Yeah, Rosie deliberately blew up the matter (accusing mc of violating his agreement with the guild) when it would have been easier to just pass over the faux pas. That would have been the better method to avoid conflict with someone capable of crushing seven Red Dragons and protecting her employee. (Nothing was mentioned about whether the guild's buying priority exists only when a quest is accepted, though I assume that to be the case.) Besides, Rosie's groupthink is baffling. The usual premise is that the Adventurer's Guild, true to it's name as a guild, is founded and managed by adventurers. The guild employees are merely administrative staff. Thinking of an adventurer as an outsider is thus a bit odd.idk about the whole rules, but i don't think armida, the receptionist, made any mistake. it didn't seem like she acted high and mighty or actually looked down on mc. she was just worried. on the other hand, mc didn't even try to give her a reason to let him take the quest and just gave up on it.
in the first place, it was the guild that didn't test new adventurers like him. so, she was just saying that based on her experience. but rosie was another matter. she deliberately accused mc and told armida to hide and lie, while knowing the truth. she deserved the punishment.
Furthermore, when I think about it, it seems absurd that the guild wouldn't have preventive measures in check to prevent newbies from rushing to their deaths. In that case, Armida's actions would be aboveboard. The whole premise is the usual 'serve the protagonist ev'rything on a silver platter' rubbish you see in light novels and web novels. It wouldn't hurt to think of a reasonable course of events, would it? Have they ever heard of beta readers? What are the editors doing?Y
Yeah, Rosie deliberately blew up the matter (accusing mc of violating his agreement with the guild) when it would have been easier to just pass over the faux pas. That would have been the better method to avoid conflict with someone capable of crushing seven Red Dragons and protecting her employee. (Nothing was mentioned about whether the guild's buying priority exists only when a quest is accepted, though I assume that to be the case.) Besides, Rosie's groupthink is baffling. The usual premise is that the Adventurer's Guild, true to it's name as a guild, is founded and managed by adventurers. The guild employees are merely administrative staff. Thinking of an adventurer as an outsider is thus a bit odd.
That Rosie is just a dumbass.Y
Yeah, Rosie deliberately blew up the matter (accusing mc of violating his agreement with the guild) when it would have been easier to just pass over the faux pas. That would have been the better method to avoid conflict with someone capable of crushing seven Red Dragons and protecting her employee. (Nothing was mentioned about whether the guild's buying priority exists only when a quest is accepted, though I assume that to be the case.) Besides, Rosie's groupthink is baffling. The usual premise is that the Adventurer's Guild, true to it's name as a guild, is founded and managed by adventurers. The guild employees are merely administrative staff. Thinking of an adventurer as an outsider is thus a bit odd.
Well, with the editors, I think it's that they can't ask the mangakas to redraw whole storyboards right before deadlines... Also, there's this emphasis on probable and 'rational' developments in modern fiction, which kinda blindsides us (myself included), to the fact that encountering an arrogant incompetent whelp -one who feels easily threatened and undeservedly possess a high position isn't actually all that improbable in real life... The fact that there are irrational and dumb people in real life is forgotten. The real issue is the rate at which the protagonist encounters these kinds of people... Also, thanks for responding. I like conversing about stuff like this.The editors fix some small mistakes, but they don't have the time to go in depth because they are overworked and have too much to do...