Chapter 33: Necromancer Protagonist Rise
by EternalibChapter 33: Necromancer Protagonist Rise – Death Magic Goes Mainstream
“They called me weak. They called me cursed. They called me an abomination who consorts with the dead. They were right about all of it. And now they answer to me—or they answer to my army of shadows.”
— Common necromancer protagonist introduction pattern
“Necromancy was always the ‘evil’ magic school, the one reserved for villains and creepy NPCs. Sung Jinwoo changed that with a single shadow extraction. Now everyone wants an undead army of their own.”
— Fantasy fiction analyst, genre shift discussion, 2022
The shadows rise. The fallen enemies don’t stay fallen. An army that grows with every battle, never tires, never fears, never betrays. Once the mark of villainy, necromancy has become the protagonist’s ultimate power fantasy—and readers can’t get enough of the aesthetic.
Trend Snapshot
- Category: Manhwa/Light Novel/Fantasy
- Origin Region: Korea/Japan/Global
- Peak Period: 2018–present (growing presence)
- Key Platforms: Webtoons, web novels, anime
- Cultural Impact: Rehabilitated “evil” magic class, created army-building subgenre
Defining the Trend
Necromancer protagonists wield death magic—summoning undead armies, commanding shadows, and wielding powers traditionally reserved for villains. This trend subverts the evil necromancer trope by making practitioners of dark magic the heroes of their stories.
Key elements:
- Death magic specialty: Raising and controlling undead
- Army building: Accumulating forces over time
- Villain-coded aesthetics: Skulls, shadows, darkness
- Misunderstood hero: Society fears them unjustly
- Power escalation: From single skeleton to legion
By The Numbers
Genre Prevalence
| Platform/Genre | Necromancer Protagonists | Growth Since 2018 |
|—————-|————————-|——————-|
| Korean Manhwa | 40+ active series | +800% |
| LitRPG/Progression | 100+ series | +500% |
| Japanese Light Novels | 25+ series | +200% |
| Western Fantasy | 30+ series | +300% |
Solo Leveling Effect
- Pre-Solo Leveling (2017): Necromancer protagonists rare, usually villains
- Post-Solo Leveling (2020+): Shadow/necromancer builds most requested in isekai
- Reader demand: “Where’s my shadow army?” became common comment
- Imitation wave: Dozens of works copied shadow soldier aesthetic
Aesthetic Impact
- Shadow imagery: Most recognizable modern fantasy power visual
- Color palette: Dark purple/blue/black became “cool power” colors
- Army visuals: Silhouette armies behind protagonist became iconic
- Merchandise: Shadow-themed products outperform other power types
Reader Preferences
- Favorite powers survey (fantasy readers 2023):
– Necromancer/Shadow: 28%
– Elemental (fire/lightning): 22%
– Swordsman/martial: 18%
– Support/healer: 12%
– Other: 20%
Historical Context: From Villain to Hero
Traditional Role
- Necromancy as evil school in D&D, video games, fantasy literature
- Liches as final bosses
- Death magic = moral corruption
- Heroes defeat necromancers; they don’t become them
Japanese Light Novel Shift
Overlord (2010 web novel, 2012 light novel) pioneered:
- Protagonist IS the undead overlord
- Villainy framed comedically/sympathetically
- Army building as power progression
- Demonstrated commercial viability
Korean Transformation
Solo Leveling (2018) completed the shift:
- Shadow extraction = necromancy without the stigma
- Loyal shadows vs. mindless undead
- Army serves good (the protagonist’s goals)
- Aesthetic beauty + death power combined
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Case Study: Sung Jinwoo’s Shadow Army – The New Standard
The Power
Sung Jinwoo’s “Shadow Extraction” ability:
- Defeated enemies can become shadow soldiers
- Shadows are loyal, intelligent, can level up independently
- No limit to army size (theoretically)
- Named shadows become characters themselves
Why It Captivated
Visual Power Fantasy
- Single weak hunter commands thousands
- Enemies become assets
- Army grows with victories
- Silhouette aesthetics stunning in full color
Practical Appeal
- Never alone in battle
- Self-reinforcing power (each fight makes him stronger)
- Solo yet army commander (resolving the title’s paradox)
- Perfect “solo leveling” narrative fit
Emotional Dimension
- Named shadows have personality: Igris’s loyalty, Beru’s devotion
- Army as found family (shadows chose him)
- Hierarchy creates character dynamics
- Loyalty earned through combat, not compelled
Lasting Impact
Post-Solo Leveling, shadow/necromancer abilities became:
- Most commonly requested protagonist power in web novel comments
- Standard option in game isekai character creation arcs
- Visual benchmark for action manhwa power reveals
- Definition of “cool protagonist” for a generation of readers
The Visual Language
DUBU’s artistic interpretation established conventions:
- Shadow color: Purple-blue-black gradients
- Eyes: Glowing red or blue points
- Emergence: Rising from ground/darkness
- Scale: Panels emphasizing army vastness
—
The Solo Leveling Effect
Sung Jinwoo’s Shadow Army
Solo Leveling‘s protagonist epitomizes the trend:
- Shadow extraction ability
- Army of shadows from fallen enemies
- Power that scales infinitely
- Visually spectacular army
Why It Caught On
- Army-building satisfaction
- Visual spectacle of legions
- Power fantasy of command
- Dark aesthetic appeal
Imitation Wave
Post-Solo Leveling:
- Many necromancer/summoner protagonists
- Shadow army variants
- Similar power aesthetics
- Clear influence visible
Why Necromancers Now?
Villain Class Rehabilitation
Traditional fantasy: Necromancers = evil
Modern trend: Necromancers = misunderstood/edgy heroes
- Subversion appeals
- Villain aesthetic without villainy
- Having your dark and eating it too
Power Fantasy Evolution
- Individual combat: Limited scaling
- Army command: Infinite potential
- Managing forces: Strategic satisfaction
- Every enemy = potential ally
Visual Appeal
- Skeleton armies dramatic
- Shadows cinematic
- Death imagery striking
- Perfect for manhwa/anime
Narrative Advantages
Escalating Power
- One zombie to skeleton legion to death knight army
- Clear progression visible
- No power ceiling obvious
- Each battle adds resources
Varied Abilities
- Different undead = different skills
- Strategic deployment
- Team combat without party
- Solo yet not alone
Dramatic Moments
- Raising fallen enemies
- Shocking reveals
- Turning tides of battle
- Named undead companions
Social Tension
- Society fears necromancers
- Protagonist must navigate prejudice
- Hidden power revealed dramatically
- Misunderstood hero arc
Notable Works
Korean Necromancer Manhwa
- Solo Leveling: Shadow extraction
- The Max Level Hero Has Returned: Dark powers
- I Am the Sorcerer King: Death magic elements
- Necromancer Academy’s Genius Summoner
Japanese Light Novels
- Overlord: Ainz as skeleton necromancer
- The Death Mage Who Doesn’t Want a Fourth Time
- Skeleton Knight in Another World: Undead protagonist
Western LitRPG
- Necromancer class popular
- Army-building subgenre
- Progression fantasy fit
- System integration
—
Expert and Industry Voices
Manhwa Artist Perspective
“Drawing shadow armies is both challenging and satisfying. You need enough detail for impact but can stylize with silhouettes. When done right, a panel of shadows rising behind the protagonist creates an image readers screenshot and share. It’s become visual shorthand for ‘this character is badass.'”
— Korean manhwa artist, industry interview, 2022
LitRPG Author View
“After Solo Leveling, every other reader comment asked for shadow builds, necromancer classes, or summoner variants. The demand was undeniable. It’s not just about death magic—it’s about the compounding army fantasy. Every battle makes you stronger. That loop is addictive.”
— LitRPG author, writing community discussion, 2023
Fantasy Scholar Analysis
“The necromancer protagonist represents the rehabilitation of ‘dark’ aesthetics for heroic purposes. It’s not that readers want evil—they want the aesthetic of darkness without the moral compromise. The shadow army solves this: death magic, but loyal and directed toward good ends.”
— Fantasy literature professor, academic panel, 2023
Reader Psychology
“I love the shadow army trope because it’s the ultimate snowball fantasy. In games, we call it ‘scaling’—every victory makes the next easier. The necromancer protagonist literalizes that in the most satisfying way possible. Your enemies become your strength.”
— Reader community discussion, 2023
Art Direction
“The shadow aesthetic has become the dark mode of fantasy illustration. Dark backgrounds, glowing eyes, silhouette armies against dramatic lighting. DUBU established a visual language, and now the entire industry speaks it. If you want your fantasy protagonist to look powerful, you give them shadows.”
— Manhwa art director, visual design presentation, 2023
—
Deeper Cultural Analysis
The Anti-Hero Evolution
- Darker protagonists accepted in mainstream
- Morally grey popular across media
- Villain aesthetics for heroes
- Power > purity in reader preferences
Dark Magic Rehabilitation
Necromancy’s image evolved:
- From: Corrupting evil that damns the soul
- To: Powerful tool that depends on user intent
- Context: Protagonist intent matters more than power source
- Aesthetic: Beauty found in darkness
Compounding Power Fantasy
The necromancer represents a specific fantasy type:
- Each battle strengthens (unlike regenerating enemies in other genres)
- Enemies become assets (transformation of opposition)
- No waste in victory (everything has value)
- Infinite scaling possibility (no ceiling)
Isolation Solution
The shadow army elegantly solves the “solo” protagonist problem:
- Protagonist fights “alone” but commands many
- No human companions required (avoiding relationship complexity)
- Loyalty absolute (no betrayal arcs possible)
- Power multiplied yet personally held
Why “Cool” Shifted
The aesthetic transformation has multiple roots:
- Gaming influence: Dark classes popular in MMOs for years
- Subculture mainstreaming: Gothic aesthetics normalized through fashion, music
- Power visualization: Shadows more dramatic than light on the page
- Uniqueness: Standing out from generic “light hero” protagonists
Character Archetypes
The Reluctant Necromancer
- Didn’t choose death magic
- Horrified at first
- Grows to accept
- Uses power for good
The Edgy Anti-Hero
- Embraces dark aesthetic
- Scares enemies deliberately
- Dark but not evil
- Cool factor maximized
The Strategic Commander
- Focus on army management
- Tactical deployment
- Less personal combat
- Mind over magic
The Skeleton Protagonist
- Actually undead themselves
- Overlord, Skeleton Knight
- Unique perspective
- Comedy potential
Visual Representation
Manhwa Spectacle
- Full-color shadow armies
- Dramatic undead designs
- Named undead individuals
- Army formations
Anime Adaptation
- CGI army challenges
- Named undead animation
- Aesthetic maintenance
- Solo Leveling benchmark
Army-Building Subgenre
Beyond Necromancy
Related trends:
- Monster tamers: Collecting creatures
- Summoners: Contracted beings
- Kingdom builders: Political armies
- Pokemon-adjacent: Creature collection
Common Satisfaction
- Growing force
- Varied capabilities
- Management gameplay
- Power accumulation
System Integration
- Each undead = stats
- Army inventory
- Upgrade systems
- Collection completionism
Cultural Significance
Death Imagery Normalized
- Skulls as protagonist icons
- Death not inherently evil
- Dark aesthetics acceptable
- Horror-adjacent fantasy
Power Through Darkness
- Light magic not required for heroism
- Subverting good/evil magic divide
- Embracing shadow
- Complexity over binary
The Lone Army
- Solo protagonist technically
- But commands multitudes
- Isolation yet community
- Independent yet powerful
Challenges for Writers
Ethical Questions
- Raising the dead: consent?
- Using enemy corpses
- Named undead autonomy
- Usually hand-waved
Balancing Power
- Army too strong too fast?
- Maintaining tension
- Limits on extraction
- Scale management
Individual Character
- Protagonist can overshadow
- Undead as characters too?
- Focus maintenance
- Personal stakes
Future Trajectory
Continued Popularity
- Necromancer class established
- Army-building satisfying
- Visual potential high
- Cross-media appeal
Subversion Coming
- Deconstruction of trend
- Consequences explored
- Darker implications
- More nuanced takes
Diversification
- Female necromancers increasing
- Non-combat necromancy explored
- Ethical exploration in literary works
- Genre hybridization (romance + necromancer, comedy necromancer)
—
See Also
- Chapter 27: Solo Leveling Manhwa Influence – Defining work for shadow army aesthetic
- Chapter 13: Morally Grey Protagonists – Broader trend necromancers fit within
- Chapter 32: System/Status Window Trope – Often combined with summoner systems
- Chapter 34: Non-Human MC Trend – Related trend in non-traditional protagonists
- Chapter 2: LitRPG and Progression Fantasy – Genre context for power builds
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Key Takeaways
Necromancer protagonists represent the successful rehabilitation of a traditionally evil archetype. Led by Solo Leveling‘s shadow army spectacle, the trend combines dark aesthetics with heroic narratives, providing unique power fantasy through army-building rather than individual combat. The visual appeal of commanding undead legions translates exceptionally well to manhwa and anime, ensuring continued popularity. While the trend raises ethical questions that most works avoid, the core satisfaction of accumulating power through forces rather than personal strength creates a distinct progression fantasy subgenre.
The shadows rise because readers want them to. In a genre once defined by bright heroes with light magic, darkness has found its own heroic narrative. The necromancer isn’t the enemy anymore—they’re the protagonist, and their army grows with every battle. It’s a power fantasy that resonates because it transforms every defeat into strength, every enemy into ally. The dead serve the living, and readers can’t look away.
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Analysis based on manhwa trends, light novel publishing, LitRPG genre patterns, and anime adaptation patterns through 2024.

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