---
product_id: 408898997
title: "Berserk Deluxe Volume 12"
price: "$78.80"
currency: USD
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 5
url: https://www.desertcart.us/products/408898997-berserk-deluxe-volume-12
store_origin: US
region: United States of America
---

# Berserk Deluxe Volume 12

**Price:** $78.80
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Berserk Deluxe Volume 12
- **How much does it cost?** $78.80 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.us](https://www.desertcart.us/products/408898997-berserk-deluxe-volume-12)

## Best For

- Customers looking for quality international products

## Why This Product

- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Description

Review: Miura carved delirium into ink until every page felt less drawn than unearthed from raw obsession ! - Bought this diabolic goth baby today. Justified every nook and cranny. Every panel is a cathedral of intricate, embellished art. Miura bled on to the pages, OBSCENE violence with ink. Even the most awestruck, fascinated connoisseurs of art would pause before this madness... __________________________ Detailed review : Owning Deluxe Volume 12 of Berserk feels less like buying a book and more like inheriting a strange, sacred relic. What makes it extraordinary is not only the density of the artwork but the eerie sense of presence in the pages. Kentaro Miura had the rare ability to make ink feel alive. His panels breathe. The silence between lines carries weight. Even the negative space hums with tension, like the air before a storm. There is something deeply human buried beneath the brutality. The violence is not spectacle. It is confession. Every twisted creature and impossible landscape feels like a fragment of the artist’s own subconscious dragged into daylight. The result is strangely intimate. When you stare long enough at these pages, you begin to feel the rhythm of a human hand that refused shortcuts, a mind that would rather suffer through perfection than settle for adequacy. What truly separates this volume from ordinary comics is how it functions almost like visual music. Your eye does not simply read the panels. It wanders through them the way one walks through an ancient city, discovering tiny details tucked into corners that were never meant to shout for attention. A background figure, a crumbling tower, a swirl of shadow that exists purely because the artist could not leave the space unimagined. It rewards patience the way great paintings do. And then there is the strange emotional aftertaste. When you close the book, you are left with the quiet awareness that you have witnessed something created with a level of devotion that borders on madness. Not efficient, not market driven, not calculated for speed. Just a human being pushing ink to the edge of what the medium could survive. That is the real reason it lingers on your shelf like a gravitational object. It is not simply something you read. It is something that waits for you. Every time you open it, you are stepping back into the mind of a man who believed that a single page deserved the patience of a lifetime. I bought Volume 12 specifically for those panels. It has the highest re-read value because it captures Miura at his most meticulous, at the absolute pinnacle of his artistry. It’s the kind of book you can open anytime just to admire the artwork. And when you have something like that sitting in your home, you’ll inevitably find yourself returning to it again and again. That’s why, if you’re only planning to buy one or two Deluxe editions, it makes the most sense to choose volumes from the later part of the series, after the Eclipse and the Lost Children arc. Personally, I’d say just get Deluxe Volume 12. Once you see how many breathtaking double-page spreads there are in the chapters it contains, you’ll understand why. If you read those same chapters in the regular Volume 34, you’d probably think, “I should’ve bought the Deluxe.” It almost feels like an art book. The oversized pages finally give Miura’s compositions the space they deserve, and the print quality makes every line stand out. Now imagine buying Deluxe Volume 1 and having those huge, crisp pages filled mostly with dialogue. That’s not to say the early volumes are bad, far from it. But even if you claim you don’t have much of an eye for art, if you’re spending 3k, you naturally want the edition that showcases the very best of what the series has to offer.
Review: Its worth it!! - Book is very nice and art style is crazy you should go for it, its really worth the money

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | #20,298 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #163 in Mangas #200 in Military Fantasy (Books) #208 in Fantasy Anthologies |
| Customer Reviews | 5.0 out of 5 stars 1,898 Reviews |

## Images

![Berserk Deluxe Volume 12 - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/91Km+KpGq8L.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Miura carved delirium into ink until every page felt less drawn than unearthed from raw obsession !
*by M***L on 7 March 2026*

Bought this diabolic goth baby today. Justified every nook and cranny. Every panel is a cathedral of intricate, embellished art. Miura bled on to the pages, OBSCENE violence with ink. Even the most awestruck, fascinated connoisseurs of art would pause before this madness... __________________________ Detailed review : Owning Deluxe Volume 12 of Berserk feels less like buying a book and more like inheriting a strange, sacred relic. What makes it extraordinary is not only the density of the artwork but the eerie sense of presence in the pages. Kentaro Miura had the rare ability to make ink feel alive. His panels breathe. The silence between lines carries weight. Even the negative space hums with tension, like the air before a storm. There is something deeply human buried beneath the brutality. The violence is not spectacle. It is confession. Every twisted creature and impossible landscape feels like a fragment of the artist’s own subconscious dragged into daylight. The result is strangely intimate. When you stare long enough at these pages, you begin to feel the rhythm of a human hand that refused shortcuts, a mind that would rather suffer through perfection than settle for adequacy. What truly separates this volume from ordinary comics is how it functions almost like visual music. Your eye does not simply read the panels. It wanders through them the way one walks through an ancient city, discovering tiny details tucked into corners that were never meant to shout for attention. A background figure, a crumbling tower, a swirl of shadow that exists purely because the artist could not leave the space unimagined. It rewards patience the way great paintings do. And then there is the strange emotional aftertaste. When you close the book, you are left with the quiet awareness that you have witnessed something created with a level of devotion that borders on madness. Not efficient, not market driven, not calculated for speed. Just a human being pushing ink to the edge of what the medium could survive. That is the real reason it lingers on your shelf like a gravitational object. It is not simply something you read. It is something that waits for you. Every time you open it, you are stepping back into the mind of a man who believed that a single page deserved the patience of a lifetime. I bought Volume 12 specifically for those panels. It has the highest re-read value because it captures Miura at his most meticulous, at the absolute pinnacle of his artistry. It’s the kind of book you can open anytime just to admire the artwork. And when you have something like that sitting in your home, you’ll inevitably find yourself returning to it again and again. That’s why, if you’re only planning to buy one or two Deluxe editions, it makes the most sense to choose volumes from the later part of the series, after the Eclipse and the Lost Children arc. Personally, I’d say just get Deluxe Volume 12. Once you see how many breathtaking double-page spreads there are in the chapters it contains, you’ll understand why. If you read those same chapters in the regular Volume 34, you’d probably think, “I should’ve bought the Deluxe.” It almost feels like an art book. The oversized pages finally give Miura’s compositions the space they deserve, and the print quality makes every line stand out. Now imagine buying Deluxe Volume 1 and having those huge, crisp pages filled mostly with dialogue. That’s not to say the early volumes are bad, far from it. But even if you claim you don’t have much of an eye for art, if you’re spending 3k, you naturally want the edition that showcases the very best of what the series has to offer.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Its worth it!!
*by V***R on 3 September 2025*

Book is very nice and art style is crazy you should go for it, its really worth the money

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Worth the purchase
*by A***H on 16 December 2023*

I received my order after a few days of ordering and it came in mint sealed condition and looks amazing.The only problem is that the seller didn't provide any sort of bubble wrap or cardboard packaging so I was lucky not to receive a damaged volume

## Frequently Bought Together

- Berserk Deluxe Volume 12
- Berserk Deluxe Volume 11
- Berserk Deluxe Volume 13

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*Product available on Desertcart United States of America*
*Store origin: US*
*Last updated: 2026-05-03*