Resenhas de livros

ikutokun906
Apr 05, 2021
Kuzu no Honkai review
The hardest review to write is for an incomplete series, but judging by the "omni-directional" approach it isn't presumably hard to rate unless the author decides to not lay his plans out so predictably.

Like most series, it cannot simply "remain" a work of art or story to be enjoyed. In the sense that it is created and enjoyed, then gets dragged up in its own success until it starts caving in on itself. Good artists never "stagnate" exceptionally long. Always improving and fluidly evolving.

However, an unexpectedly good idea will simply get the creator carried away. We see this with long-running series, multiple-season anime, and "one-trick ponies". It keeps doing the same thing until it simply ceases to be creative or entertaining.

Somewhat remarkable that it isn't porn or simply mediocre to start with, it does get carried away. Up until then it was a multiple-viewpoint series with insights into motivations, mindsets, and decision making from different characters. It didn't dwell too long on any one character.

However it abruptly abandons this and starts shelving characters for the sake of drawn-out "character development" story-arcs that simply cannot be described as actual character development nor story arcs. Mostly just a standard setting with internal monologue, self loathing, and self pity. Then capped off with the problems virtually solving themselves while the currently followed character groans but accepts it. There are a remote few gems, but most solve themselves.

Understandable to a small degree, but also absurdly aggravating, is that the male characters are woefully neglected, if not outright targeted. Understandable in the sense that the author is a female that also does porn... japanese porn at that... but when a story is to be taken seriously ALL characters should be constructed carefully. Get a co-writer who actually knows how men think or function.


All in all, it starts off good but becomes over-saturated. At least somewhat female-biased by over-generalizing men. Lastly, it starts to become bland, very telegraphed, and just uninteresting around the mid 30's or so. Before that, it was rather good at building characters with a few somewhat forgivable hiccups that have very little impact.
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709_70713
Apr 05, 2021
Kuzu no Honkai review
Yokoyari Mengo knows how to draw manga; not so much writing manga.

The whole premise is that unrequited love hurts. A lot. Been there done that. This manga really puts into illustration that pain one receives. However, the characters and the relations between those characters makes the plot redundant and long for no reason. What could've been summed up in 4 or 5 volumes turned into 8.

Some good things about this manga:
Art: Yokoyari Mengo knows what they're doing, no problems here.
Theme: I like manga that take a darker tone because we all know how many copy and paste romcoms are out there. Something like this is a breath of fresh air, the theme of unrequited love.

Now to the bad things (Trying to keep it spoiler free)
Characters: Man, it's bad. Some characters are a saving grace, Like Hanabi and Sanae, but everyone else is bad. For the first few chapters, Hanabi and Mugi couple is something that ACTUALLY happens in real life, although it's not stated. Not really dating, more of just having sex to cope with something they can't have. Sanae isn't that bad of a character, her relations to Hanabi is something realistic when you're in that situation. But, why does Noriko exist? You're taking a for the most part dark realistic story and throwing in... her. No girl actually acts like that. It's the ultimate manga girl romcom BS that i hate. Remove her. As soon as we find Akane's personality does thi smanga take a nose-dive. Why do Narumi and Mugi like her? Knowing who she is? And why did they write Narumi like that? Once he really met Akane? God i hate the relationships to each other in this story. The main relationship I understand, but everything else is either eh or bad.

Now for the glaring problem of this manga. The middle part. Why, and i mean WHY, is the story so damn confusing? It goes back and forth between past and present constantly. I had no idea what was what until it continued to present after a fest of confusion for about 8 chapters.
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AkemiTheSunbro13
Apr 05, 2021
Kuzu no Honkai review
If I had read this when I was younger, I would be crying a lot to most of the pages of this story, and would have perhaps been left traumatised. It's a realistic possibility duo to how I was when I had first gotten in to anime and manga.
The way I am though(mature, I do calim to be), it only causes me to be instantly fully awoken up in the mornings when I regain my dream-staggered consciousness , with the first thing on my mind even before I have opened my eyes being the characters of this story.

I remember my first anime, Fate/Stay night, and how for 6 months after having had gone through the story, 8 years ago, I couldn't think of much of anything, other than Saber.
I had fallen in love with her, and she was gone. It doesn't matter if you know Fate/Stay Night or not, it was the feeling of someone you love, and who loves you, not being your possibility simply because the world doesn't allow it(not in the sense that I was actually wishing for an anime character to be alive (I WAS(I DO), DEFINITELY), but in the sense of that what happened in the story I had projected on to myself).

Another example.

5 Centimeters per second.
That, I've gone through only less than a year ago, and as rugged as I've developed to be, due to my age and the amount of stories that I have gone through thus far, 5 Centimeters per second made me feel alive, really alive.
Alive by not being able to close my eyes at night in my bed even though I was exhausted and tired.
Alive in the way of, I hope you know what it is that I'm going to try to describe now(never quite found an expression to describe the feeling with, not one I was satisfied enough with to have memorised it);
Alive in the way of having the feeling of breathing being really difficult.
Having to, not physically, struggle to breathe in. That compressing feeling of sadness and knowing that what is making you sad is reality itself.

Kuzu no Honkai is basically the two things that I have described above, from start to finish(though the manga is not yet over, at the time of writing this).
To draw a line with a metaphorical comparison..
You, the reader, are a freshly open wound. No, that's not good, naturally you don't have such kinds of wounds, hopefully..
This story is, a stick, doesn't matter what really, but something solid.
This story pokes at your heart, if you read it sincerily.
It's like poking at the inside of your flesh, but in a sense of thought, your mental state.
Do you get sick with sadness by the thought of the person you love.. Not loving you.. Leaving you.. Leaving you for another...
If you delve in to this story with full respect, the respect I believe you should approach to every story with, the respect that allows you to take the whatever the story is with full sincerity, if you delve in to this story like that, enjoy yourself.
Sadness and happiness are just two sides of the same coin that is life, and this story will make you feel alive very much.


From now on, a heavily interpretation-based segment follows.

This story's premise is people's inner-most workings.
How choices are made, when there is by far not a single positive choice to be had in sight.
The single statement that I want to make, the single thing that makes this work a 10/10 for me;

The characters in this are real people.
More mature for the ages that they are, but that's not a bad thing(at least I wish I was like them when I was of their age).

Altruism, OBJECTIVELY, does not exist.
Everything anyone ever does is the best thing that one can do.
The best thing in the sense of how much you like it, the best thing in the sense of what you gain from it, the best thing in the sense of you losing the least by it.
Everything anyone knows is the world their eyes portray to them.
This work, in the packaging of romance, portrays the the principle of "I live for myself and no one else".
We are ALL SCUM, and only you know it.
We are all scum, but because no one other than yourself will ever be YOU, to peak inside your inner-most depths of thought, no one will ever know you are scum.
"Scum".
That is something I (believe I) know about everyone, but I only see the world through my eyes.

You can never be selfless, you make the decisions you make, and just by making a decision, you were already selfish. Selfish enough to have denied the existence to one possibility, because the the possibility you've chosen suits you better.
People are not pebbles on the river bed.

There would be no heroes if everyone knew the thoughts of anyone.
It would be best, if everyone knew everyone.
But this isn't the End of Evangelion.

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To finalise, Hanabi's (the main charactressess) eyes are stunning. That is to say, the art of the manga is beautiful.
Realistically drawn everything, just as I love it to be.
Realistically drawn beautiful characters manga characters, the best thing.
There is even an occasional.. I don't know what those are called, but like, when the character's face is in one instance drawn really funny just to sympathise e.g. how much that character thinks that what the other character said is stupid! You know, right? Anyways I love those whenever, and in a story such as this one.... It's like being given an ice cube when you have a nasty burn that really hurts..
Also, the way the characters' thoughts are portrayed, the way it's all "folded" in to a manga format, it's so great.
It took me while, but after it, I've started reading the manga as if I were reading three things at the same time.
Reading through reality,
the character that is in the moment the focal point of the story,
and the "heart" of that character.
This might sound confusing for those who're reading this without having had read the manga at least for a bit.
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Cowyak13
Apr 05, 2021
Kuzu no Honkai review
The first thing I would like to say about this manga is that I feel it is very difficult to give it a numerical rating. Up until now, my rating has been based upon a mixture of my level of enjoyment and the level of success that the series has in doing what it intends to do, be that tell a story, put across a message etc. For this reason though I have given an overall score with this review, I would like you to ignore it and just read what I have written.
Kuzu no Honkai is a whole different kettle of fish from the average series. To me, Kuzu no Honkai was not "enjoyable", I did not like the choices that the characters made, it frustrated me to see them sink to deeper levels, and furthermore to cause others too feel despair as well. However, it never sought to be a tale that viewers could relate perfectly to, it is a tale of our main characters choices when faced with an unrequited love and the repercussions of those choices. It fulfils its intentions perfectly, showing true consequences of this unpleasant underbelly of love where people will do whatever they can in an attempt to achieve that which is out of reach.
I think many negative reviews are based merely on the fact that it is a difficult manga to find pleasant to read, with people overlooking the fact that it does in fact do everything that it set out to do in the first place very well. i would certainly recommend it, there may be others like it, but it is the first time I have come across something like it. The art style is also very impressive, something I did like about the series a lot.
Finally, the follow on Scums wish Decor, brings a slightly more pleasant conclusion to the series, with it taking place a number of years later, looking in on the way the lives of the characters we have seen progressed and where the events of the main series brought them to. So even if you did not like the unresolved state in which the main story leaves you, hopefully this will be a better outcome in your opinion. .
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Scinn4
Apr 05, 2021
Kuzu no Honkai review
Ok this review is very bias but i will do what i can to try to make it fair
Characters
The FMC is the most insecure girl ever does every manga/anime need to portray girls with so much insecurities if they are perfect.
The Male lead, its so hard to call him an mc since he basically has 0 to none screentime at all and he is basically a walking plot device with 0 personality and when he does have a character development they dummed him down for the female teacher which i will get in a sec.
The Female teacher has the most forced romance ever for some reason the mc and the male teacher have almost everything in common yet she for some reason doesnt like the mc yet is drooling for the male teacher which is your typical nice guy gets every women.
The Male teacher is the most oh jesus deus ex machina faggot I've seen with the love of his life suddenly having a crush on him for no reason besides his somewhat sister being the reason.
The other 2 girls who are somewhat important to the story=who cares about them they barely do jacksht besides that one lesb with the most retarded backstory to be relevant

Story
Your generic can't you see I'm too deep to be understood its pathetic on how almost every scene has inner monologue it simply doesn't understand how show don't tell works.

Art
Its great i guess

Enjoyment
I'm one of those people who doesn't binge read and wait weakly i actually enjoyed first couple of chapters thinking that it would be unique but no it wasn't. Imagine almost every chapter ends with a cliffhanger and next chapter nothing happens

Overall
Itsbayed
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randomperson13
Apr 05, 2021
Kuzu no Honkai review
A fruitless love. A painful love. A one-sided love. Is that really such a wonderful thing?

It's all too common throughout the romance genre to follow the journey of an unrequited love. These stories are light hearted in nature and sparkling with color as characters fantasize about confessing to their unobtainable goal. What rarely gets explored is the emotional toll that weighs on the soul of a person who rests their hopes on the choices of another adolescent. To not be able to share yourself with the one you desire most in this world, even worse watch them grow closer to someone else, is an excruciating ordeal. One that can lead you to make terrible choices out of utter desperation and that is what Kuzu no Honkai attempts to depict in gritty detail - the darkness that can develop from an unrequited love situation and the depths one is willing to go to in order to fill that void in their heart.

In this story we encounter two seventeen year olds named Mugi and Hanabi who attempt to quell the pain from their own unrequited loves by using one another as substitutes, pretending as though the other is the one that they truly love in order to satisfy their raging desires. We witness the consequences they face from beginning such a disingenuous relationship and how it impacts the people around them for the worse.

For adolescents in a school life setting, our two main characters are unusually mature. They obviously make their fair share of mistakes throughout as any teenager would, but the way that they describe events that happen before them, rationalizing their ever changing feelings by referencing modern psychology and embracing their sexual proclivities make them appear as though they're older than they actually are. Maturity is a prevalent theme as our lead characters look to progress themselves in order to make the people that they love, both adults in their early 20's, look their way. They each have childhood friends who are in love with them and are understandably upset over the suspicious relationship that they share which serves as the root of much drama in this story. Even they begin to change drastically as the plot progresses. Character progression is a refreshing strong-point for this manga as everyone begins to develop before your eyes with the turn of each page leading into the next chapter. Kuzu no Honkai is also told from a variety of different perspectives with each central character getting an opportunity to describe the events through their own point of view, helping to keep the story from ever feeling repetitive or stale.

The art in this manga does a great job of depicting the emotional state of the characters especially during intimacy scenes. Despite the lewd premise however, this is not a very explicit manga as there's much more focus on the reasoning behind why the characters act upon their impulses, rather than the impulse itself.

Given the current events thus far its safe to say what this manga sets out to accomplish as intended by the author: Kuzu no Honkai is designed to make you feel. To evoke a reaction out of the reader that will range anywhere from lukewarm sadness to berserk anger due to the many painful decisions that these characters you grow accustomed to make. It can be quite the vexing read for many who are used to more predictable happy romantic outcomes but a strong quality of any work of literature is the ability to create a rise out of the reader. That was me as I sped through this manga upon discovery which compelled me to compose my thoughts into a review. Hopefully that is what will inspire you to continue on forth with this manga and witness the most oft ignored aspect of love that is human desperation and desperately sought after compensation for a broken heart.
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Jans6ever3
Apr 05, 2021
Kuzu no Honkai review
WARNING: This review contains explicit language.

Kuzu no Honkai is the only manga I've completed with a fast pace. This is also the first revie that I'm going to publish for a Manga here in MAL because I cannot keep myself from shading my thoughts because this fucking manga has scarred me big time.

Character: 10
I love them and I hate them. I love Mugi and Hanabi and I just fucking shipped them throughout the whole time I was reading this Manga. I'll continue on shipping them till the day I return to dust but at the same time I also hated them occasionally for being so fucked up and for being so stupid. I also hated Akane, that fucking slut. But when it came to the last chapters of the manga, I started to hate myself as well because I slowly sympathized her and came to "understand" her but I still feel conflicted about it but I just can't help it and the fact that Hanabi also said; Her confidence is flawless and I kind of want to have that typenof confidence too.
The rest of the characters were also far from being just mediocre side characters. Even they have fucked up mentalities and I think that's what makes this manga relatable and realistic because everyone of us is fucked up too. *Sobs*

Art: 8
The art is a fucking trap. At first it gives you the false impression of a Shoujo manga. Well Surprise MF! You could also prob feel turned on with all the bed scenes and shit but trust me it only lasts until you get to the middle because when you get there, no matter how hot the bed scenes are, all you're going to be able to say is "WTF R YOU GUYS DOING".

Story: 10
Like I said, at the end of every chapter you'll always have that WTF reaction but there's this certain urge inside you that wants to dig in deeper as the story progresses and you're gonna realize the author and her characters are slowly fucking up you brain but its probably too late to back out now so instead you embrace reading this sinful manga.

Overall its a 10. Even if the ending wasn't the conclusion I wanted it was what Mugi, Hanabi and I needed. Yes, I am now part of it. I can't help it. It's haunted me ever since.

Read it. Just read it. Stop looking at those reviews with a 7 below rating. Trust me. Let's all get fucked up by a fucking manga.

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Ro-ro3314
Apr 05, 2021
Kuzu no Honkai review
Art: 9 - This manga has better art than most I've read. The artist has a unique touch that could work well in a different genre, I especially liked how well she managed to fit unexpected imagery into some of the dream sequences. Characters look great, more or less easy to tell apart. Facial expressions, I think the characters blush way too much. It's like an on-off switch and it feels excessive. As someone who knows next to nothing about Japanese culture and people, their actions and mannerisms sometimes perplex me, maybe they really are that neurotic and shouty in everyday situations, I wouldn't know. Environments are not so bad that they stand out yet not so good that they stand out, I'd say they lean toward good in the end.

Characters: 9 - You know you're dealing with good characters when they create strong reactions in you. I'll preface this and the other sections with a short summary of my own views - I am strongly against casual sex and "relationships" and serial monogamy. And someone who engages in such behaviour? That's not someone you associate with or cherish or love, that's something you erase from your life. Let them flounder in their self-made misery, wondering what they did wrong. Why did I add this off topic comment? Because this story is full of such characters; I don't think I can respect a single one of them or their choices and that's what makes them good, because they're here to show what path is not worth taking. Bad choices? Check. Horrific coping mechanisms? Check. Next to no personal development? Check (I wouldn't say this is poor character design since you aren't going to have much character development as you're circling the drain). The cast is like a perfect storm of damaged and misguided/unguided people, a warning more than anything.

Story: The story fluctuates between an 8 to a sickening sub-5. At first I kind of understood that it could be possible that people in dark places could get into situations like this and it stayed like that for a good third of the story. I thought, maybe this could really go somewhere, map some uncharted territory, go at the oversaturated romance genre from a new angle. After that, though, it just got more and more predictable as I got to know the characters. And what do they do exactly? I'ma keep it real with you chief, this manga is one step from hentai. If anything, by the end you should be closer to understanding why casual sex and sexual behaviour, even between friends and on mutually understood conditions is a terrible idea. If you think you can make the jump to treating something as ancient, primal and powerful as physical intimacy like you would treat thirst or hunger through the use of your big homo sapiens brain then prepare to be corrected by the forces that made your existence a possibility. All I'm saying is that it isn't a coincidence that the characters don't get any better no matter how many times they have emotionless sex with each other.

I'm not even going to mention the surprise, like who do you have to be to do something like that, I cannot understand, it's like they're a construct or a deliberate contradiction against everything logical, sane and human. If I didn't know any better I'd think most of the characters are the author's self-inserts and this arc is wish fulfillment but that's just a gut feeling.

Enjoyment: 6. Again, a strong start that slowly loses steam as the story progresses, regressing into frankly the forgettable 20 page one-shot romance territory by the end of it. I have to say, it's not repetitive or boring, it kept me engaged throughout the story.

Overall: 6. It could have gotten a better rating but I simply cannot forgive the author for wrenching something that could have been good into something so bizarrely bad and anticlimactic (heh).
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MultiLoisa11
Apr 05, 2021
Kuzu no Honkai review
Kuzu no Honkai is one of those series that looks deep but will leave you feeling empty at the same time. However, I wouldn't say it's no good - because it's good. It's one of those bitter-sweet stories that I actually like.

Story: 8/10
After completing this manga, I was a bit disappointed with the way it ended.. I thought "that's it?" (no I am not talking about the romance part) but that feeling of being let down, I expected something more - especially from the characters, but I didn't get anything except of what they have shown.
What I like about this manga is the way it shows that realistic side of life when it comes to love.
That just because you met that person first, doesn't mean they will like you first.
That just because you have been with that person longer, doesn't mean they will love you more than anyone else.
That just because you have a history and strong bond with that person, doesn't mean they wouldn't choose someone else over you.
That just because you wanted to fill the void using someone, doesn't always mean you wouldn't feel empty.
That just because you get along just fine, doesn't mean you will fall in love with each other - even if both of you wanted to.
And that even though you are obviously the better choice - you love that person and both of you knew that you can love them better - sometimes they still choose someone else (who obviously are no good for them) - it's unfair but that's life.
And our main characters had to learn and accept that reality of life - no matter how painful it is.

Art: 10/10
I love the artwork, the characters looks good and it doesn't look so messy.

Characters: 7/10
There are characters that made me disappointed because they were really interesting at first, only to make you feel empty and disappointed in the end. Characters that you wanted to understand but wasn't able to understand - probably due to the lack of time to develop them (it seems to me that the author rushed the ending)
Although I love the development for the main characters. They were both in a long unrequited love and got their hearts broken, they tried to find a way to heal themselves, they may have wandered for a while but never let themselves get lost. In the end, they realized that they wouldn't heal that way, it's just covering up the wound without treating it but the wound it still there.
With all of that, I ended up really liking the ending for the main characters. Accepting that reality, facing the pain, facing their fear, admit they have lost, they may have wandered for a while but in the end, they didn't let that pain ruin their life completely and didn't let that pain become a reason for them to ruin someone else' life.

Overall:
I gave this manga a score of 6/10 at first but after thinking about it and re-reading the manga, I realized it wasn't that bad, it's not perfect and has it flaws but it's actually pretty good and deserves a higher score than that.
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DiegoNC12
Apr 05, 2021
Kuzu no Honkai review
I've just finished reading Kuzu no Honkai (Scums Wish) and I felt the need to put my thoughts into words, so I decided to write a review. As this work is ongoing take my current score with a grain of salt, as many of you know you can't give an accurate score till something is over. However, rest assured the 8 does mean that I have "enjoyed" what I've read (More on those quotations later). That being said, let's get into the nitty gritty.

Story:
The story is simple enough, two people find comfort in each other as the pine away for the ones they truly love. At it's heart the author tries to make the manga about the pain of having unrequited love. However, the more I read of this manga I begin to see something more. The author has created something more, something honest. Scums Wish shows depravity. The characters in Scums Wish are empty. And this emptiness gives way to their struggles. They want something desperately to fill their emptiness, but they can't get it. This is where the honesty comes in. How often do we pine away for something to fill up our own longing? Scums Wish shows this struggle. People seeking something, something they may not even be fully aware of, and that something is destroying them from the inside out.

Art:
The art is clean, and consistent, no qualms and not much to say.

Characters:
Scums Wish is an accurate title. The characters in this manga are truly scum. They are empty people doing selfish and empty things with no concern for the damage it may cause them. They so desperately want to be filled that, the very desire they wish for is killing them. Our two leads are pitiable, but not just them, the whole cast (Except for one) are sad individuals. Lonely and broken people. There have been countless times during reading the manga that I wanted to punch the characters, to yell at them. But this is not because I hated them. It is because it is painful to watch people go down a path of self-destruction. This is not bad story writing, when I stepped away from this work to look at it objectively, I agreed with how the characters acted. If I had the values that these characters hold, I could see myself doing what they have. They acted honestly to their characters, and I my mind no matter how much I hate that honesty, it is the mark of a good character when you see where their actions come from. However, that honesty is painful and frustrating to read.

Enjoyment:
Now, let's talk about why I had quotations around my "enjoyment" earlier. As I hinted at in my characters segment. Watching people spiral down a self-destructing life cycle is painful. It is like watching a friend who has a drug addiction fry his brain. You want to punch your friend, but it won't do anything. Scums Wish is a hard read, but despite how sad the characters are, I enjoyed the work. I can look at the world Sums Wish has painted and agree with the action of its characters, even if those actions frustrate me, it is an honest look at the way I believe people are. We may not seek such rotten fulfillment in love, but we may in other areas. Scums Wish is introspective and honest, and I found my self enjoying it.

Overall:
I'll wrap up my thoughts here, and add a warning to future readers of Scums Wish. Scums Wish is an honest depiction of how empty people act, when they can't reach for the thing they think they desire. Bad decisions pile up, one on top of another. I ate the story up because it fascinated me, and if you can handle the shear sadness of the characters I would recommend you try it too. If you are not instantly turned off, you may learn something about people too. I know I have.

That being said, I want to end with a warning. Around the 33rd chapter or so, the main female lead decides to find a resolution. I am desperately worried that this manga will slip into a cliched "I'll believe in myself" kind of manga which would depress me greatly. I'll be honest, I'm a sucker for happy endings, but a work like Scums Wish should not be set up for one. Unless the Author can find a way for her characters to find true redemption, I worry that Scums Wish will end hollowly. She has painted an honest world. One where people are screwed up, and I feel as if a shallow solution to the characters problems and trauma would be a disservice to this work. So be warned, all readers of Scums Wish, you may be in for a poor ending. Here's to hoping I'm wrong.

tl;dr: Scums Wish is interesting. Although the characters are frustrating, they act honestly. The drama is intense, and can be an off put, but instead of focusing on it, instead ask yourself this question, "Where do you seek fulfillment?" If it is in love, do you see yourself honestly acting any different if put in the characters situations? Try it.
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Resiverence12
Apr 05, 2021
Kuzu no Honkai review
This review is spoiler free with nothing to do with the story, so you can enjoy the manga without knowing 'too' much. Remember this is my thoughts, therefore I will make a paragraph at the end about it not based on my personal thoughts.

Kuzu no Honkai is kind of messed up in many ways, not school days messed up but not your average manga. For me it's hard writing a review for this because i can't find much good things about it. Its not boring at all,I read all 40 chapters (so far) in the first go. I can't really love any of the characters, I just can't get attached to them because its not a simple romance but a complicated romance. I didn't necessarily dislike or love it, just too hard for me to get in the story.

The plot is kinda lame no matter what way you think about it. Some say complicated relationships makes it interesting, BUT their is a limit of how f*cked up it can get. The characters are absolutely screwed up at times and some people get annoying especially this one female character. The reason why the characters are like that is because THEY are STUPID and they DONT think. Somehow i managed to give a 7/10 because it wasn't boring and it was kinda fun reading it.

The manga in general is good and worth reading but If you dont like f*cked up relationships and mature moments then I suggest you give it a pass. The art was well done, proabably one of the best aspects. Story has potential and surprising at times.

Thanks for reading my review :) Hope I helped!
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ae_shinobi6
Apr 05, 2021
Kuzu no Honkai review
I don't really like the idea of writing reviews and have never written a manga review before, but after reading all of the currently released chapters of this manga, I just thought damn, wtf did I just read and am I so masochistic enough to read all 38 chapters that are currently released. So I've decided to write this review to display my enjoyment of this miserable experience.

At first glance, you see a young high school couple who is the "ideal" couple, however, further reading along, you realize that they are perverted humans who only utilize each other in order to satisfy their physical needs because they cannot obtain the ones that they truly love. For the first few chapters you think, oh, they are going so going to eventually fall in love and its going to turn into one of those cute fluffy romantic mangas. This is where it all goes wrong and it is made known that the author of this manga is a perverted freaky schadenfreude who makes the sudden turn of events in this manga just to mindf*** with people and maybe earn a little extra money at the same time.
Although you can see me going on and on about how this manga mindf***s with people, you can see that I've put quite a good rating on this manga, this is because the story is very deep and makes you get attached to certain characters and at the same time, makes you like and dislike certain characters. The infidelity that appears so much in this manga should've already made me turn away from this manga in the first dozen or so chapters, but the author of this manga somehow makes me want to find out what is next. The desire to read this manga and find out what is next beats my sense of morals and it makes me sad to have to admit how a perverted freaking mindf***ing author is actually a good one.
What I am saying may or may not be accurate, but my overall view of this manga is that the story and plot of this manga is very enjoyable and contains many deep ideologies and if you are resilient or maybe masochistic enough to endure through many sudden changes that will make your heart tremble with emotions (mostly anger, sadness, and hatred), then I recommend you to start diving into this manga that came from hell.
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Bubuful3
Apr 05, 2021
Kuzu no Honkai review
I want to like Kuzu No Honkai, I really do. But I just can't, and here's why.

Art: 8
First and foremost I'd like to praise the superficial, the art. I adore Yokoyari Mengo's art, it's very well done. Each of the character's design feel unique and somehow colorful. Mengo's greatest achievement in Kuzu No Honkai was definitely her art. This is the only aspect of the manga I have very concrete positive feelings for.

Character: 6
Next the character, this is a double edged blade. It was simultaneously good and bad. Characters felt like they could be real people, they were relatable and all but one felt competent. Almost all of us can relate to loving someone who won't love us. And Mugi and Hanabi's sexual solace in each other while unhealthy, is understandable. On the other hand a lot of their actions and emotions feel completely unjustified and frankly illogical. Almost childish. Specifically Kanai's (and Mugi's) love for Akane. It makes absolutely zero sense. What does he love about her? Think about it. Everything he knows about her is total bullshit. The only thing he knows for sure, is that she's a pretty face. Why would he willingly commit to being a cuckold? "To make her happy". That's not an answer, why does he want to make her happy, why does he love her. He doesn't know enough about her to love her. It's childish. It's one thing to love someone despite their faults, but to love someone with seemingly no redeeming qualities is just ridiculous. Either that or he's a masochist who want's to be cheated on. In which case, whatever. I'm not going to argue with the disturbing fetish that is netorare.

Another issue with the character in this story is that the characters has this nasty little regression habit. They'd make a little progress, show a sign of moving on only to hit a wall, give up, have a little emotionless sex and go back to a world of self pity. I feel that no one in this manga had any meaningful character development. I feel that given the opportunity, Mugi, Ecchan, or Hanabi, would immediately hop into the arm's of their first love.

Almost none of the characters were likable. Yea you could empathize with them, which is important and good. But empathy means jack shit if you don't like them. Hanabi constantly acts like a victim. Always giving into her surroundings and scarcely making a choice for herself. Mugi is a delusional idiot who believes his first love is infallible. Akane doesn't need anything said about her. She's just a sociopath. And Kanai is just a man child. Ecchan was a good attempt, but had this nasty habit of taking advantage of her love, leading me to believe she more infatuated than inlove. And Moca, my favorite, just fell in love with an idea, the idea of a prince and princess. She's almost a reverse of Kanai and Akane, except Mugi isn't nearly an awful person as Akane.

Story: 2
Finally the story, Kuzu No Honkai's great short coming. I have two things to say about the story. First and foremost, it is my belief that a story is only as good as it's ending. And Kuzu No Honkai's ending was frankly shit. It end with a sociopath marrying a manchild who claims to love her when he knows nothing about her, and our two main characters who actually move on (which is good) just deciding "this person who helped me through the darkest time of my life to date, who I probably love, lets just completely cut them out of my life". People are saying this is a fitting and lovely ending. I think it's illogical and emotionally regressive.
Second, it feels like this story never had a clear ending in sight. Any good story teller knows two things when they begin to write a story. It's beginning, and it's ending. Kuzu No Honkai felt like it knew's it's beginning, but had no damn idea what the hell was going to happen after that. It just threw side characters at us and the "resolved" the story. What do I mean? It felt like Ecchan, and Moca were just there to kill time and attempt to add some more sympathetic characters.

Enjoyment: 1
Kuzu No Honkai never had the intention of making anyone happy. It simply expressed the fact that there is misery in the world and that we have to deal with it. Kuzu No Honkai had no intention of creating any enjoyment and I certainly didn't find any.

This manga lived up to it's name.
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Kuzu no Honkai
Kuzu no Honkai
Autor Yokoyari, Mengo
Artista --