Don't even suggest this. I just bough My Sisters best friend kindle ver., I will have to buy this one as well.Seriously, I'm going to jump off a bridge if The Princess of Sylph doesn't make it. A short bridge but it'll hurt my ankles.
Can I dm you then?Gay sex is the answer to all problems.
100% all my feelings. If this is the ending, it retroactively makes the series seem much more simple than I expected it to be. The ending could have broadly remained the same. I actually expected that the story was leading to this intended ending; but it was certainly sudden, here, and felt like it skipped steps in a way the rest of the story did not. I might need to reread it to get the full story in one motion--but fully agreed.Yes this is the end. There's still extras for volume 3 coming, in September, and it might be longer than usual considering this volume was suspiciously a full chapter short on the page count.
But it's safe to say it was axed. There's some unnatural circumstances, especially the sudden hiatuses, and it felt like this chapter was racing through plot points that easily could have taken up more chapters, assuming this was the intended conclusion.
All things told, I think it wrapped up nicely. There's some great payoffs with Haru returning to how she was in chapter 1, Haru seeing herself in Hinoto, Haru tearing up the marriage certificate, the way they traded suffering over each other over the course of the manga, and them finally having absolutely nothing left.
Also more manga seriously need to end with the protagonists saying, "Fuck it all, let's just have sex all day."
It's a happy enough ending: they recognize their true happiness is each other and are willing to suffer through the grind together. But I don't think for a moment this was Keyyan's original vision. It just doesn't add up thematically, coming up weak if they're simply meant to be 2 dumb kids who got in over their heads and returned to life. The story needed more ups and downs for that to work, instead of one big fall before quickly calling it quits. And the message of "just have a girlfriend who'll die for you" isn't likely to resonate with those sympathizing with their situation. As much as I love Haru and Hinoto's never-ending commitment to one another.
So while I admire Keyyan's ability to make the best of this, and I'm happy it wasn't KitaKawa 2, I'm pretty dissatisfied. As you might be able to tell by the credits page.
Seriously, I'm going to jump off a bridge if The Princess of Sylph doesn't make it. A short bridge but it'll hurt my ankles.
Agreed with all that. Also in a strange way that this may not have been the intended conclusion and was effectively forced on the author despite truly loving the characters itself sort of makes it all more poignant? The emotion feels real. And I find the end sort of satisfying in that it's not their dreams, but neither is it doom and gloom. Like, that's not such a bad life is it? Not their beautiful dream life but they are young, their relationship is now on the kind of footing and they have the kind of perspective many people will never get in decades more, they have opportunities, they're fundamentally safe and sound.I'll have to agree. The way this story started and progressed, I simply can't believe that the intended conclusion was "give up and compromise until we make it through the slog we call corporate life". Hell, it was hammered basically every chapter how hard they were trying to avoid giving up on the sacrifices they'd made to find happiness their own way.
For it to end with them giving up in the face of strife, after all the pain, anxiety and stress—although painstakingly realistic and relatable—didn't seem to be the original goal of the story. And that sucks to see.
But I appreciate it nonetheless, because it was a great read. Everyone felt real human in a way you don't normally see in manga. Thanks for the chapters.