Sense Life !!install!! - Manga

Sense Life is a popular Brazilian manga series written and illustrated by Caio Ulisses, known by the pseudonym Glitch Tellend. Originally a webcomic on platforms like Fliptru, it has transitioned into a successful physical publication through Editora MPEG and is recognized as a standout in the national "BR Manga" scene. Core Plot and Characters

The story centers on Noah, a quiet and somewhat nihilistic boy searching for a "sense" or meaning in his life. His life changes drastically when he crosses paths with Kaleb (or Caleb), a reckless drug user with a massive bounty on his head.

Noah: A protagonist with a tired appearance and orange eyes, often wearing a shirt that says "No Sense". He uses a Springfield M1903 rifle in combat.

Kaleb: The secondary protagonist whose chaotic presence drives the action. He has a bounty on his head and uses illegal substances to fuel his supernatural abilities.

Delete: A mysterious female character with "Debt" powers that allow her to erase information, memories, or even her own existence from the world. The Power System: "Tributes"

Since "Manga Sense Life" is not a widely recognized specific title or established idiom, I have interpreted this as a request to explore the concept of "Manga Sense"—the unique way Japanese comics capture the essence of life—and the growing phenomenon of "Life Skills" Manga. Manga Sense Life

Here is a feature piece exploring how manga transcends entertainment to become a way of sensing, understanding, and navigating life.


The Community and the "Nakama" Effect

Perhaps the most pervasive element of Manga Sense Life is the concept of Nakama—a Japanese word meaning "comrades" or "found family," which carries a weight far heavier than "friend."

In Western media, the lone hero triumphs. In manga (One Piece, Fairy Tail, Hunter x Hunter), the hero is nothing without their crew. Luffy cannot beat Kaido alone; he needs Law, Kid, Zoro, and even the Scabbards. He literally gets knocked out four times and requires others to carry him up the stairs.

Manga Sense Life rejects the Silicon Valley "grind alone" mentality. It argues that asking for help is not weakness; it is a power-up. It encourages readers to build their own crew—not just people who like you, but people who will carry you up the stairs when your Haki runs out.

In practice, this means nurturing relationships not based on convenience, but on mutual destiny. It means forgiving a friend's flaws because you understand their "character arc" is incomplete. It means celebrating their power-ups as if they were your own. Sense Life is a popular Brazilian manga series

2. The "Training Arc" Mentality

Going to the gym? Studying for an exam? Learning an instrument? Do not call it "work." Call it your "training arc." Montage music optional. When you view discomfort as a time-skippable montage, the pain becomes narrative necessity, not punishment.

10. Critical Acclaim (Fictional)

“Manga Sense Life doesn’t just tell you how its characters feel — it makes you hear, see, and taste their world. A masterpiece of sensory empathy.”
Manga Journal Weekly

“In an era of loud, fast stories, Sense Life dares to be quiet. And that silence is deafening — in the best way.”
Otaku USA Magazine

“The most innovative use of screentone since Taiyo Matsumoto. Each page is a sensory experience.”
Anime News Network


Final Page

Manga sense life isn’t about mimicking anime poses or seeking drama. It’s about absorbing the emotional truths baked into every panel—the courage to try again, the grace to be soft, the wisdom to see beauty in broken things. The Community and the "Nakama" Effect Perhaps the

Next time you close a volume, ask: What did this story teach me about living mine?

Let the art sink into your bones. Then go live with a little more heart, a little more awareness, and a little more manga sense.


Would you like a version of this piece tailored for a specific age group (e.g., teens, adults) or a shorter/longer format (e.g., a social media thread)?


IV. The Body as a Landscape: Physicalizing the Psyche

Western comics often treat the body as a vehicle for action; manga treats it as a map of the soul. Through exaggerated posture, distorted proportions, and symbolic imagery (flowers, shadows, cracks), manga visualizes psychological states.

Manga’s bodily hyperlegibility offers readers a vocabulary for their own somatic experiences — the knot in the stomach, the heat of embarrassment, the looseness of relief.

Domestic clients
Business clients

Skip the line, request and
book a service online

Book a service