you gotta remember, those long time comrades were just mindless npcs before this so he's trying to remember every personality trait with the highest chance of rebellion, what he didn't realize is that now the npcs are real that means the troops have their own personalities and now can rebel toomc got so little trust towards his long time comrades
You mean game characters that didn't posses any will before this? You mean the same beings who could kill him in one hit?mc got so little trust towards his long time comrades
Why would she be forgiven for anything she didn't do anything wrong?Well, Camilla got them boobs so I hope she will be forgiven after a night. ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
She just casually talks to the rebell instead of fighting him. Doesn't that make her an accomplice?Why would she be forgiven for anything she didn't do anything wrong?
Nah Galdy's not a rebel, it's one big "haha got you" from the author, she's there to assist galdy on quelling the actual rebels (ogre faction).She just casually talks to the rebell instead of fighting him. Doesn't that make her an accomplice?
No commander rebelled. It was the PoW ogres who did. He was just too paranoid about the situation and immediately feared the worst, assuming one or more of the commanders rebelled.Man, I really hope the author steps up his narrative game after this. More interactions with his citizens and, in turn, how his citizens views him would be really neat. As everyone has said already, it's only been 1 day and 2 commanders rebelled already? I hope this meant that the system is not working as intended not some character trait thing, thereby making his people/characters "realistic".
I'd let this slip for now, since it's understandable that they're all in a sort of "trance" since they literally just transported in an unknown world.
And to anyone who have read the novels, can you guys please tell me when the MC will realize that his people are very strong like Overlord's Ainz? The pretending to be weak trope is really annoying on this one, execution is too poor.
and immediately feared the worst, assuming one or more of the commanders rebelled.