I think the difference is, when people ask if their son is in heaven, usually they're not actively trying to follow him there. An empathetic answer there can provide a closure and help them find the will on live on. But in this case, agreeing with her and keeping her delusions going may result in some serious consequences. I know most such attempts were portrayed somewhat humorously in the manga, but as her scars prove, they were real.Doubara isn't anymore 2x years old. He should possess much more introspection, especially when he works with literature full time. At the end of the day, how is this different from any random mother, who lost their only child in an accident and has a totally non-supportive, cheating husband, asking someone if they believe the child is now in Heaven? Because going to Heaven after dying is not fundamentally any different from getting isekaied, the only difference being that going to Heaven is an official religious belief, that even billions may believe in, the other is fantasy literature.
If Doubara was a young guy, I wouldn't blame him for this, but since he's not, I do. Why the heck does he need to be 100% honestly and brutally straightforward in a case like this? This isn't about him, it's about Mio. He even realised that afterwards, but how the heck does realising it afterwards help? He should have had plenty of time to go through these things in his mind while Mio was visiting her own home, in fact even before while they were together. So, no, this was totally unnecessary and immature behavior from Doubara. I expected more from him.
You ask a certain sort of people and they'll say it's ALL fantasy literature.Doubara isn't anymore 2x years old. He should possess much more introspection, especially when he works with literature full time. At the end of the day, how is this different from any random mother, who lost their only child in an accident and has a totally non-supportive, cheating husband, asking someone if they believe the child is now in Heaven? Because going to Heaven after dying is not fundamentally any different from getting isekaied, the only difference being that going to Heaven is an official religious belief, that even billions may believe in, the other is fantasy literature.
If Doubara was a young guy, I wouldn't blame him for this, but since he's not, I do. Why the heck does he need to be 100% honestly and brutally straightforward in a case like this? This isn't about him, it's about Mio. He even realised that afterwards, but how the heck does realising it afterwards help? He should have had plenty of time to go through these things in his mind while Mio was visiting her own home, in fact even before while they were together. So, no, this was totally unnecessary and immature behavior from Doubara. I expected more from him.
what big tits do to a lonely mfSo, no, this was totally unnecessary and immature behavior from Doubara. I expected more from him.
The manga ran its course. It was adopted from a much shorter twitter/web manga, with some stuff added in, like the entire interaction between Mio's friends back home. I don't think it could have been extended much longer than what it was and ended when it should have. The translation is just about half-way through it, that's all.yoo wtf, the main page is saying this manga is "completed".. did it get axed or something?
Aww man that made me so sad. I really loved this manga, i can't believe it's so short. Do we have any hopes of the author releasing more stuff in the future, at least?The manga ran its course. It was adopted from a much shorter twitter/web manga, with some stuff added in, like the entire interaction between Mio's friends back home. I don't think it could have been extended much longer than what it was and ended when it should have. The translation is just about half-way through it, that's all.