Problem is, this trope is all overused.Yet you not complain when most of time the initial setting is European? He's totally journeying from not-Europe to not-Central Asia to not-China. Maybe in the next century he'll be stranded in not-Hawaii.
Sakoku/Japanese isolationist cultural aspectHow would that be different from real world history, though?
😀Which head 😂
Not sure if it's thrillseeking for Aesir... More like idle curiosity, as far as I can tell.Our sweet elf boy has been negatively influenced by the dwarves. Now he has become quite the thrill seeker
Though isn't that a more recent term? I'd be surprised if that was the term used for ancient tales.While there's blue/green ao (青) there's the definitely-only-green midori (緑)
But the thing is, he does go through a bunch of other cultures first. It's not like there's a straight-to-Japan-ignoring-everything-else plot. Including Japan as one of many is distinct from it being the only one. And honestly, if I got isekaied and had the opportunity to explore a new world, I'd see if there was an equivalence to my own culture as well.Problem is, this trope is all overused.
Honestly, that's as far as I trust these authors to represent Europe. They get things so sideways most of the time that it doesn't matter what European nation they claim to represent. And that's for modern-setting manga. Maybe there's a difference between southern Europe and northern (with central being more northern-like), but none east-west.You say european setting, but what kind of european? We can't even define the initial setting because it is just a generic euroguild society.
1. He might have some translation skill from when he reincarnated.I am now confused on why there are no language barriers