Serialized from 2012 to 2020, there was little that could compete with the feel-good sports vibes of Weekly Shonen Jump’s Haikyuu!! The series was the perfect combination of various underdog story formulas as the players for the once-illustrious Karasuno High School, particularly the short king at its center, Shoyo Hinata. The manga and anime franchise balanced strong animation with exceptional character development, presenting winsome scenarios that drove audiences to cheer the team on, and plenty of BL fanships. But even over a decade since its debut, few sports anime have risen to meet similarly gratifying heights in their debuts.
In the case of Spring 2026’s latest debut, Hal Formula, Shonen Jump may just recapture that energy, but with a peculiar shift in its featured sport. Instead of high school volleyball, Kento Terasaka (Green Green Greens) brings the action to the ultra-high octane tracks of WF1 racing. It’s a gorgeous new series which, hopefully, can outlive Terasaka’s other two Shonen Jump serials. But fittingly, the series features a risk-averse star, pushed to face his fears in order to shine on the racetrack and ascend from the lowly WF4 circuit to the top.
Shonen Jump’s Channeling Haikyuu!! Vibes In Its New Sports Series
Warning: Spoilers Ahead for Hal Formula Chapter #1!
There have certainly been exceptional sports and coming-of-age manga to similarly embody Haikyuu!!’s spirit, like Blue Box balancing competition and growth in badminton, basketball, and romance. Even Akane-banashi features a similarly engaging protagonist. At the center of this new series, though, is 19-year-old Miharu Suzukaze representing Adler Lights Racing, whose inability to make it to the top 10 puts his career at heavy risk of ending. What’s perhaps most tragic, though, is that his four-year-old brother Haruka absolutely idolizes him, understandably finding his racer brother to have the coolest job in the world. But once again, disaster strikes, and he crashes out of the race.
Hal Formula appears to set its racing leagues up like the Formula 1 feeder leagues. WF1 is the world’s premier racing league in the series, with WF4, where Miharu currently races, at the bottom.
It turns out that, while Miharu is a gifted racer, being seen as a worthwhile prospect in WF4. But nobody will want to invest in a racer who is “not a fighter”, that is, not somebody who takes the calculated risks necessary to pull ahead. Despite significant hurdles ahead, Haruka, a naive young dreamer, is steadfast in supporting his brother, believing he can break into WF1, despite it only housing 20 drivers in the world. The way Miharu tells it, he got onto the scene ever since discovering the joy of racing and competition while go-karting as a child, “driving like his life depended on it” ever since. But Miharu had it all wrong: he was driving defensively, to protect himself, rather than using that motivation to push harder.
Miharu is frankly a lovable shonen protagonist. He’s paralyzed by his fears, but still can’t help but shout to the skies above that he’ll race to the top. There are glimpses of rivals who passed Miharu by, an obvious, fitting trope that will surely provide multiple noteworthy characters ahead, even if it leaves Miharu insecure when told his whole life is ahead of him. Yet, he perseveres, while Haruka feeds off this, finding his brother to be a positive role model, willing to defend his honor against other kids at daycare who dare to disrespect him. It produces wonderfully heartfelt moments where Haruka gives his idol a special medal made from his gold origami paper, sure to be a prized token Miharu will look upon in future chapters.
Hal Formula, despite being wildly different from Haikyuu!! and not even being set in high school, still has the juice to hit similar emotional heights. One might even reasonably compare Miharu to Asahi Azumane with his “Glass Heart”, with him growing increasingly crushed by later defeats, unable to hide his shame from Haruka. He has a rational fear of death, a real consequence of catastrophic failure on the track, and the prospect of quitting initially gives him relief. But Haruka once again gets through to him, facing his boyhood fears, in a bid to inspire Miharu. It’s a magnificent display, prompting a spectacular race in the finale.
Hal Formula Shows All Facets Of Its Potential In Chapter #1
Being a Shonen Jump manga, it was practically a foregone conclusion that Miharu would win the pivotal race and stay in the game. But seeing him don his brother’s origami medal was a true class act moment for the character, vowing to his brother that, in a last-ditch effort, he’d secure a victory on the track as well as against his own worst enemy, himself. The chapter showcases the kinetic fury of vehicles racing at 220 km/h, with the only hope of getting ahead being to risk one’s life. It’s gorgeously drawn, showcasing the tension of these drivers in their open-cockpit vehicles, thumbing their noses at death. Miharu, knowing this could be the last race Haruka watches, puts on a hell of a show.
The rest is Terasaka at his best. With the mangaka swinging for the fences, Hal Formula is his third serialized manga, so the tension is felt in the detailed art and in his writing throughout. It’s a gripping final act in which Miharu stares down death, pushed almost foolishly by his little brother’s words, to break through a devastating wreck that occurs around him. It’s not even a great moment of driving, but instead a massive personal victory, and readers will understandably be moved to see just how much joy and adoration is seen in the manga’s central sibling bond.
This is all for a victory from the abyssal lows of WF4, with vast challenges ahead. So ideally, for this manga to shine, it’ll need reader support in the weeks and months ahead. Hal Formula has the potential to create some fantastic, thrilling racing arcs, with Terasaka easily handling the visceral terror of what it can mean for drivers to fail in the sport. It presents loads of opportunities for characters to grow, flourish, and flame out spectacularly. But it also represents the feel-good spirit of the best Shonen Jump has to offer in its sports catalog, and hopefully will run in the magazine for a long, healthy life.
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Haikyuu!!
- Release Date
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April 5, 2014
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Ayumu Murase
Shoyo Hinata
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Kaito Ishikawa
Tobio Kageyama
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- Created by
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Takashi Isono, Kazuhiko Torishima
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Shonen Jump is one of Japan’s most successful manga anthology franchises, published by Shueisha. Launched in 1968, it is the source of some of the most beloved and popular anime and manga series, such as One Piece, Dragon Ball, and Naruto. The franchise has extended into multiple adaptations across various media, including anime, films, video games, and merchandise.
