A panel went viral and you need the title. A single screenshot is usually enough to find it. Here's the fast way, plus reliable backups for edited or obscure panels.
Identify your screenshot free →No account, no email. Drop in a screenshot and get the title in seconds.
A manga panel carries the art style, the characters, and the lettering — enough for image AI to match it to a specific series. Qued does this in a couple of seconds, free and without an account.
Backups for when a panel is edited, cropped, or niche:
These communities are built for naming series from a single panel. Post the clearest image and add any detail you remember — a character, a genre, roughly when you saw it.
Lens can surface the source of a widely-posted panel. It's hit or miss for obscure titles, but it costs nothing to try.
If you recognize the art style, the mangaka's other works are a good lead. If a character name is visible in the text, search that with "manga" added.
Pick a panel with clear character art or readable text. Avoid panels that are mostly a meme caption or a single speech bubble. The more distinctive the art, the faster the match.
Qued identifies the manga and saves it to a list you can sort, track, and share — all from one screenshot.
Try Qued free →Often. A clear panel showing characters, art style, or readable text is usually enough for AI to name the series and pull its cover.
Upload it to Qued. It identifies the manga in a couple of seconds and saves it, with no sign-up.
Try the cleanest version. If it's heavily edited, post it to r/whatsthatmanga or try a reverse image search.
Yes — Qued is free with no account. Google Lens is free too for widely-posted panels.