First Print/Series/Attack on Titan

Attack on Titan

The biggest non-Shueisha giant of the modern era — a Kodansha blockbuster with deep Western demand and a hard pre-anime scarcity line. Here's every key that matters, how to spot a real first print, and where the value sits.

Publisher
KodanshaBessatsu Shōnen Mag
Vol. 1
2010初版
Creator
Isayamadebut 2009
Volumes
34complete 2021
The grail
Vol. 12010
The keys

What's actually worth owning.

Attack on Titan is a Kodansha book, not Shueisha — a different magazine, a different colophon, and a different collector base. Every entry assumes a first print in high grade; the pre-2013-anime printings are the scarce ones.

We don't quote prices — the market moves too fast to trust a number on a page. Each Check live price → opens a filtered, real-time search on the open market: always current, and the links support the desk.
Japanese first prints · tankōbon

Volume 1 Grail

Kodansha · 2010 · 初版

The debut of the era's biggest breakout. Pre-anime (2010–2012) first prints are genuinely scarce — the series wasn't a phenomenon until the 2013 anime — and are the grail of the run.

Volume 34 Finale

Kodansha · 2021 · series end

The final volume, closing one of the most-watched manga endings in years. A clean modern finale key.

Bessatsu Shōnen Magazine · the magazine keys

Bessatsu Shōnen Magazine 2009 Series Debut

Kodansha · 2009 · Chapter 1

The monthly issue where Attack on Titan began. A Kodansha magazine debut — harder to source than a WSJ issue, and the true first appearance.

English first prints

Kodansha Comics Volume 1 First EN

Kodansha USA · 2012 · English

The English Vol. 1 first print — notably, it hit the West before the anime, so early English first prints have their own scarcity story.

Is your Vol. 1 a first print?

The tells that separate a scarce first print from a reprint.

  • Find the colophon (奥付) — Kodansha's layout differs from Shueisha's; learn it.
  • A first print reads 初版 / 第1刷; the 2013 anime triggered massive reprinting.
  • The date is the whole game: a 2010–2012 Vol. 1 is scarce; a post-anime printing is common.
  • An intact obi adds a premium and helps date the copy.
Full first-print ID guide →

Should you grade it?

The Attack on Titan grading calculus, in short.

  • Grade pre-anime, high-grade early volumes — that's the scarcity that pays.
  • A post-2013 printing is common no matter the grade — verify the date first.
  • English first prints matter more here than on most series, thanks to strong Western demand.
  • Grade when a half-grade swing moves the price $100+.
Read the full Buyer's Guide →
Watchlist

The Attack on Titan board.

The desk's current read at a glance. Status reflects our thesis, not a price quote — always confirm with live sold comps.

Volume / ItemWhat makes it keyTierDesk status
Vol. 1 (JP, 2010)Pre-anime first print; the grailGrailCore hold — verified pre-anime
Bessatsu Shōnen Mag 2009Serialized debutDebutWatch
Vol. 34 (2021)Series finaleFinaleAccumulate
Kodansha Comics Vol. 1 (EN, 2012)English first-print, pre-animeFirst ENWatch — undervalued
Desk status, defined Core hold a foundational key to own and hold long-term. Accumulate worth building a position into on weakness. Watch on the radar — tracking comps for the right entry. Entry buy an accessible starting position for a new collector.

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