think it like this. san was accepted that she was going to die, and yet she got rescued by the named. nobody would believe her so she kept the fact that the named (the monster she should be hunted) was exist to save her savior. that was her first bottled up feeling. but, one year later there is named in the are that caused so much damage. it makes her feel guilty she can save lives by telling others there was a dangerous named. this is the second impactful experience. and last, she got revealed into relieve that all monsters was really a nice person. that was all because kikuru's action to believe her choice and her saviour.
but, because her integrity she chose to protect seiten first after all that time she ignored her attraction to kikuru
He just got brother-zoned(or something, I forgot) by Enome, tf you expect
And he treats Hanabata's affection or admiration as respect being a senpai
There's little to no hope
He just got brother-zoned(or something, I forgot) by Enome, tf you expect
And he treats Hanabata's affection or admiration as respect being a senpai
There's little to no hope
And in Hanabata's case, she just needs to speak clearly, so it's not totally hopeless on that front. Maybe a few more near death experiences and she'll find the courage to do it before she loses him.
lol "This is the way of an adulteress: she eats and wipes her mouth and says, 'I've done nothing wrong.'"
If this is the case with an adulteress, how much more so a murderer? The proud (i.e., not closeted--and in the non-slang sense of the word) pedo MC shares a drink with a fetching lady visitor, with the wrongful extinguishing of a life treated as all in a day's work for him; the visitor even senses his guilt over the fate of those ultimately responsible for the entire incident--as if they had any innocence in them to merit mourning. All in a day's work, indeed, as he watches a local newscast detailing the incident and pinning guilt on the very same people he fought to defend as innocent--the same people he murdered someone for--and watches as if his hands are clean. Must have been easy, too: by the looks of the narration, the only people left dead are the victims of those "innocents" said MC fought so passionately to protect--courtesy of Phoenizaku.
All this after a bunch of people reacted so strongly and/or strangely to my criticisms of this arc and their favorite paraphilically written actors thereof, ranging from silly hostility to ludicrous perplexity. People are truly funny to me, but they don't produce the kind of humor that breeds mirth: reading comprehension ability is as lacking as I have long suspected, in this era--that in addition to morality.
But such things take a distant backseat to "cunny" and "bussy", anyway.
I don't buy this--or his display of penitence in this chapter--at all.
The time for penitence over a misdeed--specifically one that necessarily requires premeditation, like Wanda's murder of Fone and his contribution to the murder of Hadesman--is before one commits that misdeed; "I'm sorry" rapidly depreciates in value with every second that passes after the fact, no matter how much the guilty party wants to show the world how penitent he is for a wrongdoing he could only make up for with a repeat performance. (Mind you, Wanda's ability isn't just the kind of MC-kun magic that has its user wave an effeminate hand and level a mountain--Wanda's magic especially requires thought.)
To be clear, Wanda's idea of atoning for killing Fone was killing Hadesman to match.
Wanda's illusion cast on the original commissioners of the murders is merely performative: while they live in illusionary pain, Fone and Hadesman both died in pain and grief--the latter in a delusion of guilt imposed by absurd gaslighting visited upon him in his state of physical, mental, and emotional exhaustion. Their deaths--their agonies--were real and final, with Hadesman being murdered for a people that would end up revived anyway.
It's already clear that many of Hadesman's murderers will walk not only scot-free, but even like heroes; I'm looking forward to seeing what the original perpetrators get. If the illusion taxes their bodies to death, it'd approach fairness--but the message has already been sent.