One thing i noticed is that the Miya on his nightmare looked almost exactly as the Miya in reality, sans piercings, clothes, and I think her hair's color. Now, this could be the author just being a bit lazy and not wanting to design a different appearance for her "gyaru self", but I would...
It is worse, she is unleashing Satan for the sake of the school's "dignity", which is actually to upheld the patriarchal order, the bullying is just a by-product.
Not only that, but shitty enough to see that the people you are trying to kill is EASILY dispatching all assassins sent against her, and not showing any sign of even weakness after being given an absurdly strong poison. No matter how evil they might be, if they had half a brain, at one point...
I think after continuous evidence of her not being a "normal person", they couldn't really say anything against dissolving the marriage. She, unawaredly, put them between a rock and a sword.
I feel bad for the little sister, I hope she gets "adopted", even if just as a maid in training, because the lifestyle she has become accustomed to, and probably the only lifestyle she remembers, is about to go poof. Her "fake older brother" and her mother seems to be both jackass, and if they...
I'm just waiting for the MC to start wearing a Tuxedo Mask's cosplay to hide his identity (but everyone knows it is him) and throwing cards like knives.
With stories like this, where a character is introduced as an asshole and an antagonist (a lot of otome isekais, and that subgenre of "getting kicked out of the party for being useless but I'm actually amazing"), I welcome redemption arcs, but they really need to go through the ground and learn...
I think the bit that is fake is that you develop romantic feelings for those holding you captive, not the "going along" with what they do. In such stressful and life threatening situations, people would do anything to survive, or more accurately, what they think will make them survive, which...
I think that's due to the perspective, the first image is how we see it, from a height comparable to her, the second one is from his eye level, which is supported by the third panel. It is a bit exaggerated, but all together, it is quite an ingenious way to panel that scene.
At least here they actually pointed out how the experiment was manipulated. That's a plus. They might also explain how the Stockholm Syndrome isn't really a thing.
I mean, sure, but it was her actions who triggered the war, right? I would have to re-read to confirm it, but I think she was the one who ordered the killing and shooting of the japanese tourists in that other country. The Emperor tried to protect her afterwards, but he didn't had a direct...