This compilation brings together ForneverWorld's enthusiastic, chapter-by-chapter reactions to *Hungry Joker*, Yuki Tabata's short-lived 2012–2013 Weekly Shonen Jump series (24 chapters). It's Tabata's first major serialization before *Black Clover*, blending science, supernatural powers, mystery, action, and dark humor. ForneverWorld calls it a fresh, high-potential Shonen Jump title with crazy concepts, strong early hype, and eventual disappointment over its cancellation.
Core Story (as covered in the reviews)Genius amnesiac scientist **Haiji** (or Heidi) and his quirky assistant **Chitose** investigate bizarre "glowing corpses." Haiji eats a mysterious **Black Apple** (linked to historical figures like Newton) that grants him gravity-manipulating powers—but with limits and side effects. The plot escalates into battles against monsters, rival organizations (like the White Jokers), revelations about Haiji's past, god-like powers, and deeper conspiracies involving science, devils, and forbidden knowledge.
ForneverWorld highlights the wild first chapter (one of the craziest in Shonen Jump), Haiji's cool, quiet scientist vibe (compared to a blue-haired Hitsugaya), intense fights (e.g., vs. Kild), escalating reveals, and Tabata's energetic art and pacing. He praises the fresh science-fiction twist on battle shonen, mystery elements, and potential for big things. ForneverWorld's Take Across Reviews
**Early chapters (1–4+)**: Extremely positive. He was hooked by the setup, action, and originality, calling it promising and urging viewers to jump in. He notes the one-shot vs. serialized differences and hopes it avoids early cancellation.- **Mid-to-late chapters**: Mixed but engaged—praising fights, character moments, flirting/death scenes, Haiji's "God Mode," and backstory drops, while noting rushed elements or concerns about longevity.-
**Final thoughts (Ch. 24 + cancellation)**: Bittersweet. Strong praise for effort and concepts, but frustration that it got axed despite potential. He discusses what could have been and picks a next series to review.
**Overall tone in the compilation**: Excited and nostalgic, with ForneverWorld's signature energetic rant/review style—hype for the highs, honest critique on pacing/rush, and appreciation for Tabata's early work. The full series "explained" video (longer retrospective) serves as a great bookend or alternative.