I enjoyed it to some extent but I disliked the "killing oneself because of love" ending.
So, the main character never had a real friend to begin with. Brian used and sacrificed his own best friend for the better mankind system or beliefs, whatever that is. Sean wasn't happy in reality but he never wished for death, did he? Brian could've done something to save him after he found happiness. He could've also planned that, isn't that right?
Heather feeling bad for the people she indirectly killed in the later chapters felt kinda illogical. Why would she suddenly feel bad for them when she killed a person in middle school, at such a young age. Even if we take in the possibility that the frontier cornered her and broke her mind, that's why but nah, it simply doesn't add up. A man killed for her, she didn't feel love for him then, why would she feel love for someone who saved her a couple of times? Because he was different than others? His rationality can be a cause.
In short, her personality in the later chapters felt unnatural, but humans can change the next second so, okey.
Humans are naturally selfish, didn't Sean have worldly desires after he discovered the meaning of happiness and blah blah?
I enjoyed it to some extent but I disliked the "killing oneself because of love" ending.
So, the main character never had a real friend to begin with. Brian used and sacrificed his own best friend for the better mankind system or beliefs, whatever that is. Sean wasn't happy in reality but he never wished for death, did he? Brian could've done something to save him after he found happiness. He could've also planned that, isn't that right?
Heather feeling bad for the people she indirectly killed in the later chapters felt kinda illogical. Why would she suddenly feel bad for them when she killed a person in middle school, at such a young age. Even if we take in the possibility that the frontier cornered her and broke her mind, that's why but nah, it simply doesn't add up. A man killed for her, she didn't feel love for him then, why would she feel love for someone who saved her a couple of times? Because he was different than others? His rationality can be a cause.
In short, her personality in the later chapters felt unnatural, but humans can change the next second so, okey.
Humans are naturally selfish, didn't Sean have worldly desires after he discovered the meaning of happiness and blah blah?