![yondome wa iyana shi zokusei majutsushi แปล yondome wa iyana shi zokusei majutsushi แปล](https://cdn.mangamitsu.com/site1-maseki-gurume-mamono-no-chikara-o-tabeta-ore-wa-saikyou/19/11.jpg)
Healing gave parties the false illusion that they were safe even if they were really close to dying, but suddenly if the line is crossed or if the healer runs out of mana, then reality strikes, and the party is in deep trouble.īUT unfortunately, we have not escaped the overbearing harem. I especially love the way they use healing. It makes the fighting and the close calls that the characters experience much more personal and realistic. Dead people come back to life or deaths are brushed off to the side as trivial in comparison to other items. There's death! One of the worst things about RPG world novels and manga is that death is trivialized. You can see how he changes/tries to change over the chapters due to necessity and survival, and his insecurities in contrast to the front he puts up really hits home. The MC's character growth is especially good. The trope where the MC basically breezes through everything because he's "special" doesn't exist in this novel, although he does have a special skill that they are gradually building upon. Then they experience tragedies and really close calls as they grow. Generally RPG-setting LNs have several things that I hate: 1) "OP" main characters who basically doesn't have to try, 2) no death or seriousness to death, and 3) overbearing harem.Ĭharacters in Hai to Grimgar grow, and not in a spontaneous nonsensical manner, They start off incredibly weak. Grimgal had a nice concept, but there's a limit as to how far you can go with just that. There is no feeling of the party growing together or even any of the side characters growing. Outside of hunting they hardly talk to each other, and when everyone is together it's always the same antics from the first to the eight volume.
![yondome wa iyana shi zokusei majutsushi แปล yondome wa iyana shi zokusei majutsushi แปล](https://f.ptcdn.info/042/073/000/qqxy8t1atuMOINVwVb-o.jpg)
What Grimgal is lacking is meaningful dialogue. While they actually grew on me quite quickly, there is hardly any development except a little for the protagonist Haruhiro. The biggest weakpoint are however the characters. This is not necessarily a bad thing, but after 8 volumes I'm still not sure where this is supposed to go. Grimgal tries to be more realistic and portrays the difficulties an average person would encounter in a foreign world with a relatively harsh environment.Īs was often mentioned, the plot progression is very slow. Grimgal is a different take on the isekai trope, where our main cast is not somehow blessed with superpowers or are natural geniuses.