Why is bleach called bleach
Naruto and One Piece’s names are self-evident. But what about Tite Kubo’s smash blockbuster Bleach manga series?
Bleach, a popular manga series created by Tite Kubo, debuted in Japan in 2001 and quickly established itself as one of Shonen Jump’s famous “big three,” alongside Naruto by Masashi Kishimoto and One Piece by Eiichiro Oda. Bleach is the weirdest name of the three, with a meaning that isn’t entirely clear even years after the series ended. There is, however, a rationale behind it.
When Bleach’s one-shot flopped, manga veteran Akira Toriyama wrote Tite Kubo a letter of encouragement, encouraging him to continue with Bleach, despite the unusual title. Kubo’s insistence on the term Bleach is pure Kubo, if not also a smart parody of the Soul Reapers concept.
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Bleach was inspired by traditional Japanese death gods, or shinigami, who donned black robes and collected souls, as Tite Kubo explained in interviews. Rather than focusing on the protagonist, Ichigo Kurosaki, Tite Kubo prioritized the aesthetic of Bleach — Ichigo wasn’t even the first character conceived for the manga. Said was the person in question, and her look is significant.