Which Infidelity Comics Have The Highest Fan Ratings?

2026-02-03 01:01:53 310

4 Answers

Jude
Jude
2026-02-04 10:08:51
Late-night shortlist: if you want the highest-rated comics that center on infidelity, I’d start with 'Nana' (manga), 'Blue Is the Warmest Color' (graphic novel), and graphic adaptations of 'Anna Karenina' and 'Madame Bovary.' These repeatedly score highly on community lists because they treat affairs as part of a larger moral and emotional picture rather than just shock value.

I tend to trust cross-platform consensus: Goodreads for graphic novels, MyAnimeList/MangaUpdates for manga, and Webtoon/Lezhin ratings for serialized comics. Those four names kept popping up in every corner I checked, and they’re the ones I keep re-recommending to friends who want smart, painful stories about love gone sideways — honestly, they hit hardest at 2 a.m.
Connor
Connor
2026-02-04 11:44:19
If you’re hunting for top-rated comics that treat infidelity as a core drama engine, I gravitate toward a mix of modern graphic novels and classic adaptations. Fans often rate 'Nana' very highly because it’s not just about cheating scenes — it’s about the fallout, the friendships, and how careers and insecurities feed poor decisions. 'Blue Is the Warmest Color' also gets top scores for its emotional honesty, even though people argue about how it ends. Then there are faithful graphic versions of 'Anna Karenina' and 'Madame Bovary' that readers praise for keeping the novels’ tragic cores while adding arresting art.

Ratings can swing wildly depending on whether reviewers prize artwork or narrative depth, so I always cross-check a few platforms. In short: those four come up the most when people talk about infidelity done well in comics; they stick with you in ways trashy soap operas rarely do.
Yara
Yara
2026-02-05 17:53:46
Long before I chased every new webcomic drop, I got hooked on stories that didn’t shy away from betrayal and messy adult choices. For fan-rated reads that revolve around infidelity, the ones that consistently pop up across communities are usually either modern graphic novels or comic adaptations of classic literature. Titles I keep seeing with very high marks include 'Nana' for its raw, tangled romantic lives; 'Blue Is the Warmest Color' for its intimate, heartbreaking portrayal of love and the fractures inside it; and graphic-novel adaptations of classics like 'anna karenina' and 'Madame Bovary' — both of which are literally centered on adultery and are praised for how they translate those themes visually.

If you want a quick way to check relative standing, I look at Goodreads for graphic novels, MyAnimeList and MangaUpdates for manga, and GoComics/Webtoon/Lezhin for serialized webcomics. Ratings vary by platform because readers rate different things — art, pacing, moral complexity — but these four keep surfacing in high-rated lists. They’re the kind of reads that leave you thinking about choices and consequences for days, and I still find myself recommending them to friends who want emotional, complicated drama.
Quincy
Quincy
2026-02-06 12:01:12
This week I dove into community lists and let ratings guide a mini reading marathon, and a pattern emerged: the most highly rated pieces that focus on adultery are either literary adaptations or character-driven manga/graphic novels. 'Anna Karenina' and 'Madame Bovary' appear repeatedly in high-rated graphic adaptations because they’re classic case studies of desire, social pressure, and the consequences of crossing certain lines. On the modern side, 'Nana' gets rave fan reviews for its flawed, realistic characters whose romantic betrayals feel earned rather than sensationalized. 'Blue Is the Warmest Color' shows up too — praised for its intense emotional register and the way relationships crack under pressure.

If you want to judge for yourself, compare community scores on Goodreads and MangaUpdates, then skim comments on Webtoon or Lezhin (for serialized work) to see what readers loved or hated about the portrayal of cheating. For me, the most satisfying ones are the ones that don’t just show the act but dig into why people betray each other, and those titles do exactly that — they linger in my head long after the last panel.
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