Nov 30, 2024
Why is it so entertaining to watch an old man terrorize and dismantle the entire Japanese society by himself?
Well, putting it like this is actually quite easy to see why.
The strongest point of this manga is absolutely Sato and his antics. The art during his terrorism is incredible, and the action from panel to panel flows perfectly. There's just something about seeing a "one vs many" scene that gets the monkey brain going.
Besides Sato, however, the rest of the cast and general story is hardly impressive.
We have characters like Nakano and Kaito that falls in the "dumb extrovert that does the first thing that
...
comes to mind", which isn't really interesting most of the type.
Tosaki starts the story quite one-noty, but eventually becomes more well-rounded.
I've finished the entire thing and I'm still not sure what's the deal with what the writer is saying with Ogura.
And then we have the protagonist, Nagai. He has some form of psycopathy, and the author seems to be saying something like "Hey, sure, we have psycopaths like Sato, but psycopathy isn't inherently evil" which is something, for sure. For me, personally, Nagai was a whatever character, even though everyone (including himself) talks about how smart he is, he is always one step behind Sato, which is impressive for Sato, but doesn't make us like the protagonist, which is... one way to write the story.
Overall, entertaining and I recommend to anyone interest in action and a story revolving exclusively around the main villain.
Reviewer’s Rating: 8
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