Kino no Tabi: The Beautiful World
Edit
What would you like to edit?
 

Kino no Tabi: The Beautiful World

Alternative Titles

Synonyms: Kino's Journey: The Beautiful World
Japanese: キノの旅 -the Beautiful World-
English: Kino no Tabi: The Beautiful World
More titles

Information

Volumes: Unknown
Chapters: Unknown
Status: Publishing
Published: Mar 10, 2000 to ?
Genres: Adventure Adventure, Drama Drama, Fantasy Fantasy, Mystery Mystery, Sci-Fi Sci-Fi
Theme: Psychological Psychological
Serialization: None
Authors: Sigsawa, Keiichi (Story), Kuroboshi, Kouhaku (Art)

Statistics

Score: 8.831 (scored by 31783,178 users)
1 indicates a weighted score.
Ranked: #342
2 based on the top manga page. Please note that 'R18+' titles are excluded.
Popularity: #951
Members: 19,421
Favorites: 563

Resources

Recommendations

Young girls travelling across strange countries with peculiar situations and characters. Similar humor and structure, based on a series of short stories. Kino has a darker tone.  
reportRecommended by Drynwhyl
Both of them offer an exquisite type of world, and how they interact inside it, with unexpected result of choices for both of them. For Kino is travel, Ginko is mushi. 
reportRecommended by benriya
Travel is the main theme of both Tabi ni Deyou and Kino no Tabi. 
reportRecommended by NickZHaw
Relaxing manga/LN about a somewhat masculine girl who likes to travel with a motorcycle. 
reportRecommended by Ganji_No_Tensai
Science-fiction with philosophycal undertones, where the MC character travel across the world. 
reportRecommended by ObscureObsidian
Both deal with questions such as what defines humanity, why people keep moving forward, how people deal with gruesome reality, and what it means to connect with one another. Both stories are also told through story arcs about the places the characters travel and the people they interact with. Finally, both stories are open-ended thematically; they don't explicitly tell the audience how they should interpret the events of their story arcs. 
reportRecommended by SAniyoukoso
Although the setting and plot may be different, these series are still similar in many other aspects - Both have a somber feeling in their respective settings - Both have MCs that travel around the world, listening to people in many different areas - Both have characters with their own unique backstory 
reportRecommended by Learyan
A lone girl travelling with just a non-human but talking companion. While it's mainly a talking motorcycle in Kino's Journey, a talking dog like in Roaming the Apocalypse with my Shiba Inu makes appearance too. 
reportRecommended by abystoma2
Chronicles of petite girl on her travels as she meets new people and sees curious places and customs. Both have episodical format. 
reportRecommended by abystoma2
Travel is the main them of Kino no Tabi and Shoulder-a-Coffin Kuro, with the protagonists visiting different cultures and people in a world not really like our own. Kino and Kuro are tomboy-ish and don't bother correcting people for assuming they're girls. Also, they have an unorthodox traveling partner who tends to be less serious than the main character (a talking motorcycle for Kino and talking bat/bats for Kuro). The stories are episodic with each chapter visiting a different place before being forgotten for the next chapter. 
reportRecommended by Waffocopter
In both a young girl travels from place to place without ever truly getting involved with the people who live there. 
reportRecommended by Jruru
Light novels with duo of protagonists (technically, if we count Hermes) travelling around the world visiting countries with different customs and interacting with others as we learn the life stories of multiple secondary characters. Both have slower pacing, in a good way. 
reportRecommended by abystoma2
Both feature a protagonist that's not the main focus. The protagonist is there to shed light on themes related to society, philosophy, justice, ethics, etc. where auxilary, episodic characters exist to portray certain stereotypes or tropes. Both in Kino no Tabi and Ethics, the main character usually doesn't take a side, but rather raises questions and lets others, as well as the reader, to decide what to think about that. 
reportRecommended by Eonir
Young girl travels around the world and interracts with various people, learning their stories and maybe helping them. Both girsl also scarcely shows emotions, have military experience and can defend themselves without a problem, thought their look might suggest otherwise. 
reportRecommended by abystoma2