@Kake That's exactly it. There's a lot of guesswork involved because the TL bullshits about every basic thing.
Let's just take the one thing that put me off the most: Who is the protagonist / heroIne of the game.
Page 5: "It "was" my name in my pervious life as a heroine in the rpg game"
Okay, many things wrong with this sentence alone:
1. Yes, I deliberately quoted the typo.
2. Rpg stands for role playing game, no need to add another "game" after that, just like HIV virus.
3. Arguably the way this sentence is built implies that Laura lived her previous life as an rpg heroine and not a human playing said rpg.
But at least it clearly establishes that Laura was the heroine and protagonist. This is even emphasized on page 8: "Yes, I used to play as Laura in my previous favourite rpg title."
Now we get to the very next page 9: "In the rpg the protagonist Luke Ash [...]" Wait, what?
Page 10 is for the most part useless, making no sense at all (btw. I hate panel arrangements like this that don't make it clear if they are intended to be read right to left or top to bottom, especially when the text doesn't make it clear either), but the last panel repeats that now Luke is the hero and protagonist.
On page 12 Laura is now Luke's childhood friend.
Page 14 nameless girl is now the heroine (or heroin, lol).
Page 17, 29, 36 Laura is described as "losing heroine".
Page 18, Luke's the hero, emphasized especially on page 25 when descibing his eye. Page 28, he's also the protagonist.
This is the basic setting. Shit you should get right. Don't contradict yourself every few pages. When there is a literal hero with special powers that's part of the story don't refer to the powerless female lead/love interest as heroine.