Como la mayoría de volúmenes, tiene su momento que, para mi, es un poco aburrido. Aunque no lo es tanto como sí lo sentía en volúmenes anteriores.
Rio logra sacar a Celia sin complicaciones, y debe preparar todo para que vivan juntos por el tiempo que sea necesario hasta aclarar su situación. A su vez, los movimientos entre los reinos son cada vez más tensos, y es a partir de la segunda parte del libro en donde se dan estas cositas que sí me gustaron. Si hay algo que me gusta de este mundo, son los nobles y sus ansias de posicionarse a la cabeza de los demás reinos. En este volumen se aprecia más a Reiss, aunque todavía no está claro lo que busca lograr. Sin embargo, su ofensiva es cada vez más fuerte, y esta poniendo en marcha su plan.
A rather slow volume of the series that mostly deals with the aftermath of the events from the previous volume. It's really about 40% filler romcom moments with Rio and Celia, which depending on your preferences may be the best thing ever or "can we just get on with it?" and sadly i felt the latter more than the former here.
The volume also does set up things with Liselotte, who's been pretty much hinted to be a future member of the Rio harem and there's a significant chunk of this book that is from her PoV which is a welcome change.
As a filler volume it does the job well-enough, but sadly not much else.
Main character is looking for Aki and Masato's brothers that supposedly were summoned to this alternate reality world. Aki was once Haruto's half sister (before Aki's dad divorced Haruto's cheating mother, in his previous life). In a totally illogical move, Rio (Haruto) fights with the monster stampede that Reiss set up to capture the Galarc Princess Lisselotte. Rio is able to defeat all of the strongest monsters, and saves Stewart (pushed Flora (second Princess) off of the hill and later blames Rio for Lesce Majesté Stewart is also (the "brother" that tortured and trained Latifa) and Duke Huguenot, the person that sent Latifa as an assassin to kill Rio. So in this intervention, Rio is saving a lot of the corrupt nobles that have made him a wanted person in the Kingdom of Belrum, and have tried to assassinate him. Completely contradictory, irrational and nonsensical. It doesn't make sense that the main character in this volume is still saving the people that are trying to kill him and do harm to the people he most cares for. Reiss is the most evil character of this novel, he is the ambassador of the proxia empire in the Belrum Kingdom. Reiss mentioned Lucious, the adventurer that murdered/sexually assaulted/etc Rios' mother when Rios was just 5 years old (12 years ago). Light novel is full of contradictions, fake drama and nonsensical and illogical actions written by the author. Author created a dystopia alternate world where evil reigns and all of the reincarnated and teleported people go to suffer, get tortured, sexually abused, physically and mentally abused, enslaved etc. Why would any person want to purchase and read a light novel series like this one?
While I enjoyed reading this book. The characters are interesting and there's enough backstory to introduce them. The timeline bothers me a bit. If Haratu and Miharu are the same age and Aki is 3 years younger and Haratu died when he was 20years old. How are Miharu and Aki 16 and 13 now. Especially since it's 9 years later now. Hopefully the inconsistency will be cleard up in later books. But all in all a nice easy read
This series has somehow managed to stay consistently entertaining without falling into redundancy. I'm hoping it stays that way. I definitely don't mind Rio/Haruto being an overpowered protagonist as long as the challenges don't become copy and past book by book. Shield Hero never recovered from falling into that trap.
As the plot thickens , the interaction between the characters is great especially when woman are involved. Rio is as unaware of his effect on the ladies around , as normal. This blindness is the charm of his being.
Another enjoyable addition to the series, with the main character further showing the kind of strength and power wheels. Once again, if you like the previous volumes, the quality of this volume is no less excellent and enjoyable.
It was not bad, but most of it contained filler. It seems that the overall point of the story was to bridge the gap between major events. Little things that could be described in a single paragraph ended up taking a whole chapter. Many anime fall into this story structural in an attempt to extended the story the out. The art of extending the story is part and parcel of many animes were a single fight could take up an entire novel.
Not a bad book, with some nice scenes. But the story is too slow, more than half of the book the author describes the same scenes as previous books. The Flinstone's house with a new occupant, again shopping lingerie, and the same scenes in the Spirits Folks Village. Nothing really interesting up to the end, a battle and a cliffhanger.