@JelloYello all her knowledge comes from her life in this world though, from time-travelling back to her childhood after having worked very hard to gain the knowledge and skills and then dying.
Literally none of that comes from her having memories of a past life as a person from a modern...
I genuinely like the fashion choices for the characters here, it feels distinct to me. The story's enjoyable and I like Firentia, but I'm genuinely baffled why the author included the isekai part when it's so completely irrelevant. I've read a bunch of korean "isekai" stories where you could've...
I'm glad that this manhwa actually came out and said it. No matter how much you love your child, if your child believes they're hated, you've failed as a parent.
I get that she's got a whole ass laundry list of problems, but it still sits wrong with me that she doesn't seem to care at all about all the other people who are also suffering in that underground arena or who are being enslaved :/
it would bother me a lot less if there was like a scene that...
she quit her job that made her miserable and is now taking a sabbatical, but because of cultural expectations it's treated like a shameful thing and she can't even take her free time to recover but only feels guilty
makes me sad every time
The stories were nice by themselves, but only the first story had what the title promised, and it was also the only story that was actually yuri. As a whole, the anthology did not deliver what it promised and felt rather disappointing in that regard.
i wish these kinds of stories could have engagement annulments that would be like, a privately handled matter where everyone parts amicably. I'm tired of flat, brainless characters written only to be hated by the readers.
Nunnaly should live the gay dream and go for that age-gap workplace romance with her boss who is also her first love and inspiration
fire-guy who? i don't know him