Holy shit, this was a delicious surprise. It was so well placed, that it just felt natural, like another piece of a puzzle being suddenly found. Even though this is manga-"original" (now I
really want to know whether Carlo Zen is mentioned as the author as in "original creator" or whether he prepares the (manu)scripts;
@Miralisque, do you know, per chance?), it doesn't feel out of place at all. In other words, it covers something that LN didn't cover, so basically it really is additional information.
At this point I think we can say that the LN is a
strategical view on the story, and manga is the
tactical view.
I have never seen such a complementing manga adaptation, I mean it. It is rare.
Now, as others mentioned, this woman (I can't really call such a person
a girl now) is a friend of Visha back from the academy, I think? Now that I think about it, it really was somewhat heavily implied that she wasn't just a nobody, and I remember wondering if she was assigned to Intelligence service when she answered about her assignment vaguely to Visha (I think she said something about either artillery or rear position). I actually have trouble remembering her from the LN, which probably means that she wasn't covered in it much (if was at all).
In any case, at least for me, her being a spy wasn't a complete surprise, it actually felt "right."
Also, I want to note, people talk about her being a spy, but there should be a large note, that it really is implausible that she is
not the Empire's spy. Covering up for this would be really tricky, considering the already established facts about her.
But the way, iirc, in the novel, much to the intelligence officer's dismay, after the attack he discovered that the recording was incomplete, broken, or something like this. I also don't think he died.
And I'm a little bit sad that we weren't shown this as it was in the LN: from the horrified Vianto's point of view.
-----
Now, I think this is the only comical moment that the manga presents weaker than the novel. You see, the whole part about Tanya being aware of other countries' (Albion, in particular) spies and such, was actually shown quite a lot in the novel, us having whole little chapters about different agents being utterly
shocked and
horrified, since Tanya knowing about all those things implied that their
whole system is dysfunctional, and that they all
completely misjudged the Empire's intelligence forces. Little did they know, that in reality the Empire's intelligence was even worse than they anticipated. It all goes on and on through the eyes of different agents, especially the Albion's Intelligence Chief back in Londinium having the nightmare of his life not understanding just
how was it all possible.
These were the most hilarious parts of the series, at least as far as I read. At one point they even were scared about doing any more investigations considering they had no clue as to how much the Empire knows.
-----
Man, I really appreciate that this manga shows a little bit more of the wing soldiers. First Ponytail, now this curly-haired big guy (apparently 05? So he's the fifth in command/power/e.g.?)
@Dyoneva
this also explains a whole lot about the irregularities and the errors in the news/data in the chapters from the future
I can't really agree here, there being a spy in enemy HQ is nothing unusual, and so far we were only shown that this agent is competent in her job. Attributing to her the achievement of classifying and outright destroying most of information about "Eleventh Goddess" is simply favoritism. As far as we know at the moment, she's a field agent, actually.
@beepboop1
I'm still hoping it's all a prelude to adult Tanya arc and WW2.
What "WW2" exactly are you talking about?
%smug_anime_face.jpg%
First of all, we know from future chapters that there was no WWII, there was only one Great War, which ended up with the Empire loosing (though we don't know the peace conditions).
Secondly,
the basic conditions for WWII are not met in this world. The Empire is a Großdeutschland (basically Germany + Austria), something which never happened IRL (aside from occupations) for various reasons. It is of imperative importance, since Austria, in contrast to Germany, was a somewhat multinational state. So, the whole idea of racial superiority would have a weak standing in the Empire. Heck, a lot of characters in the series have non-german names. Which means no NSDAP ruling, at least.
@Richman
I read the Otto Carius manga the other week, so, are the animal forms of the countries people of this manga a reference to that one?
Having two works sharing one theme doesn't mean that they are connected, you know.
You should look up some general animal caricatures and propaganda of 20th century, French being portrayed as pigs, Soviets as rats/foxes, and Brits as lions is much older than all of us.
And considering the paramountcy of Military-Industrial Complex in the Empire, it is only fitting that they are portrayed as wolfs.
@Ravezta
this is why a prefer the manga version. the anime adapt things at speed of light while the LN spend too much time with tanya's complain monologue and real history lesson which may or may not be right
simply because it's too much. i do enjoy the trivia but it is still a fictional novel, not a history book itself
>complaining that what is basically a thought work upon early 20th century military with the addition of specific offensive magic is wordy and too detailed.
Um, OK.
@redpandamaniacal
She seems to be in chapter 41 page 36 as one of the news reporters as well.
I am fairly sure it looks like another person for me.
Apparently Erya is known as a spy to UK intelligence as of chapter 29 page 78.
Oh, good catch, thanks.
@Rugid
LN writing is very poor really
Yeah, that's why it has such a cult following among all kinds of military nerds and 20th century history enthusiasts, especially in Japan. Because it's poorly written. Well, sorry it's not some shitty edgy isekai, oh wait, it is a satire about isekai.
Calling one of the most complicatedly and wittingly written LNs out there "poorly written," some people are just so... Well, I guess if we to compare it with something like
Caesar's Commentaries it
would look poorly written. Jeez.
@everpink
this has a major plothole though....it was stated that only the empire (not-germany) and Allied States (not-US) used female soldiers [...]
What. It was never stated as such. It was merely stated that the US and Empire don't care about gender for mage positions, and that the Empire additionally doesn't care much about not being of age. She easily could've been portrayed as some military office worker, which would actually explain her being in the enemy HQ. You're confusing the objection to women being in fighting forces with women being in the military on the whole.
@Trosfy
[...]It's quite ridiculous how just a single appearance of some side character could shake the views of others[...]
This.