I understand why these chapters take so long to release. The staff is too busy stripping the clothes off the men and fulfilling their delusions.
*The staff corner gets more comments in this section than the actual chapter, lol
That's a lot of dialogue for nothing happening this chapter. It's not so fun when the MC has to spend the whole chapter bargaining with lowlifes to do anything. I don't see these people being useful in a fight anyway, just go in solo like a chad.
Ooh, Melissa going to be outbraining Peacock. It was her plan to leak the info to Peacock to do the work of building up the mine, and then she'll move in and just take it. Nice.
@degenerateafro This is probably a "spoke too soon" moment. We might not be done with the cooking stuff. For all you know, she might finally decide to open a food stall nearby and invent mayo. Mayo is almost always the "secret weapon" in isekai cooking manga, it's never the first round or...
It's moments like these that help Davie reinforce the loyalty of his men. Monmeder is already a loyal, duty-bound man, but he's getting to witness firsthand how his new lord outplays his opponents and schemers. Monmeder can be assured his lord is someone worth serving.
We’re already 9 chapters in and there still is no plot. Author had a premise (golem waifu) but has no idea for a story yet. They’re just dicking around with a rando now.
*Edit: I guess the publisher had the same thought since they axed this. No surprise there.
Ordoll is sure adopting daughters at a brisk pace. Duke's daughter, Saintess, Sorceress' homunculi-or-something, and a Magical Wolf heiress. Wonder what we get next...
Man, author got us real good. I think most of us thought that Edith was the little bratty sister trying to steal Duke Dewello from Valerie. Turns out she's just really misunderstood. Middle child syndrome right here.
Nice! Have Marie start up a patisserie in this region and have people change their mind that they need sweets. Sweets are for making EVERYONE happy, not just nobles. Need to start by changing the thinking of the citizens.