Dex-chan lover
- Joined
- Apr 30, 2020
- Messages
- 907
Yeah, lots of "could"s and "if"s, you basically just guess a whole lot of nonsense and none of it changes what the author actually wrote, which is what we're actually scrutinizing. Also, some of your "explanations" don't even make any sense.
What's scientifically true about long living beings taking longer to change? The only long living beings that exist are some animals and trees. In the first place, we're talking about mental maturity and emotion, which you can't measure in any of the aforementioned beings, hence why the topic is about humans, which are not long living beings. The fact that the mc is a human and not a naturally long living being already makes your statement irrelevant.
Also, popping in at the very last second when things are at their utmost breaking point isn't protecting your friends. Letting your friends get severely hurt, brutally bullied and defeated by people with bad intentions isn't protecting them. Allowing them to be taken away to some unknown location and confined by people with evil schemes isn't protecting them.
Or is it all good as long as they're technically alive? What about in the recent chapter where one of them was held hostage so that the other was forced to swallow some drug made from the lives of other innocent people? I guess it's all okay since he'll "save" them eventually right?
But that's totally convenient since the author would never actually have one of the main characters die. But in a real scenario it doesn't work like that. In a real scenario the villain doesn't stall and wait for the mc to show up at the very last moment. In a real scenario all of the mc's friends would already be dead as he takes his sweet time over multiple chapters to find and rescue them.
Yes he is a complete and total spineless coward because after 30 thousand years of training with the strongest being that destroyed countless world, he most definitely has the power to prevent all of the bad things happening to his companions. But he refuses to because of reasons that don't even make sense and are completely contradictory to his goals.
He's so obsessed with living a "peaceful and quiet life" or whatever yet him acting like a pussy all the time is exactly what's attracting so much negative attention his way. He just randomly assumes, with zero basis, that him proving that he's strong will somehow cause everybody to realize that Felize is the demon lord and the whole world will riot as a result. Even though countless other students are allowed to be strong for seemingly no reason, even though they couldn't decipher her identity or even detect her nature as a demon lord as she's just waltzing around in the middle of their facility in cat form, even though they clearly have no way to actually confirm what goes on in the worlds that they all return from. There's literally not a single logical reason for him to be so weary yet he still acts like a useless brick at all times even though he has enough power to protect Felize even if she gets found out for some unexplainable reason.
Lastly, bragging about your standards is pretty cringe, especially if your "standards" mostly just amount to reading whatever is rated the highest. The fact that you even rate this trash story so well despite it's innumerable glaring flaws and plot holes is telling enough. There are plenty decent stories out there that aren't rated as high as some that are worse, you miss out on a lot when you only tend to try what the masses seem to enjoy, you sound like one of those people who think that Solo Leveling is the peak of the "Dungeons on Earth" genre when there are many better ones that came before and after it that just simply get a mainstream anime adaptation.
Anyway, all that to say that the mc is indeed a spineless, cowardly pussy of an individual, just like so many other Japanese main characters, and the story is dogshit for many reasons other than just that. I've seen many cases where an overpowered main character was allowed to be overpowered yet the story itself was still interesting and engaging enough so that things didn't become stale because of it. This whole "hide my powers no matter what" trope has long harshly fallen out of style for good reason and if the author can't make a compelling story with an overpowered mc without making use of this terrible and frustrating trope then that just speaks to their lack of ability, that and the aforementioned glaring plot holes and cliches.
To start off, my comment is about how such a trope could be better with logical reasoning, while the other addresses your exaggeration or misuse of an term and personal feelings.
Firstly, yes, he’s human, but his body and therefore his brain has been frozen or slowed at that age for all those years, so it’s entirely plausible that his emotional growth has been stalled alongside his physical state. In real-world biology, neural development tracks bodily development. Lock someone’s body at a fixed age, and you effectively lock their mind’s maturation too. That’s the core of the hypothesis, when everything else in this world changes at its own pace, why wouldn’t the mind? You jumped straight to typical human psychology, but this MC is clearly not typical; if his biology never ages, his psyche shouldn’t either, unless the author shows otherwise. It’s nuanced thinking.
Either way, you’re trying to refute on something that I think could help explain such cliche plots better, with less effort. I’m not saying it’s for this specific title. You thought I’m going, “could,” and, “if,” for this? Maybe read again. I’m not even defending this title over this. I’m using it as an example.
-Main point.
Thus, the hypotheticals do not apply to this work. I’m criticising it for the lack of building for the 30000 years setup. It felt shallow.
Regarding my personal criterias, you’re ironically telling me about lower rated titles with good plot. As if my comment had stated that I only read high rated works. I only said it’s my rule of thumb. Neither did I say that all high rated works are good. The market is over saturated with such typical plot. I’m an avid reader which is why I use the high rating as a personal filter. You win some, you lose some.
I used this experience for a relative comparison. I’m well aware of hidden gems. I have read quite a few to the point it’s hard to tell when hardly anyone talks about the specific title.
-That’s not even a brag, it’s an observation and comparison.
Secondly, you’re ranting, though I get that it might make sense from your preference.
But really? Solo Leveling? You really thought you could shoot your shot with that as an argument? It’s an irrelevant accusation.
Funny enough, Solo Leveling is actually very typical to me. You really missed your shot there.
Also, calling my input “cringe” while making your own baseless assumption is hypocritical when it comes to the “cringe factors.”
I find assumption to be cringe in arguments because they reveal whether someone is genuinely engaging with the point or just arguing to feel right.
Additionally, to address your point.
“forced to swallow some drug made from the lives of other innocent people?”
Yeah, but then even if the MC had shown up earlier, it would still feel convenient as fictional timelines aren’t strictly linear, so we can assume off-screen events. More importantly, yes, friends get hurt, but if the MC swooped in every time, side characters may not grow. That “last-second save” isn’t just posturing; it may potentially be the only way they develop agency. Of course, whether this works depends entirely on execution, but dismissing it outright ignores its role in character development.
It’s fine in theory, but it all comes down to execution. Whether it works or not is up to preference and bias plays a part.If the mc does arrive for these moments early on, you’re not giving these characters time to possibly develop.
They’ll then be another one of those useless characters you can also continue to critique.
Lastly, I stand by my point regarding the term, “spineless coward.”
It generally means someone who is unwilling to stand up for themselves or their beliefs. Which we see, is not entirely something he is doing. He even did something in the early chapters before anything escalated further.
Again, whether you think his actions makes sense or not, his reasons, nor his beliefs, what he did is not simply cowardice. It’s more of exaggerated caution. Like an overthinker. Let me work up an analogy. It’s like you’d call a worker a “spineless coward” for trying to adhere to a barrage of seemingly minor safety rules in a hazardous work environment that others are neglecting because they’re already experienced.
Conclusion.
I attempted to offer a logical opinion grounded in biological sense.
The trope itself isn’t dead, it just works best when the author earns it on the page.
It seems I’ve been dragged into a reply that barely relates to, or even considers, the point or opinion I raised (refer to my opening sentence).
So I didn’t bother addressing every thing you brought up about the story. (Wasn’t actively going for that).