Berserk

The finite dark-fantasy masterpiece — a vintage seinen grail whose supply was capped forever by Miura's passing. Here's every key that matters, how to spot a real first print, and where the value sits.

Publisher
HakusenshaYoung Animal
Vol. 1
1990初版
Creator
Miuradebut 1989
Volumes
~41d. 2021
The grail
Vol. 11990
The keys

What's actually worth owning.

Berserk is vintage seinen, not shōnen — older paper, smaller print runs, and a different publisher. Every entry assumes a first print in high grade; condition and browning matter more here than on modern books.

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

Hakusensha · 1990 · 初版

A 1990 vintage seinen grail. Early Berserk printings are genuinely scarce — the series wasn't a phenomenon yet — and clean, un-browned high-grade copies are hard to find. The anchor of the collection.

Volume 13 The Eclipse

Hakusensha · 1990s · Golden Age

The volume era that collects the Eclipse — the series' defining, franchise-defining turn. A story-driven milestone key that collectors seek out specifically.

Young Animal · the magazine keys

Berserk Prototype (1988) Prototype

Miura · 1988 · contest pilot

Miura's prototype Berserk, created for a contest before serialization. The earliest printed Berserk — an apex key for the completist and almost never seen intact.

English first prints

Dark Horse Volume 1 First EN

Dark Horse · 2003 · English

The English Vol. 1 first print from Dark Horse — the accessible entry point for Western collectors, and the version most US fans discovered.

Is your Vol. 1 a first print?

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

  • Find the colophon (奥付) — Hakusensha's format differs from Shueisha's, so learn its layout.
  • A first print reads 初版 / 第1刷; Berserk has seen many reprint waves — most copies are not firsts.
  • The date should sit near the 1990 debut. Later-printing early volumes are common and worth far less.
  • On vintage paper, browning and foxing are the main grade-killers — inspect edges and interior closely.
Full first-print ID guide →

Should you grade it?

The Berserk grading calculus, in short.

  • Grade true-first, high-grade early volumes — that's where the vintage premium lives.
  • On old paper the grade curve is brutal: browning caps grades fast, so white-page copies command real multiples.
  • A graded later printing is still a common book — verify the print first.
  • Supply is finite post-Miura, which supports the long-term case for the true keys.
Read the full Buyer's Guide →
Watchlist

The Berserk 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, 1990)Vintage seinen grail; scarce first printGrailCore hold
Berserk Prototype (1988)Earliest printed Berserk; contest pilotPrototypeWatch — rare
Vol. 13 era (Eclipse)Defining story milestoneMilestoneWatch
Dark Horse Vol. 1 (EN, 2003)English first-print entryFirst ENEntry buy
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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