@omegaxis1 I'm tired of seeing these excuses. Yeah, in reality how she's acting makes a lot of sense. The problem is that it renders the whole "I was reincarnated" trope pointless, if she was literally going to act like a child anyway, whatever the reason for that may be. What was the point in doing that if she wasn't going to be able to use something-- anything at all, be it emotional maturity at the very minimum-- in this cycle? She even admits in this chapter that the one self-preserving skill she may have learned (being able to stomach the maids whispering about her) was overwritten by her stay in this life. If it was just to show that she would be mistreated at the Duke's home, she didn't have to go through the rigmarole of being reincarnated to do that. She was an orphan; there of plenty of stories where orphans casually find out that the people trying to adopt them are bad people. They could have pulled a Lucia where she had prophetic dreams, or do what I Belong to House Castillo, where she did have memories of her previous life, but not be a literal continuation of the person from that life. I wonder if the latter case is what they were going for, but it's just executed poorly.
I should also maybe point out that this isn't an isekai. She's just reincarnated in the same world. And most of people's annoyance is coming from the blatant misuse of this trope that set the reader up with false expectations.
That all being said, I'm still reading because the art is cute and the MC is okay (if you pretend she's a normal kid), and the story isn't that bad. But I think some of the critisim is earned when writers include convoluted elements to their story that don't actually contribute as much as they'd imply, especially given what other stories occupying that space.