COMIC ARTIST

One

1986 - Today

Photo of One

Icon of person One

ONE (stylized in all caps) or Tomohiro is the pseudonym of a Japanese manga artist, who is best known for his web manga series One-Punch Man, which was later remade into a digital manga illustrated by Yusuke Murata. One serializes the One-Punch Man webcomic on his own website under no official publisher, while the manga remake is serialized in the web version of Weekly Young Jump. His other well-known series, Mob Psycho 100, was serialized in the online version of Weekly Shōnen Sunday, Ura Sunday. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 18 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 17 in 2024). One is the 184th most popular comic artist (down from 175th in 2024), the 2,157th most popular biography from Japan (down from 1,742nd in 2019) and the 66th most popular Japanese Comic Artist.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of One by language

Loading...

Among COMIC ARTISTS

Among comic artists, One ranks 184 out of 226Before him are Kōsuke Fujishima, Robert Kirkman, Len Wein, Scott McCloud, Peter Laird, and Hiroyuki Takei. After him are Joe Kubert, Yasuhiro Nightow, Gege Akutami, Kia Asamiya, Kōhei Horikoshi, and Tetsurō Araki.

Most Popular Comic Artists in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1986, One ranks 261Before him are Park So-jin, Óscar Ustari, Song Ha-yoon, Yoon Shi-yoon, Domenico Criscito, and Lykke Li. After him are Yuki Koike, Thomas Morgenstern, Mustafa Ali, Evgeni Malkin, Michelle Waterson, and DJ Snake.

Others Born in 1986

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, One ranks 2,157 out of 6,245Before him are Yudai Nakashima (1984), Mio Otani (1979), Toru Yoshida (1965), Shohei Ono (1992), Ai Sugiyama (1975), and Nobuyuki Hiyama (1967). After him are Eita Kasagawa (1990), Keita Nozaki (1990), Koji Matsuura (1980), Kunio Kitamura (1968), Masakiyo Maezono (1973), and Ken Yorii (1984).

Among COMIC ARTISTS In Japan

Among comic artists born in Japan, One ranks 66Before him are Yoshitoshi ABe (1971), Oh! great (1972), Tooru Fujisawa (1967), Yuu Watase (1970), Atsushi Ohkubo (1979), and Hiroyuki Takei (1972). After him are Yasuhiro Nightow (1967), Gege Akutami (1992), Kia Asamiya (1963), Kōhei Horikoshi (1986), Tetsurō Araki (1976), and Moyoco Anno (1971).