No way... Could this really be...? A finished manga that appears to have a somewhat good reception? And seems to be at least slightly worth reading? In this economy?
It's been months. :fml:
Yeah, just give us the "shit" implementation that fixes this retarded problem now, and explore all you want later.
Since the implementation of the new comments, I've barely used MangaDex due to how annoying my usual "workflow" has become.
Worst part is actually the fact that clicking on the comments on the chapter now opens the chapter itself along with this useless comment section, marking the chapter as read.
My usual "workflow" is to check the comments on some chapters without actually reading the chapter, so this change...
Ahh, thank you for describing it properly so I can avoid reading this shite. Had it on my feed for a while, waiting for it to finish.
Boy, am I glad I stopped reading ongoing series.
Yeah...no. :facepalm:
Feck this shite. I'm blocking these retards. :shamihuh:
Gonna file a report as well. Not sure if they're breaking any rules, but it sure feels like they are. :salute:
Hating the newspaper club, but will keep reading for a little while longer since they don't seem to be taking too much of the "screen time".
Still a retarded plot point, though.
...gay meteorites. Authors are really running out of premises, huh.
It's not even that interesting. Remove the meteorites and their effects, turn both childhood friends the same sex, and it's really just your typical "gay teenager falls in love with a hetero friend" story.
Probably gonna end...
I mean, I understand how these releases work in Japan. I'm just saying that even then, they feel pathetically short.
I reckon it's a combination of what you said, and the way the story is written, where it's less a story and more a log of events.
Conclusion: I just hate slice of life stories...
Wao... All the volume covers look like they were generated by an LLM using the exact same prompt.
I'm not saying they were generated, I'm saying that all of them can be described with the same phrase, and the variations between them can be attributed to the randomness you get with typical...