Overall |
6 |
Story |
0 |
Art |
0 |
Character |
0 |
Enjoyment |
0 |
tl;dr: A manga with a weak plot and unlikable cast, but that moves fast enough to stay somewhat interesting.
A group of high school students and their former teacher return to their elementary school for a class reunion. However, things quickly turn into a nightmare when one of the students, Mikio, announces that he has placed deadly traps at all possible exit routes, trapping them inside. Then, while brandishing a pistol, he tells them that he would be using them for a series of social experiments. A series of painful and potentially deadly social experiments that would put their bonds to the test and unearth traumatic
pasts and lingering grudges.
The central premise of this manga is fundamentally flawed in that a single teenager with only a handgun maintaining control of over twenty people despite forcing them to do horrible things they don’t want to do is absurd. For the first half of the manga, it’s not too hard to suspend your sense of disbelief enough to ignore this because the focus of the manga is on other things, mainly small scope experiments. Especially as the pacing of the manga overall is really fast so it’s easy enough to get swept up in things and ignore all the issues the manga has. However, as the manga progresses things get more complicated and start involving the premise more, at which point these issues make the overarching plot feel full of holes. Ultimately, I wasn’t really satisfied with the resolution to the plot at all.
Still, that’s not a deal breaker because this is a manga much more focused on characters than the overarching plot. Unfortunately, the cast was also incredibly weak. The early experiments were pretty interesting, but as things progressed characters felt like they made less and less sense. The vast majority of the plot is driven by characters doing something completely unexpected, and then the reader being provided background on why they did so. But this background is often forced and full of contradictions as the background is inconsistent with how the character had been acting earlier in the manga. There are sometimes forced attempts at smoothing over gaps, but it’s obvious that they’re being shoehorned in and often cause more problems than they solve.
Characters are also incredibly inconsistent personality wise. Characters will behave one way, but then suddenly start behaving a different way without any build-up or explanation for why. The cast is pretty big and the narrative generally involves everyone at the same time. As such, it naturally focuses on some characters but not on others. As such it has to minimize certain characters by essentially erasing their personalities and just having them go with the flow in order for things to progress. But holistically it just makes characters seem erratic. As a result, it’s hard to really get invested in anyone and thus the ending and epilogue aren’t all that satisfying. I think the manga tries to address this point explicitly by having a character remark about how people can change in unpredictable ways. But regardless of how the changes may seem to others around them, for stories such as this the writer should convey enough to the reader that the way characters change make sense.
It also feels like the manga didn’t really have any sort of underlying message. That’s not a problem in and of itself as every manga certainly doesn’t need one. But the way this manga was written was like it desperately wanted to have one but couldn’t figure out how to actually do so, so it just threw everything it had at the wall hoping something would stick. The manga has all sorts of morals and themes, such as how power can corrupt, how people act under extreme stress is not their ‘true’ selves, people can be deeply traumatized by things that seem inconsequential to others, or that teachers are grossly overworked and overburdened. But they’re all incredibly shallow to the point it doesn’t feel like they have much value. They also completely lack subtlety.
The art was okay. Some of the cover art looks pretty nice, but art of the manga itself wasn’t particularly good in terms of style or quality. The designs were pretty boring too, though I don’t consider that much of an issue considering the setting and the manga trying to seem grounded. What was handled really well was the paneling as the manga flowed really well and was easy to read through really quickly.
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