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In Log.65 Killy carries the orb to an unknown location with a lot of water and plants, and the orb seemed to start to develop. Later it was discovered that the orb is an entity that has the Net Terminal Genes and that it will start to develop when it will be in a safe environment. This new manga is likely to appeal to younger male readers jonesing for an adrenaline rush while their PSPs recharge, but it won't be able to compete once their batteries are back at full strength.When Cibo transformed into the Level 9 Safeguard her body contained an orb in her stomach. But with ascending levels, occasional fights and increasingly bigger monsters for Killy to defeat, the storytelling is indistinguishable from old versions of Doom and Duke Nukem. The art is actually quite good, with an eye for detail and architecture. Basically, the plot here is a thin MacGuffin on which Nihei hangs a relentless series of chases and gun- and swordfights between Killy and escalating waves of humanoid robots, disfigured mutants and spiny-necked mutated robots with guns for eyes. Enter Killy, a quiet, dark-clad loner who is looking for the "net terminal genes." What are they? Why is he looking for them? Those are apparently questions for volume 2.


Killy's journey throughout the City and his encounters with its inhabitants make up most of the. The world has become an endless metal labyrinth, populated by people hunted by unknown forces for their genetic material. Killy (, Kirii) is the main protagonist in Blame, a synthetic human who travels though the Megastructure to find a human with Net Terminal Genes, which, if found, would be able to halt the expansion of the City, thereby saving all human life within it from hostility by the rogue Safeguards.
