"Watch this, friends. You can actually pinpoint the second when her mind rips in half." XD
Seriously though, there's a lot to take in here. From the definition of Unbound (a term you should probably get used to, as you'll be hearing it a lot going forward), to Nara's personal stance on its legitimacy, to Chiaki realizing that her reality sounds absurd to people. The idea of an Unbound may be a known concept in this world, but it seems it's not a well understood or widely believed one from the sounds of it.
And yeah, Nara comes off pretty harsh, but be honest: if you met a person who kept insisting they were from another world - minutes after meeting them - how readily would you believe them? It's quite the statement to make, after all. Especially without any hard proof. Do you take them at face value right away, or do you assume it's the setup to a weird prank or game or something?
Or imagine the other way around. In the hypothetical scenario where you're in Chiaki's shoes right now, what would you say? What can you say?
Redge seemed to believe in Unbounds, but I wonder how common that is...
Anyway, I hope you've enjoyed this week's pages giving a lot to think about. Next week, we'll shift gears a bit and have some fun. :)
i assume that since chiaki showed her tamagotchi as "proof" she's an unbound, she doesnt have an ID or library card or anything that says "tokyo, japan"
Follows the strange story of Chiaki, a daydreaming otaku who longs to confess her feelings to her childhood friend, Fumiko, and how that's made especially difficult when she gets transported to another world...
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