You must be new here. The only girl this series has introduced by name so far who hasn't fallen for him is his younger sister.Here's hoping the author doesn't railroad Yuuya towards the the plain ol' "class-rep good girl with long black hair archetype"... They're usually the types that add unnecessary drama or impede with developments with other girls...
In a world with monsters and dungeons, it makes more sense than for our world, since there's a demand for that kind of work. The closest equivalent we had would probably be hunters, mercenaries, or maybe rangers. Not sure whether they had guilds, though.Given how ubiquitous the concept has become in Japanese media, there must be people who sincerely believe that adventurers' guilds actually existed in medieval Europe.
Funny you should say that.... They sort of did... many of the occupational Guilds used a system similar to what you'd see in a "standard" fantasy adverturer's guild to divide the available work.Given how ubiquitous the concept has become in Japanese media, there must be people who sincerely believe that adventurers' guilds actually existed in medieval Europe.
Here's hoping the author doesn't railroad Yuuya towards the the plain ol' "class-rep good girl with long black hair archetype"... They're usually the types that add unnecessary drama or impede with developments with other girls...
About this...You're gonna be waiting for-fucking-ever for Yuuya to work through his issues from being abused by his entire family (grandad excepted) for the first fifteen years of his life to even become aware a girl could have any interest in him in the first place, despite THE PRINCESS OF AN ENTIRE COUNTRY OPENLY WORKING ON HIM TO BECOME HER CONSORT for umpteen light-novel volumes. Gah.
Except that is literally not an adventurers' guild, either in name or in function. While any number of different guilds have existed over the past several centuries, adventurers' guilds specifically are an entirely modern concept first popularized through gaming.Funny you should say that.... They sort of did... many of the occupational Guilds used a system similar to what you'd see in a "standard" fantasy adverturer's guild to divide the available work.
No Monster Extermination Requests, but you did have mercenary brokers.
Hanzebund Chapters also had an "odd job" desk where requests could be made, which were then posted and taken up by whoever wanted/needed the job.
Not quite the same, but the general gist of requests being made to a guild, who then makes them available to their members, with the better requests being available to members with a proven track record/higher status did exist.
And was actually an important part of the economic engine(s) of the time, especially for the cities.
So not a matter of belief, but historical fact.