Post by omnimegami on Nov 25, 2020 12:47:25 GMT -5
it appears to be ongoing.
mangadex.org/title/49634/when-i-was-reincarnated-in-another-world-i-was-a-heroine-and-he-was-a-hero
Spoilers
it better not end up like Kampfer or the anime version of Bagel Girl.
also why would they wanna go back to Earth world/dimension? and weren't they killed? that swords and sorcery world makes Earth look like hell,
sigh, but yea its really conservative politics to blame, causing some authors to be so cowardly and backwards with isekai storytelling and other genres.
but maybe this author will be bold to develop things into something that rivals Trans Venus and Sekainohate de Aimashou, cause the other route is
just done too much that its like why bother if they go back to how things were? that's such a boring and sad route to take.
Very nice art by the way and good humor mixed in. Its pacing is also very quick, which some may like and gets to the meat of progression even though
it may feel like a grind, but its not like those stories where it takes dozens of chapters just to get to the next task. there is nice pacing that develops
detail, psychology and new happenings too. It also is a unique style in expressing the capabilities of a hero and heroine. Some may mistaken it
for a parody of the swords and sorcery genres, but it also has a serious and meaningful side to it too. Though if this turns out like
one of those 'back to normal' stories, or if its just a 'dream', I would bash it SOOOO much. Is the author gonna cave in to conservative mindsets, or be bold to
teach its ok to embrace the new and move forward and stay in a new reality instead of going back.
Also what puzzles me with genres that include reincarnation, is how the protagonists start at a mature age instead of from infancy, though
like Circle Zero, guess they use that style of reincarnation so they get to the good stuff instead of detailing the years growing up to that point.
however Eiyuu did a great effort detailing the early years of a protagonist before getting to the golden age of their new life.
though yea this story is more akin to Circle Zero's take on reincarnation, however, Circle Zero's style was reincarnation through the protagonist
possessing a young mature body that died and resurrected with the protagonist as its replacement, while this story is like the protagonist and their friend
each reincarnated with a new body that didn't belong to any other soul. So instant creation/materialization/manifestation of corporeal forms is also involved.
HOWEVER some say that perhaps the story skipped their new childhood, but I don't think that's the case because otherwise the protagonist would not
be so premature with getting used to their new body. So it's like woosh they just so happened to be reincarnated with a new teenage body like that.
in a sense, its kinda like how in Disgaea, people that reincarnate into a different body/form/class, simply possess the new body they possess, fully developed, which is an instant process.
mangadex.org/title/49634/when-i-was-reincarnated-in-another-world-i-was-a-heroine-and-he-was-a-hero
Spoilers
it better not end up like Kampfer or the anime version of Bagel Girl.
also why would they wanna go back to Earth world/dimension? and weren't they killed? that swords and sorcery world makes Earth look like hell,
sigh, but yea its really conservative politics to blame, causing some authors to be so cowardly and backwards with isekai storytelling and other genres.
but maybe this author will be bold to develop things into something that rivals Trans Venus and Sekainohate de Aimashou, cause the other route is
just done too much that its like why bother if they go back to how things were? that's such a boring and sad route to take.
Very nice art by the way and good humor mixed in. Its pacing is also very quick, which some may like and gets to the meat of progression even though
it may feel like a grind, but its not like those stories where it takes dozens of chapters just to get to the next task. there is nice pacing that develops
detail, psychology and new happenings too. It also is a unique style in expressing the capabilities of a hero and heroine. Some may mistaken it
for a parody of the swords and sorcery genres, but it also has a serious and meaningful side to it too. Though if this turns out like
one of those 'back to normal' stories, or if its just a 'dream', I would bash it SOOOO much. Is the author gonna cave in to conservative mindsets, or be bold to
teach its ok to embrace the new and move forward and stay in a new reality instead of going back.
Also what puzzles me with genres that include reincarnation, is how the protagonists start at a mature age instead of from infancy, though
like Circle Zero, guess they use that style of reincarnation so they get to the good stuff instead of detailing the years growing up to that point.
however Eiyuu did a great effort detailing the early years of a protagonist before getting to the golden age of their new life.
though yea this story is more akin to Circle Zero's take on reincarnation, however, Circle Zero's style was reincarnation through the protagonist
possessing a young mature body that died and resurrected with the protagonist as its replacement, while this story is like the protagonist and their friend
each reincarnated with a new body that didn't belong to any other soul. So instant creation/materialization/manifestation of corporeal forms is also involved.
HOWEVER some say that perhaps the story skipped their new childhood, but I don't think that's the case because otherwise the protagonist would not
be so premature with getting used to their new body. So it's like woosh they just so happened to be reincarnated with a new teenage body like that.
in a sense, its kinda like how in Disgaea, people that reincarnate into a different body/form/class, simply possess the new body they possess, fully developed, which is an instant process.