This didn’t make it any better, on the contrary it just made it worse. A teenage girl gave up her life for her teenage crush, and she isn’t even that grateful. This ending is really dark, and its weird that the story doesn’t treat it as such.
This didn’t make it any better, on the contrary it just made it worse. A teenage girl gave up her life for her teenage crush, and she isn’t even that grateful. This ending is really dark, and its weird that the story doesn’t treat it as such.
Maybe it was referring on the how. Granted we , and probably the character themselves, don't have much information about cancelling or rewriting the spell. However from Makia speech it seems to me like (but I may be over-reading an intention that isn't there) she always intended to do this, and instead of trying to cancel the spell or changing the effect, she went straight to redirect the spell on herself because she intended to disappear in her place from the beginning, maybe as a wake up call for Maki. In chapter 6 Makia straight up says to Kana she could have stopped Maki attempt, but that would have been meaningless, Kana may be saying here that she think Makia choice wasn't the best, and better alternatives could exists