Dex-chan lover
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2023
- Messages
- 250
Everytime i see canada mentioned in a manga:
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I think this one is setup a lot better for this type of character. To begin with, the main issue, the misunderstandings, is driven by the heroine pretty hard to the point that it's reasonable for both the hero and third parties to think she's reluctant about their relationship. Add to that that the setup is that the hero is using his misunderstanding as a motivator, trying harder to get her to like him or improve their relationship because he thinks it's bad, make it so that this character making the misunderstandings worse can drive their relationship forward if he takes the comments as a challenge.I really really hope this girl doesn't become a regular fixture of this story. Least she isn't as unlikable as the usual friend who hates/dislikes the love interest trope, but still.
Its because she took all of the direct canadian aggression with her to japan. We now channel our emotions through cobra chickens.I don't think I have ever met a girl this aggressive while in Canada. Hopefully the friend circle fleshed out a bit more.
She's only marginally better, which isn't saying much considering the typical trope is horrendous.I really really hope this girl doesn't become a regular fixture of this story. Least she isn't as unlikable as the usual friend who hates/dislikes the love interest trope, but still.
I'd love to see that, Sora distancing himself even further, Miyuki realizing maybe her new "friend" is kind of a bitch to Sora, etc.New girl is annoying, but damn she just spent a whole day insulting Sora, and Miyuki didn't say a single thing. Sora honestly should just call it off.
It's really annoying when we keep seeing the same trope of "He isn't worth it, you could do better!" in the supposedly "close friend" character that does something like this in their introduction chapter. I think it really cheapens the character as it makes them appear unable to process social cues (or feel so strongly about the protagonist that they bluntly state their opinion anyways) as they insult someone close to their "friend" with very limited time together. It makes them seem less friendly, more judgemental, and overall undermines their characterisation as "Friend A". This would be fine if this sort of animosity is addressed later on, but it almost always is played for cheap laughs at the expense of the protagonist and ultimately goes unresolved.I really really hope this girl doesn't become a regular fixture of this story. Least she isn't as unlikable as the usual friend who hates/dislikes the love interest trope, but still.