lamsar503's manga / #Full color(10)

Lamia Orphe is Dead

Ongoing | Song seori,Gamunbi | 2019 released

My advice: Read at least 10 chapters (preferably the first 20 chapters), and then re-read the first 10 chapters, before deciding to continue it or not. I say this because the first 10 chapters or so can be confusing when you start reading this due to the fact that there is constant "time-reversal and retelling events through the same period of time" occurring in the first few chapters without any explanation; so while the story is still interesting, the first read through can be rather confusing. The confusion arises because time reversal is a main plot point for the story, such that in one chapter someone may already be dead, in the next chapter they're alive, in the next chapter they may be appearing just as a figment of someone's dream, etc. Additionally, there are many similarities across chapters, and nothing specifies that time reversal has occurred or gives specifics about "when" time reversed or why. So the information you get from the first few chapters is a bid hard to interpret until after you finally get into the chapters that are relaying (what appears to be) the "current" run-through of this period of time. --- I feel like just trying to explain it is a bit confusing too, haha. Otherwise, the art is full color and pretty decent. I'd give the art alone 3/5 stars; it's appealing enough to be called "good". (I've seen better/more detailed/more artistic works that I'd give 4 stars ['Beatrice', for example, is somewhere around a high 4 to me], and I'd save 5 stars for something that was clearly gorgeous or somehow just artistically "worked' aesthetically with the story.) Regarding story, it is a bit early to say one way or another whether it is 'good' or 'bad'. For now, I will say that there are no glaring cliches or trite plot developments that are like the flea infestation of comics, manga, manhwa, and manwha. The time reversal and re-living the same time period aspect is interesting. The origin story of a dragon that fell in love with a human, and then reversed time after her death to live again with her may not be a completely new idea, but it doesn't feel like a cheap plot device. The dynamics between the FL (who is "strong" regardless of timeline; Intelligent, capable, ambitious, noble, and courageous - determined to be a great Duchess or a Knight or whatever she must be to face an OP foe, depending on the timeline), her younger brother (who suffers PTSD courtesy of the ML, and must face the ML despite his trauma) and father (who kinda seems like 'Schrödinger's Cat' thanks to the time reversals), the OP ML (the second prince; probably a descendent, remnant, or reincarnation of the time-reversing Dragon), and the minor characters are interesting to see. I look forward to reading more, and to be honest I'm pretty sure I'll end up re-reading the first few chapters for a third time just because there's a lot to take in about how Lamia lived her lives, and how many times Lamia has died causing a time-reversal to trigger.

The Wicked Queen

Ongoing | Shin ji-sang,Ga yan | 2000 released

Instead of the very typical wise, gentle, beautiful, skilled, etc. female protagonist in an asian harem that wins over the emperor (or prince, or prime minister, or whatever) from the wicked Empress, this story is centered around the wicked Empress as the protagonist. The story shows her motivations, reasoning, and thoughts as she goes around being a servant-slapping, self-centered, sometimes misunderstood (more often than not, NOT misunderstood), "Wicked Queen". Meaning that, she is expected (for certain reasons) by everyone to become the Emperor's proper wife (the Empress), but (for other certain reasons) she is married to him as a Queen (Concubine) with the belief that she will one day force the situation to be as she wants, such that she will wind up Empress. It is interesting to watch the dynamics between this woman and the man she fell obsessively in love with, the Emperor. Additionally, it is interesting that they include PTSD/psychiatric disorders as a characteristic of this protagonist. Lovely full colored art, as well. The story definitely makes you want to slap the protagonist and her husband frequently though. lol.

Survive as the Hero's Wife

Ongoing | nokki (녹끼),abin (아빈) | 2000 released

Sweetheart V5: The Boss Is Too Kind!

Complete | Hua er bao | 2000 released

Dropped this; stopped reading at chapter 206. It is just too monotonous. The characters never learn or grow in any way and the drama is just boring. All that plus the ethically/morally reprehensible elements make this a "no-go" for me. A fairly typical Chinese soap opera style comic. Basically, an emperor in his mid 30s falls in love with a 12 (maybe younger) year old girl that he found on the street and adopted. They both die; the king reincarnates while the adopted princess' soul transmigrates to the future. She conveniently (?) transmigrates into the body of the wife of the reincarnated emperor. Oh, and they both look identical to their "original selves", minus a haircut for the guy that makes him look like a sheep. Then proceeds the development of a love (?) story between a guy in his mid 30s and his wife (he hated the old soul, but likes the "new" one in his wife's body), who has the mentality of an uneducated 14 year old girl...whom he convinces to get pregnant. I read chinese soap opera comics with a hefty amount of mindfulness regarding the fact that there will inevitably be glaring cultural differences and values that grate my tolerance (such as the attitudes toward rape, love, women, gender roles, abortion, domestic abuse, violence, honor, etc.). Even so, I find myself thinking that if I never read another page of this story again I wouldn't ever think twice about it.

Emperor And The Female Knight

Ongoing | 안경워숭이,Team-iyak,winter - heyum | 2019 released

Quick story-thus-far sum up: The first season is about 42-44 chapters long (I forgot which chapter it ended on exactly). And is primarily about the background story of the FL, how the FL meets the ML, and how the FL rises in rank and prestige during their conquest of the entire continent. In the first chapter, we see that the ML realizes he's in love with the FL upon finally completing his 10 year conquest. In the final chapter of season 1, it finally circles back to that same moment. In season 2: Currently ongoing, the story shifts back to the original capital city of the ML's kingdom (which is now part of his continental empire) and follows the transitional period of setting up the infrastructure of the empire. The capital city is moved to Yappa (where the FL, as an act of compassion, had assisted the deposed princess to commit suicide in a quick and "humane" way to maintain her dignity in death during the conquest of her kingdom in Season 1). There is a lot more focus in this season on the ML's romantic struggles with his feelings. More specifically, his ongoing romantic and sexual desire for her while being accustomed to thinking he can have whatever/whoever he wants as an emperor..but, at the same time, not wanting to act on his feelings since it might break the faultless relationship between them as a master and servant. On top of that, he also knows he wishes for her happiness...but anytime it seems like that happiness might be given to her by another man, he can't ignore that he wants her happiness to be "being with him." Meanwhile, he has to repeatedly come to terms with the fact that the FL is 100.00% dedicated, loyal, friendly, trusting, and his steadfast ally...but she is 0.00% romantically interested in him. This leads to some good moments of comedy (such as when his feelings of joy leak out unintentionally when he realizes she has declined a marriage proposal), some good moments of "moe" (such as when the FL kabedons/"wall slams" the ML after he visits her as a surprise and he confesses in a daze that she was "so gallant he wanted to kiss her"), and some good moments of slight angst (such as when the emperor finally marries 3 concubines for political reasons, despite his reluctance, and his ongoing love only for the FL alone. And the concubines, so far, are totally likable and very pitiable characters. So even if you hate the fact that they're in between the FL and ML developing a romance, you know that as aristocratic women they had no choice whatsoever in the matter and you can't even dislike them, dang it.) Through both seasons, lots of sexist/gender-biased BS, and the FL's responses, are superficially and directly addressed. My thoughts: Overall, it is an enjoyable story. Art-wise, its a bit better than the average manwha and it has the typical full-color illustrations. As far as main character design, if you approach this expecting that a lovely/handsome king falls in love with a rough and scruffy (and very masculine in appearance) warrior woman, then you'll be fine. Don't expect any femininity from this FL. Seriously, there were many times that I wondered if the artist didn't know how to draw strong women that still look like women, or just didn't know how to draw androgynous women, or just flat-out didn't know how to draw women at all. --- Which felt weird, since the king is so "pretty." --- But, in the end, I was like "does her lack of any sort of traditionally feminine appearance at all, even for a moment, really matter? Does the presence or absence of it change who she is as human or as a woman, and does it affect the believability of the emperor falling, and remaining, in love with her?" -- I concluded that regardless of whether it was due to artistic ability or artistic choices, its an effective mechanism of the comic to draw the reader's attention to their own gender-biases. Story-wise: It started off fairly weakly, with season 1 being rather superficial and having drastic pacing issues. Season 1 covers about 6-10 years, depending on how you look at it, and the story basically went in a repeating loop of "...(1) battle here, sexist garbage occurs, sexist garbage dealt with like a boss, time leap, move scene, (1) battle here, sexist garbage occurs, etc...". Additionally, the characters were rather 1-dimensional. When I say 1-dimensional, I mean it felt like the story presented characters such that it felt like it was saying: "this is the emperor/conqueror character, this is the grumpy sexist character, this is the "defies the odds, but in a believable way" female warrior character, etc.". And eventually, it got to the point that I just wondered just how long I would be reading until I could see the scene from chapter 1 again. That said, season 2 is really helping this story become much better in various ways. The most important ways are that it is helping: to flesh out the story-world setting, to depict the characters in more well-rounded/multi-faceted ways, and to bring some more depth to the themes of sexism/gender-bias through personal growth of characters' mindset and thoughts (rather than just the FL "muscling" her way through BS gender-based situations). Up to now reading reminders to self: FL is head of second special forces division, which is usually the emperor's personal guards. As a strategic move, the emperor ordered the FL to be the protector of the 3 concubines (which is a lower position and much less respected) under the guise of a punishment for vomiting in front of him (again). FL is aware and happily following orders, as always. The concubines really seem to like (and envy) the FL, and likewise the FL likes the concubines. That said, she can't understand or empathize with the concubines' concerns about pregnancy, marriage, etc., or begin to fathom why they choose to endure silly things like starving themselves before their wedding to be more slender. The emperor seems to be having marital relations with the concubines (based on a pregnancy false-alarm), but it is not clear if that is true yet. Still, the emperor said he'd make whichever concubine bears an heir first the empress, while knowing that the FL, whom he loves, is infertile. The idea that FL is infertile is currently unsubstantiated. We know her period is irregular, but that is to be expected with malnutrition, heavy alcoholism, excessive exercise, and low body fat (FL has 8-pack abs anyone would envy). Being from a conservative and patriarchal (read: ignorant) society, its only natural that an irregular period would be enough for someone to label her infertile. Currently, one concubine had a "phantom pregnancy" scare. A second concubine is sick with a cold and is talking in her feverish state to FL about how envious she is of the FL's strength and independence. The FL is starting to appreciate the struggles of women who didn't find a path like her own. The emperor was super shocked by news of a possible pregnancy, but haven't seen him since it was revealed to be a false alarm. There's a pudgy dude in the palace that is stanning the FL, while also treating her like a lady. FL is starting to like it and become receptive to the rare treatment. -- Possible spring-board for developing a romantic interest for FL? I'm looking forward to more.

Virtues of the Villainess

Ongoing | Bae Hee Jin,Koonac | 2020 released

My Mom is Not to be Messed with

Ongoing | nuò, dò,ngmà,n gōngzuò, shì | 2019 released
2020-12-26 01:59 marked

Boring. dropped at chapter 16. A weak, mentally handicapped mother dies due to abuse from her village and an OP personality takes over the body. She eventually meets the guy who (is likely the one that) raped and impregnated her (and who also seems to be the future romantic interest). OP mom proceeds to beat people up. Story is basically just a carbon copy of the Chinese manwha trope where "an OP identity is 'reincarnated' into the body of a weak person upon their death, and new OP identity seeks vengeance on the dead's behalf'". Nothing particularly interesting about the art, characters or story. Maybe it'll get better in time, but for now it's too dull to bother with.

My Husband Hides His Beauty

Ongoing | Jungyeon, Gabi Nam, Harara | 2019 released
2020-12-21 16:05 marked

Seems interesting so far. There's not much to it yet, but maybe after another 100 short chapters it'll get somewhere. But, I gotta say, I do wish that the ML would keep his mask on. I don't know where the ML's face from the cover went, but it'd be nice if he actually looked that way in the comic. -- I mean, he's obviously not a monster, but he has the face of a kid somewhere between the ages of 8-14 years old depending on which chapter you're reading (even though he's 22 by the time you see it). Yeah, the face of a sparkly-eyed 8 year old on a adult man's buff, warrior body kinda ruins it for me. I wish the illustrator could learn from the ML in "Beatrice". That right there is a *fine* example of a hot, beautiful, but still "masculine" man in both face and body.

Three Lifetimes

Ongoing | | 2000 released

The daughter of the god of the netherworld falls in love at first sight with the god of war. She pursues him only to discover that he is about to face a heavenly trial to increase his divinity by going through 3 mortal lives. She asks her uncle, the Jade Emperor of the deities to allow her to follow him through his 3 mortal lives and is granted permission to do so. The first life she spends raising the reincarnated god of war in a chinese-style/cultivation-martial arts themed world (which is apparently not Earth, based on later chapters). She retained her memories and superhuman abilities while he had no memories of being a god. For the second life, set in modern times on Earth, she accidentally wound up reincarnating as a male, and the god of war as a female. They meet in high school. She (now a he) has her memories and has to figure out if the god of war (now a she) still has his. As of chapter 53, they have just had the drink of oblivion (which wipes all memories of the immortal realm upon rebirth) and have entered the portals to descend to the last mortal realm setting for their final trial. I really enjoyed this more than I expected to. I'm looking forward to more. the novel: https://www.royalroad.com/fiction/6107/three-lifetimes-completed

A Strange Life

Ongoing | 카나리아 | 2019 released
2021-01-22 23:42 marked