Golden Age Berserk [exclusive] May 2026

This is where Miura executes his grandest trick. He makes us love the Band of the Hawk. He makes us believe in Griffith’s redemption. He gives us the "Rescue at the Tower of Rebirth," where Guts and Casca save the broken Griffith, whispering promises of a quiet life.

Then, reality collapses. The Eclipse is not just a plot twist; it is a metaphysical violation. The festival of the dead. The transformation of the dreamer into the demon (Femto). The branding of the sacrifice. golden age berserk

We watch a feral child soldier transform into a loyal comrade. We witness the rise of the from a ragtag group of outlaws to the unofficial royal army of Midland. The art shifts from the scratchy, gothic horror of the Black Swordsman arc to a sweeping, cinematic clarity. The skies are blue. The castles are magnificent. The battles are won through strategy, not curses. This is where Miura executes his grandest trick

What makes the Golden Age a masterpiece of suffering is the . Judeau’s unrequited love. Pippin’s silent strength. Corkus’s stubborn loyalty. These characters die not in glory, but as offerings to a god they never believed in. Griffith’s act is unforgivable not because he sacrifices his army, but because he does it with a smile—erasing the humanity we spent 12 volumes learning to love. He gives us the "Rescue at the Tower

Guts loses his arm, his eye, and—crucially—his future with Casca (who is mentally shattered by the trauma). The "Golden Age" ends not with a bang, but with a rain of blood washing away the innocence of the world. The Golden Age of Berserk remains the benchmark for dark fantasy storytelling because it refuses to comfort the reader. It argues that the "good old days" are not a time we wish to return to, but a scar we carry. The glow of that era is only visible because of the black void that surrounds it.

In the end, the Golden Age is the corpse of a dream. And we, like Guts, are forced to drag that corpse behind us, one bloody step at a time, asking if the love we felt then was real enough to justify the hell that came after.