They're gonna bullshit a reason for them to stay because this is a manga and no one has balls to do drastic thing, what the MC and the gang should do is send them away with provisions if they're feeling generous.I am sure it will all work out fine. However, they are so desperate they are taking hostages now. That is not a friendly look.
If they’ve seriously kidnapped him then those deserve to be abandoned
I prefer to use thermobaric bomb to drain the air from someone lung.Literal human garbage fucking use the fairy to drain the air from their lung
At least some of retards died, I was afraid that everyone would stay alive and well even after all this.It's worse. Roma intentionally went AWOL. He let himself be used as a hostage, as a "feel good" sympathizer for the strangers. He did it to force everyone else to come after him and "help" the stranger tribe.
The militant faction of stranger tribe then -- surprise surprise -- uses him as a hostage to try to extort the Miko. Because negotiations under threat of force (obviously) don't go well , the militant faction gets irate, and ends up killing Roma anyway. Losing their leverage.
The religious cult faction stages a mini-coup in their camp as a result, killing the militants responsible. Since they know all they did was piss off the Miko's camp, they STILL try to ingratiate themselves, by sending their (forcibly-enshrined) figurehead/not-real-prophet to Lerunda.
...where the fake-prophet stranger girl freely admits her (fake-prophet) predecessor told her "pretend to have prophecies, or (we) won't survive in the tribe".
The stranger group has no redeeming features. And I'm guessing was used as a vehicle by the author to illustrate religious zealots/migrant behavior. Won't speculate much beyond that, but wanted to put that out there for WN readers who may not be familiar with how xenophobic JP culture is regarding immigration and naturalization. (But maybe it is realistic in this case...?)
Lerunda then has to de-program the fake-prophet girl and let her lead a normal life in the village, while keeping the stranger-tribe outside as an "out-group". Lerunda's divine powers keep "enemies" away from her, which the stranger tribe are now recognized as. But Lerunda's group are forced to provide some social support as a result of this one-man clustertruck.
What a train wreck, but at least it gives reasonable consequences for all the stupid mistakes and not some bullcrap like friendship solves everything.It's worse. Roma intentionally went AWOL. He let himself be used as a hostage, as a "feel good" sympathizer for the strangers. He did it to force everyone else to come after him and "help" the stranger tribe.
The militant faction of stranger tribe then -- surprise surprise -- uses him as a hostage to try to extort the Miko. Because negotiations under threat of force (obviously) don't go well , the militant faction gets irate, and ends up killing Roma anyway. Losing their leverage.
The religious cult faction stages a mini-coup in their camp as a result, killing the militants responsible. Since they know all they did was piss off the Miko's camp, they STILL try to ingratiate themselves, by sending their (forcibly-enshrined) figurehead/not-real-prophet to Lerunda.
...where the fake-prophet stranger girl freely admits her (fake-prophet) predecessor told her "pretend to have prophecies, or (we) won't survive in the tribe".
The stranger group has no redeeming features. And I'm guessing was used as a vehicle by the author to illustrate religious zealots/migrant behavior. Won't speculate much beyond that, but wanted to put that out there for WN readers who may not be familiar with how xenophobic JP culture is regarding immigration and naturalization. (But maybe it is realistic in this case...?)
Lerunda then has to de-program the fake-prophet girl and let her lead a normal life in the village, while keeping the stranger-tribe outside as an "out-group". Lerunda's divine powers keep "enemies" away from her, which the stranger tribe are now recognized as. But Lerunda's group are forced to provide some social support as a result of this one-man clustertruck.
Oh great and wise spoiler, do we hear anything about her twin sister?It's worse. Roma intentionally went AWOL. He let himself be used as a hostage, as a "feel good" sympathizer for the strangers. He did it to force everyone else to come after him and "help" the stranger tribe.
The militant faction of stranger tribe then -- surprise surprise -- uses him as a hostage to try to extort the Miko. Because negotiations under threat of force (obviously) don't go well , the militant faction gets irate, and ends up killing Roma anyway. Losing their leverage.
The religious cult faction stages a mini-coup in their camp as a result, killing the militants responsible. Since they know all they did was piss off the Miko's camp, they STILL try to ingratiate themselves, by sending their (forcibly-enshrined) figurehead/not-real-prophet to Lerunda.
...where the fake-prophet stranger girl freely admits her (fake-prophet) predecessor told her "pretend to have prophecies, or (we) won't survive in the tribe".
The stranger group has no redeeming features. And I'm guessing was used as a vehicle by the author to illustrate religious zealots/migrant behavior. Won't speculate much beyond that, but wanted to put that out there for WN readers who may not be familiar with how xenophobic JP culture is regarding immigration and naturalization. (But maybe it is realistic in this case...?)
Lerunda then has to de-program the fake-prophet girl and let her lead a normal life in the village, while keeping the stranger-tribe outside as an "out-group". Lerunda's divine powers keep "enemies" away from her, which the stranger tribe are now recognized as. But Lerunda's group are forced to provide some social support as a result of this one-man clustertruck.
snip.
thank u for confirming after this weak chapter for me that its time to drop this trash while its still somewhat cute in my head and everyones annoying extreme naivety or extreme "fears" annoy me anymore then it already hasIt's worse. Roma intentionally went AWOL. He let himself be used as a hostage, as a "feel good" sympathizer for the strangers. He did it to force everyone else to come after him and "help" the stranger tribe.
The militant faction of stranger tribe then -- surprise surprise -- uses him as a hostage to try to extort the Miko. Because negotiations under threat of force (obviously) don't go well , the militant faction gets irate, and ends up killing Roma anyway. Losing their leverage.
The religious cult faction stages a mini-coup in their camp as a result, killing the militants responsible. Since they know all they did was piss off the Miko's camp, they STILL try to ingratiate themselves, by sending their (forcibly-enshrined) figurehead/not-real-prophet to Lerunda.
...where the fake-prophet stranger girl freely admits her (fake-prophet) predecessor told her "pretend to have prophecies, or (we) won't survive in the tribe".
The stranger group has no redeeming features. And I'm guessing was used as a vehicle by the author to illustrate religious zealots/migrant behavior. Won't speculate much beyond that, but wanted to put that out there for WN readers who may not be familiar with how xenophobic JP culture is regarding immigration and naturalization. (But maybe it is realistic in this case...?)
Lerunda then has to de-program the fake-prophet girl and let her lead a normal life in the village, while keeping the stranger-tribe outside as an "out-group". Lerunda's divine powers keep "enemies" away from her, which the stranger tribe are now recognized as. But Lerunda's group are forced to provide some social support as a result of this one-man clustertruck.