Shonen Jump’s Greatest 2020 Manga Is Officially Returning in 2026

4 days ago 8

Hannah is a senior writer and self-publisher for the anime section at ScreenRant. There, she focuses on writing news, features, and list-style articles about all things anime and manga. She works as a freelance writer in the entertainment industry, focusing on video games, anime, and literature.

Her published works can be found on ScreenRant, FinanceBuzz, She Reads, and She Writes.

When Deadpool: Samurai first slashed its way onto Shonen Jump+ in 2020, it felt like a once-in-a-lifetime crossover miracle. Marvel’s most chaotic antihero colliding with manga sensibilities created a series that was loud, self-aware, and impossible to ignore, even among Jump’s strongest digital offerings.

Now, after years of silence, Deadpool: Samurai is officially making its long-awaited return in 2026. The announcement from @shonenjump_plus on X confirms the manga’s serialization will resume on Shonen Jump+, bringing Wade Wilson back into weekly manga chaos and reminding fans why this unlikely hit became one of the standout Jump titles of the decade.

Why Deadpool: Samurai Became a Jump+ Phenomenon

 Samurai volume 1

From the beginning, Deadpool: Samurai stood out because it fully embraced both sides of its identity. It didn’t water down Deadpool’s fourth-wall-breaking humor, nor did it treat manga tropes as disposable jokes. Instead, it fused American comic absurdity with Shonen Jump pacing and visual flair.

The series also benefited from impeccable comedic timing and sharp art that exaggerated Deadpool’s violence without losing clarity. Fight scenes felt authentically “Jump,” while the humor leaned unapologetically absurd. That balance made the manga accessible to manga-first readers and longtime Marvel fans alike.

By 2020 standards, Deadpool: Samurai felt experimental in the best way. Jump+ was already known for risk-taking titles, but this crossover proved digital serialization could handle bold collaborations without compromising quality, creativity, or audience trust.

What the 2026 Deadpool: Samurai Return Means for Fans

To celebrate the manga’s return, Shonen Jump+ has made the latter half of its second season temporarily free to read, encouraging both returning readers and newcomers to catch up. Earlier volumes are also discounted, signaling real confidence in renewed interest ahead of serialization’s comeback.

The 2026 revival arrives at a perfect moment. Cross-media experimentation is more accepted than ever, and Jump+ continues to dominate digital manga culture. Deadpool: Samurai returning now feels less like a novelty and more like a proven success reclaiming its place.

If the new chapters maintain the same unfiltered energy and genre-savvy humor, Deadpool: Samurai could once again become one of Shonen Jump+’s most talked-about titles. Its return isn’t just fan service, it’s a reminder that manga succeeds when it isn’t afraid to get weird.

Cover of the first issue of Weekly Shōnen Jump (Shonen Jump), released in 1968

Created by Takashi Isono, Kazuhiko Torishima

Upcoming TV Shows Dragon Ball DAIMA, Sakamoto Days

Read Entire Article