
By the way, I was meaning to ask, how old is your daughter Mei?
Scary…
Are you almost 5 years old?
I hope you can become that.
Please… just for my daughter…
My eyes are already…
No good.
It sounds too much like something Sashess would say…
(Not introduced)
…I don’t have a daughter, but
Why do you know about my daughter…?
Did you do this… uncle?
>>10
I can’t believe you noticed that.
Renn, you’re amazing~
He seemed mature for a kindergarten student.
I thought you were an elementary school student.
Business negotiation techniques when the initial request is not accepted by the other party.
Maybe it’s someone who already knows the age but intentionally asks the other person.
>>16
You’ve taken good care of it, haven’t you~~ (gogoggo)
>>16
It’s interesting to ask about someone’s age even though they’re already dead.
>>38
How old would you be (if you were still alive)?
If you’re doing this naturally, you’re a genius, seriously.
Dad wants to see his daughter too, right?
Where would you like to look?
It’s obvious, but when you read the entire story, it doesn’t bother you at all and doesn’t feel that way, but if you cut out just one frame, I think it’s a bug that suddenly makes Hiroshi fit the voice of Keiji Fujiwara in a different sense.
>>20
Is it the same genre as the third generation?
>>20
It feels like a gourmet spin-off manga of a killer manga.
My son is also 5 years old.
Wow, it’s a really cute moment, isn’t it?
Huh? While saying that, it seems like I would stab you as we pass by.
>>23
The etiquette class for French cuisine was properly handled by this guy.
I warned everyone to escape with them because the scammer is coming next.
>>28
It was a story that really felt scary and had a sense of realism.
Why are your eyes never smiling?!
(Those eyes…)
When I’m reading, it’s normal, but when I start, there are more panels that look like a bad fight scene than in a manga, it’s driving me crazy.
This guy… is not just an ordinary salaryman…!
I’m really curious about the anime, but I guess that’s because it’s a manga.
Wow! I love those kinds of things where they just dig out meat from a random spot!
>>33
No matter how you hear it, it sounds like a line about learning the tricks of torture.
It seems like I’m definitely going to win against the robot, but that’s not the real Hiroshi…
Humanoids are fun, aren’t they? Well, that’s almost like Ali Al-Sarsesh!
When I look at it again, it doesn’t look similar at all.
>>39
It was too blunt and didn’t work out.
Do you really give names randomly to torture methods when you don’t know their actual names?
For what reason did I leave the organization I was previously a part of?
You must have joined Futaba Trading Co.
>>42
Do you not know the dark side of Futaba Trading Company?
The voice in my head is similar…
The strong character vibe of a slender man with beautiful legs.
It’s nice to see AI defeated by human madness.
I want the anime version to be performed with a bit less sanity than the original.
Requested Morikawa.
Napolitan and pilaf… they were regrettable guys.
Ugh… this aroma is irresistible. The sweet smell of soy sauce is stimulating my appetite. And then, the perfect softness of this egg!! Just looking at it conveys its deliciousness. Mmm!! Here we go! *Snap* First, I take a bite of the cutlet, then together with the egg and onion, and rice… nom nom, it’s so good!!!
It’s strange, but it’s quite suitable to read when you’re bored.
???
The barriers for anime adaptation have decreased so much within me that I have confidence that I can enjoy whatever comes my way.
I have no expectations at all.
Naming a kid on the spot with something random because you forgot their name after torturing them using their own children as leverage is so blasphemous that I genuinely think it could be used as character development for a psycho in a story.
The latest episode was interesting, and the anime is doing a good job with it, right?
Isn’t it okay to make it a little more similar…?
Kawaguchi is also kind of psycho, you know…
>>60
Ryugi Kawaguchi gives off a power-type character vibe.
There are already 113 chapters of the manga, so I won’t run out of story material.
It feels like I’ve come to a theme park.
I’m so pumped up!!!
There’s hardly ever an anime adaptation that’s anticipated as little as this one.
Even though it has a certain level of recognition
I think that in today’s era, having low expectations is a tailwind.
I hope it has a moderately cheap construction.
Isn’t Hiroshi from Ryugi quite an elite businessman?
Speaking of which, the main series also changed voice actors right around the time the serialization started.
I like serious battle scenes that exclude things like torture and play.
The feeling of relaxation is just right, isn’t it?
I wonder if a surprisingly small hit anime will get a live-action adaptation in the late-night slot.
A scene when the trap that was set up was avoided.
It’s fine if it’s at the level of Faburu.
After this, those three scammers will go missing, but that’s what it is, you know.
It’s DLE after all.
You can avoid excessive expectations.
I wanted a different person, not Morikawa-san, to be cast for the style of the anime.
I’m pretty sure the original story of the thread image was supposed to be a horror twist where it appears to be a daughter but actually…
Who are you?
>>81
Who, you ask… It’s the “real” Hiroshi, you know?
Did something unexpected happen?
Does it resemble the original character’s face from the early stages?
>>83
No, not at all…
I wish they would just adapt the beginning, which is not only uninteresting but even feels empty, as it is without trying to be considerate of the original work.
It seems that it has sold over 800,000 copies…
Ryugi Hiroshi seems to end his spoken words with phrases like “you know” or something similar.
https://comic-action.com/episode/2550689798616557570
Thanks to the free release, I finally got to know the original story of Dosun.
>>89
There are indeed faces that look quite similar…
I wish they had done it in live action on a low budget.
>>90
Is it “Solitary Gourmet”?
The real ones don’t call themselves real.
>>91
Don’t suddenly stab Robo Dad.
A guy who gets paid in lead bullets.
>>94
This Hiroshi won’t do something like the villain in a Commando film.
What is this feeling of a solemn battle beginning…
It’s the one where the ceiling gradually comes down!
On the contrary, if poison gas wasn’t sprayed in this flow, then what would that mean?
It’s amazing how just the legs can feel so different.
Sometimes when I read the free chapters posted here, it doesn’t feel that way at all, but when just the panels are taken out, I can’t help but think, are they trying to target it? There are quite a few like that.
I suddenly love quizzes.
There are cases where I might just forget at a regular establishment and cases where I shoot lead bullets at a rival in the same industry.
The art style has changed quite a bit.
Oh, that’s right.
Misae is regenerating in the garden.
It’s nice that it’s just an interesting food manga.
Turning six this year?
I hope you can become one!
The world line where “I” exist.
It makes me laugh when only the frame is cut out.
“Kebab” Quiz!!
The enemy that resembles a clown is actually an insider on our side.
>>113
Eh.
?
Quickly deal with the part-time girl.
I read it for the first time, and it’s pretty normal to read… There aren’t really any strange developments that would make it a topic of discussion, so it must be the art style after all.
>>116
To be honest, the Hiroshi setting is just noise…
Especially in the beginning.
>>119
Well, that’s to widen the scope…
It’s like when you add “Gundam” to something.
The style of the hamburger was good.
Is Hiroshi a wire user?
I like the scene where someone gets stabbed from behind while having a drink in the evening.
The illustrator is originally from hard-boiled comic art.
It has developed a nice flavor.
It’s the one who puts pressure by talking to the opponent’s child in front of them during negotiations…
The contrast between the low tension like in the dry curry episode and the high tension like in the hamburger episode is amazing but interesting.
I think the recent episodes on jazz cafes and abura-fu rice bowls were well done.
>>128
Cipher, huh…
It’s just a comedic premise, but if you read it, it’s not that bad as a relaxing gourmet manga.
>>129
In other words, it was a topic that could be made fun of, but it has been properly improved to be entertaining.
>>132
Rather than consciously thinking of it as a spin-off of Crayon Shin-chan, I kind of gave up and almost completely eliminated the Crayon Shin-chan elements, making it more of a salaryman story.
>>129
I think it’s a category that’s easy to read even in the gourmet genre, as long as you don’t become too conscious of being Hiroshi Nohara.
Is it okay to say that the panels and dialogue are good?
>>137
I think it’s a bit different to say it’s good just because it was created unintentionally.
How should I put it… individuality?
There are many panels that come from relatively interesting stories within the style.
I think the areas where lines are removed from the sketch create a sense of “pause” in the artwork, giving it an unsettling feeling.
Because the real Hiroshi has become an indescribable presence, like a dad who just lets you say good things for now.
It has relatively started to give off a sense of authenticity.