Which Authors Write The Most Popular Infidelity Comics?

2026-02-03 10:02:17 309

4 Answers

Clarissa
Clarissa
2026-02-07 20:26:17
When I curl up with relationship-heavy comics I tend to look for writers who treat cheating as character development rather than just shock value. Ai Yazawa’s 'Nana' often comes up in conversations because it shows how attraction, loneliness, and personal Demons lead people into destructive choices. Adrian Tomine’s 'Shortcomings' leans into the awkwardness and self-sabotage side of infidelity, which hits different from melodrama. If you want soap-opera energy with complicated loyalties, Jaime and Gilbert Hernandez’s 'Love and Rockets' has decades of messy romance. For serialized web comics, Korean and Western creators on Lezhin or Tapas sometimes build entire stories around affairs, calling them 'mature romance' or 'adult drama'—searching those tags surfaces creators who specialize in adultery plots. I enjoy seeing how different cultures and platforms approach the same taboo; it keeps the genre surprising and often painfully relatable.
Owen
Owen
2026-02-09 06:28:46
I get sucked into messy, human stories, so when people ask who writes the most talked-about infidelity comics I immediately think of creators who don't glamorize betrayal but make it brutal, complicated and readable. My top instinct is to point to Ai Yazawa — her work 'Nana' is full of love that fractures, jealousies that burn, and betrayals that change lives. It's not a textbook on cheating, but the emotional fallout is front and center and fans keep coming back for that raw realism.

On the indie/alt side I always bring up Adrian Tomine; 'Shortcomings' nails the small humiliations and selfishness that lead two people apart. Then there’s the Hernandez brothers — 'Love and Rockets' is sprawling, messy and full of affairs that feel organic to the characters' lives. Terry Moore's 'Strangers in Paradise' also deserves a shout: it’s melodramatic and romantic in a way that puts infidelity inside long, layered relationships. Beyond names, a lot of the most-read infidelity stories live on platforms like Lezhin, Naver and Tapas, where mature romance tags and josei/seinen creators explore adultery in modern settings. Personally, I find those honest, unflinching portrayals both painful and addicting.
Angela
Angela
2026-02-09 19:11:51
If you want a quick mental list of creators who often show infidelity in memorable ways, I immediately picture Ai Yazawa's 'Nana' for emotional fallout, Adrian Tomine's 'Shortcomings' for micro-realism, and the Hernandez brothers' long-running sagas in 'Love and Rockets' for soap-opera scale. Terry Moore’s 'Strangers in Paradise' is another go-to when you want complicated love triangles that stretch for years. For anyone browsing right now, check mature romance/josei/seinen tags on Lezhin, Naver (Webtoon) and Tapas—those hubs host a lot of popular adultery-centered stories. I love how different creators handle betrayal: some make it cinematic, some clinical, and some painfully intimate, and that variety keeps me coming back.
Anna
Anna
2026-02-09 19:58:57
I tend to break this down analytically: authors who make infidelity compelling usually combine deep character work with an environment that rewards secrecy or emotional distance. Ai Yazawa (notably 'Nana') uses pop culture, music scenes and youth angst to stage betrayals that feel inevitable. Adrian Tomine builds contemporary urban portraits where petty selfishness spirals into larger betrayals in 'Shortcomings'. The Hernandez brothers in 'Love and Rockets' create long-form sagas where affairs ripple across years of continuity, and Terry Moore’s 'Strangers in Paradise' uses melodrama and loyalty conflicts so that cheating becomes a plot engine, not a throwaway twist.

Beyond individual creators, the platforms matter: josei and seinen manga, plus mature-tagged webtoons on Lezhin/Naver and indie Western zines, are where infidelity tends to live and thrive. Those environments allow slower burns and moral ambiguity, which is why readers seeking 'cheating' stories often gravitate toward those names and spaces. Personally, I find these works compelling because they force you to sympathize with messy people instead of judging them from afar.
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