this work is a spectacle action manga, meaning that the art is superb, but there isn't real tension in any of the fights—
it's difficult to grasp the extent of Ginko's strength/ technique because there is no baseline for it— her sword will cut many times the length of the blade, for the sake of art, it looks cooler for sure chopping a monster in pieces rather than just stabbing an organ and it crumbles dead like any other animal
but there in lies the problem: we can't gauge how fast/ strong anything is, fights can look flashy but they have no weight, no tension; is anything at stake? we don't know.
when Ginko said that the wolf was too strong for her, it didn't really seem that way, because we're watching something that doesn't really have any base logic to what's happening. can he cut a house in half? a tree in half? a mountain? he broke a soldier's sword with ease, but her katana can parry her claws? logic bends to whatever the mangaka wants to happen basically, and that takes away from the action;
this reminded me of a chapter page in Bleach, years ago, where one of Aizen's strongest soldiers is fighting Ichigo, and after Ichigo teleports behind him, he throws this:
"That wasn't Shunpo... it was Sonido!" —the only problem is... what's the difference? were we supposed to know? don't all characters teleport behind the opponent like it's nothing? the whole reveal is completely meaningless because we have no scale of what is supposed to be fast
so it just becomes gibberish, in fact, if he had not said anything, we wouldn't even know it was sonido, because it just looks like every other
teleport behinds you moment— there is no shock or awe, because the power creep has rendered any scale of speed meaningless to the reader
this mangaka is so talented, I just wish he would learn to ground his "power scaling" into something that he can show/draw, instead of tell