Member
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2021
- Messages
- 53
dojfidfkj THIS WAS TOO GOOD TOO PURE WHEN ANGEL SMILED T.T
i understand why you think this way, and actually i would agree it does feel like she's a mary sue. but i think there are a couple points that should be madeIt's pretty decent but it has a major inherent problem.
The star maiden protagonist of the original game was a self insert mary sue. Remilia's plan for revenge mostly revolves around stealing the march on the star maiden and essentially beating the game before the star maiden can even start it. However, as she imitates the protagonist of that story, she rapidly develops those sue like traits and half the story is spent showing everyone heaping praise upon praise as the seemingly invincible Remilia rapidly solves all the worlds problems effortlessly. Despite being a supposed villainess, she goes on and on about how it's all a mask and she's just using people but she never actually does anything remotely evil or particularly manipulative. Meanwhile, the star maiden and her harem essentially disappear from the story as it focuses more on Remilia being OP and the rest of the casts boot licking.
I give it a 6/10. Not terrible, but not peak fiction like everyone claims it is.
You make some good points and I agree with a lot of it but I do want to make some counter arguments of my own.i understand why you think this way, and actually i would agree it does feel like she's a mary sue. but i think there are a couple points that should be made
1. i don't think this is a completely believable reason for her strength, but emi (as remilia) trained hard. and keeps training even when she's strong. this was explained pretty much in the first chapter with snippets later on. on top of that it's mentioned remilia's potential is crazy high, which it needed to be for her to become the "big bad" of the original game.
2. the idea of a villain/ess is foundationally, the enemy of the protagonist. but i think there's also an obsession that tends to be an integral part of a villain/ess. in this case remilia's obsession is emi. you'll see it all throughout the story that she is only trying to be the way emi was and wanted as remilia. everything is for emi. what is important is not how evil she is but how far she is willing to go for her obsession
3. i kinda said this already but remilia's not trying to be the protagonist, she's trying to be the remilia that emi was. the remilia that emi wanted her to be. everything has been her preparation for when the star maiden and her harem enter the story. which falls into how remilia wants revenge because of her obsession with emi.
the reason this is highly rated is because the story focuses on remilia, her motivations, her reasons for why she is acting the way she is. so though ther are mary sue elemnts here, it is permissible because the focus of the story isn't in the action. this is a story of two sisters, and how much they love each other, before it is a story about saving the world or revenge.
those are some good arguments, and i'll keep my response short:You make some good points and I agree with a lot of it but I do want to make some counter arguments of my own.
1. Like you said, Remilia/Emi trained for some of their power but so little of that is shown and focused on in the story that instead of her training becoming an important part of her character demonstrating her determination and hard work, it simply becomes an excuse for her to already be capable of doing almost anything the author wants.
2. While Remilia certainly does have some of the villainess traits, the problem is that the story itself tries to present her as an antihero when her actions have been purely heroic so far. The premise from the first chapter was that this was a revenge story featuring an actual villainess instead of generic isekai sue #583. Instead, we get Remilia monologuing on and on about how evil and manipulative she is while playing with orphans as onlookers feel the need to spend a few pages talking about how she's the greatest thing since sliced bread. As for her obsession with Emi, another issue is that Emi is just gone from the story now without a clear reason. Without Emi around, all we know about her is what Remilia has said and what was in the first chapter. We see so little of her that just like Remilia's training, instead of coming across as an important major character she becomes an excuse for Remilia to be all powerful and act heroic.
those are some good arguments, and i'll keep my response short:
1. i think this is just an issue of the author/artist wanting to focus on the story, rather than trying to justify their strength. it relates back to everything she's doing for her revenge rather than how she does it. narrative choice maybe, author didn't think the justification important
2. i now do think looking back the praise has been excessive. not much i can say except that the gravity of what she does and how no one else does it could be the reason why she's praised so much. i do disagree about emi though, her presence is felt through remilia, and maybe you think she only turns into an excuse but the first couple chapters should have established how important emi is to remilia
You make some good points and I agree with a lot of it but I do want to make some counter arguments of my own.
1. Like you said, Remilia/Emi trained for some of their power but so little of that is shown and focused on in the story that instead of her training becoming an important part of her character demonstrating her determination and hard work, it simply becomes an excuse for her to already be capable of doing almost anything the author wants.
2. While Remilia certainly does have some of the villainess traits, the problem is that the story itself tries to present her as an antihero when her actions have been purely heroic so far. The premise from the first chapter was that this was a revenge story featuring an actual villainess instead of generic isekai sue #583. Instead, we get Remilia monologuing on and on about how evil and manipulative she is while playing with orphans as onlookers feel the need to spend a few pages talking about how she's the greatest thing since sliced bread. As for her obsession with Emi, another issue is that Emi is just gone from the story now without a clear reason. Without Emi around, all we know about her is what Remilia has said and what was in the first chapter. We see so little of her that just like Remilia's training, instead of coming across as an important major character she becomes an excuse for Remilia to be all powerful and act heroic.