “Kushan Scouts,” parts 1 and 2; “Tower of the Shadow,” parts 1 and 2; “Children of the Shadow,” “Fierce Believer,” “Bowels of the Holy Ground,” and “The Witch”; “Spirit Road,” parts 1 and 2; and “Pillar of Flame.” Features the death of Midland’s king.
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Berserk, Volume 19 (2007). Collects “The Black Swordsman on Holy Ground,” “Straying,” “Ambition Boy,” “Den of Evil,” “The Reunion,” “Ambush,” “The Cliff,” “Captives,” “The Iron Maiden,” and “Blood Flow of the Dead,” parts 1 and 2. Spotlights Casca as she succumbs to pagan culture. The plot ventures into the realm of witchcraft.
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Berserk, Volume 20 (2007). Collects “The Spider’s Thread,” “Those Who Dance at the Summit, Those Who Creep in the Depths,” “Hell’s Angels,” “One Unknown in the Depth of the Depths,” “The Threatened,” “Omens,” “Martyrdom,” “Collapse,” and “Shadows of Idea,” parts 1-3. Features Casca’s capture and imprisonment in the Tower of Conviction.
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Berserk, Volume 21 (2008). Collects “Leaping Fish”; “Bestial Priest,” parts 1 and 2; “Those Who Cling, Those Who Struggle”; “Tidal Wave of Darkness,” parts 1 and 2; and “Resonance,” “The Sky Falls,” “Daybreak,” “The Arrival,” and “Determination and Departure.” Refines, retools, and reinforces Guts’s primary goal.
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Berserk, Volume 22 (2008). Collects Hawk of the Millennium Empire Arc: The Holy Evil War Chapter; “The Rent World,” “Reunion of the Hill of Swords,” “The Beast Swordsman vs. the Black Swordsman,” “Unchanged,” “Prologue to the War,” and “Fierce Kushan Attack”; “War Cry of the Wind,” parts 1 and 2; and “Of Snow and Flame,” parts 1 and 2. Features Griffith’s return and his perverted version of Midland as his personal kingdom.
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Berserk, Volume 23 (2008). Collects Falcon of the Millennium Empire Arc: The Holy Evil War Chapter; “Winter Journey,” parts 1 and 2; “Scattered Time,” “Fangs of Ego,” “Wilderness Reunion,” “The War Demons,” “Banner of the Flying Sword,” “Wings of Light and Darkness,” “The Night of Falling Stars,” and “Like a Baby.” Casca accelerates into madness.
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Berserk, Volume 24 (2008). Collects Falcon of the Millennium Empire Arc: The Holy Evil War Chapter, “Trolls,” “The Witch,” “The Astral World,” “Magic Stone,” “Elementals,” “Enoch Village,” “Ambition and Reflection,” “Troll Raid,” and “Mansion of the Spirit Tree,” parts 1 and 2. Features a population of militant, predatory Trolls.
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Berserk, Volume 25 (2008). Collects Falcon of the Millennium Empire Arc: The Holy Evil War Chapter; “Magic Sword,” “Mirror of Sin,” “Magic,” “The Arcana of Invocation,” “Raging Torrent,” “Shaman,” “Qliphoth,” “Taint,” and “Evil Horde,” parts 1 and 2. Introduces Schierke, who is childlike in her zeal but mature in her powers.
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Berserk, Volume 26 (2008). Collects Falcon of the Millennium Empire Arc: The Holy Evil War Chapter; “Retribution,” “Redemption,” “Vicinity of the Netherworld,” “Whore Princess of the Uterine Sea,” “Companions,” and “Claw Marks”; “The Blaze,” parts 1 and 2; and “The Berserker Armor,” parts 1 and 2. Features Slan of the God Hand, who appears from the entrails of slain Trolls.
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Berserk, Volume 27 (2009). Collects Falcon of the Millennium Empire Arc: The Holy Evil War Chapter, “Fire Dragon,” “The Depths of Hellfire,” “Departure of Flame,” “Demon City,” “Dread Emperor,” “The Daka,” “Demon Knights,” “Demon God,” “The Sleeping Princess Awakens,” Falcon of the Millennium Empire Arc: Falconia Chapter, and “The Sound of the Sea.” Features the appearance of Grunbeld, who, in dragon form, poses a threat to Guts.
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Berserk, Volume 28 (2009). Collects Falcon of the Millennium Empire Arc: Falconia Chapter, “Proclaimed Omens,” “The Boy in the Moonlight,” “Familiars,” “Supernatural Fog,” “Sea Beast (Makara),” “The Roar of the Sea,” “Superhuman (Jnanin),” “Navy Yard,” “City of Humans,” and “The Kite and the Owl of the Wharf.” Casca bonds with and adopts an abandoned child. Guts struggles against the Kushan-possessed Makara.
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Berserk, Volume 29 (2009). Collects “Bloodshed,” “Warrior,” “A Meager Supper,” “Homing,” “In the Garden,” “The White Lily of the Field,” “Mother,” “The Ball,” and “The Colonnade Chamber.” Features battles against new foes. Schierke and Isidro battle pirate slavers to secure the band’s passage out of Vritannis.
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Berserk, Volume 30 (2009). Collects “Duel,” “Suzerain of the Religious Domain,” “Enchanted Tiger,” “Intrusion,” “The Rusted Birdcage,” “A Proclamation of War,” “Demon Beast Invasion,” “Divine Revelation,” and “City of Demon Beasts,” parts 1 and 2. Farnese sacrifices her freedom so the Band of the Hawk can move on.
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Berserk, Volume 31 (2009). Collects “Broiling Bay,” “Blaze Rod,” “Sword Beast,” “Paramarisha Sen’an’I (Wizard General),” “Eastern Magic,” “The Coiler,” “Bursting Flame,” “Thunder Emperor,” “Attack of the Demon Army,” and “Cloud Cluster.” Guts must choose between leaving Farnese and summoning the strength to control the Berserker Armor to fight off the Kushan clan.
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Berserk, Volume 32 (2009). Collects “Human Bullet,” “Setting Sail,” “The Flight,” “The Torn Battlefield,” “Wind Coil,” “The Midland Regular Army,” “Hero,” “On Board,” and “Massive Invasion,” parts 1 and 2. Features the reappearance of Griffith as Femto, demonic lord of the God Hand.
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Berserk, Volume 33 (2010). Collects “Bubbles of Futility,” “A Howl from the Darkness,” “Dream of Foresight,” “Fog of Death,” “Silent Darkness,” “Exodus,” “Shiva,” “The Heavens Shook,” and “Naval Battle,” parts 1 and 2. Includes Guts’s quest to reach Puck’s homeland, to get the help of Elfhelm’s king to restore Casca’s sanity, and find the demonic Griffith.
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Berserk, Volume 34 (2010). Collects “Giant God of Blindness,” “Demonic Release,” “Inhuman Battlefield,” “The Medium of the Hawk,” “Chaos,” “The Flight,” “Black Lighting,” “Fissure,” “Creation,” and “Fantasia” episodes. The new Band of the Hawk, led by Griffith, is compelled to reveal its true beastly identities.
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Berserk, Volume 35 (2011). Collects “Falconia,” “Solitary Island,” “Girl of the Roaring Torrent,” “Denizens of the Sinister Sea,” “Human Tentacles,” “The Tentacled Ship,” and “Ghost Ship,” parts 1-3. Guts and his entourage find a deceptively safe haven.
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Berserk, Volume 36 (2012). Collects “Full Moon” parts 1-2, “Beastman,” “Sea God,” parts 1-3, “Booming Art,” “A Call from the Deep,” and “Merrow” part 1. Guts must don the berserker armor to give his company a chance for survival.
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Berserk, Volume 37 (2013). Collects “Merrow” part 2, “Siren,” “Surfacing,” “Shooting Star,” “Spring Flowers of Distant Days,” parts 1-3, “Covered Wagon,” and “Paradise”. Guts battles a titanic Sea God, from the inside.
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Berserk, Volume 38 (2017). Collects “City of Men,” “The Divine Right of Kings,” “Pandemonium,” “Bridge of Parting,” “Twilight Assassin,” “Royal Capital in the Moonlight,” “Night Fight,” “Soaring Escape,” and “Landfall”. Guts and his company voyage to the Elven isle of Skellig in the hopes of curing Casca..
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Berserk, Volume 39 (2018). Collects “Flame Puppet,” “Village of Witches,” “Great Gurus,” “Elfhelm,” “The Flower Storm Monarch,” “Dimly Lit Wasteland,” “The Corridor of Dreams,” and “Fragments of Memory”. To cure Casca, Guts battles Elf island’s magical defenses.