
So I’ll sell it to you.
There is a strong theory that it just seems like a counterattack starting, but instead, it will be surpassed, leaving one in astonishment.
>>1It seems like that will probably happen.
I have no idea what is happening…
>>2For now, you can understand that I was completely defeated this time and that the calculator is acting up and is creepy, right?
Is it okay that this triangle has not been viewed from Mr. Taft’s perspective?
Since we can’t beat the triangle body, are we switching our target to the friend collection inside the triangle…?
I don’t understand.
We only call Junket Bank based on the atmosphere.
>>6Oh, it’s the usual thing.
Isn’t it still too early to settle this?
>>7The enemy’s thoughts have generally been revealed, and it’s about time to settle things, but there are still plenty of rounds left in the game.
I wouldn’t be surprised if Degizuman had kept three digits inside.
Mr. Tufts has a body 100 times stronger than that of an ordinary person and has 100 lives.
>>10Don’t say things like a sea man.
Is the theory of including yourself in the world and causing an explosion a strong one?
Will 100 people who absolutely, absolutely, absolutely, absolutely, absolutely love triangles (in their imagination) come…?
In the end, isn’t there a limit to the triangle since it can’t be recreated by Mom?
If you’ve won with this style in one head, there should be a one-head gambler among your friends.
>>16It may be that I didn’t particularly try to become friends…
The theory that we should start seeing the preparations soon is strong since the turnaround has already passed.
It’s tough because there are regular hiatuses.
I could understand the last teacher battle, but this time I don’t get it.
I understand the game itself, but I have no idea what it is aiming for.
It’s hard to call it a win or loss when the key hasn’t been turned off.
Considering the extreme abilities displayed by the triangle and the fact that the teacher owns a calculator, I think it leads to the conclusion that “that’s something anyone can do.”
I can’t help but feel that the triangle character just seems to be saying that with their mouth, and it’s painful.
To be frank, everyone is strong in reading.
>>24This is something.
It’s a common problem in gambling manga that, while the predictions are strong, the characters have lost their individuality.
Finally, it’s our turn to counterattack? It took a long time.
The landing points are scattered with “explosions,” “dust,” and “rock falls,” making it hard for players to understand which one they are targeting!
There is a theory that poisoning is a possibility, but it has mostly been forgotten.
Even for Mafutsu, they have to confirm the strength of the poison and the strength of the explosion, right?
Every time, I’m just absorbing cool conversations around here.
The victory condition is ultimately the death of the opponent.
Like dying because you don’t understand?
Dark wealthy (I don’t really understand, but I’ll smile nonetheless…)
It’s fine to reread the rules towards the end, right…?
The commentary for the game will be provided by the three people watching in the room.
Seriously, the calculator can only perform facial expressions…
I wonder if I’m going to break mirrors by hitting them against my friends.
Huh? Is there a calculator inside the triangle?
>>38I’m already learning on the plane.
>>38Were you left alone because you weren’t interested?
I’m no longer concerned about the game content, I’m just looking at the characters’ expressions.
Even if you can’t win the reading battle, winning the game feels quite similar to the teacher match, or rather, it seems to be a regular occurrence every time.
It seems like the premise is that I’ve been unable to win in the reading game since the dawn of time.
>>40To be frank, if the opponent can definitely read your hand, it can actually be easier to let them read it and then trap them.
It’s difficult to make a copy character appealing as a character.
Even though he’s a copy character, he’s endlessly self-narrating.
I think Sango might commit suicide as a final act of dignity, but I wonder if Mahutsu will let that happen.
In terms of game content, the killer who has been led by Mafts-san has perfectly read everything.
Since it was a performance where they caught up from a tie to a turnaround of a two-point difference.
Isn’t it easy to understand?
>>46It’s a game where you have to kill, so I can’t tell which side is leading!
It is said that one cannot win in a reading match, but beyond that, there are Matsufu’s intentions, and in the end, I feel that Matsufu is stronger in the reading match compared to opponents who are unable to see through that, such as doctors.
>>47To be honest, it doesn’t really matter which one it is.
It’s better to be in a weaker position if you can simply reflect your opponent’s methods back at them like a mirror.
>>47It feels like it’s just a difference in resource allocation.
The opponent is focused on reading the hands of the person right in front of them, but Mafutsu-san seems to be doing it half the time for game debugging.
Is it a strong theory that this person’s dumbfounded expression shows they don’t understand the aim of this game, similar to the direction of the painter?
In various scenes, small stones are featured, but I don’t really understand the meaning.
>>50It seems that there is a cavity under the stage.
>>53Is that so? Then if I want to go to the surface, will the stage be raised?
>>50It’s a feature.
I can read what Mafts-san has put out, but I can’t understand why they put it out; that’s how the matches have felt so far.
In the end, I can read the cards, but I can’t read the overall strategy.
It’s the same pattern every time, isn’t it?
Even if I completely lose, I can’t imagine having a Picasso face while watching last week’s rerun; I wonder how it will flow.
(I’ll take a look around here…)
If we don’t take some damage little by little, it’s hard to tell which side has the advantage.
It seems that Mafu’s matches always end up being more about stage gimmicks trapping opponents rather than the game’s development, so I tend to skip over the game part quite a bit.
The teacher who could somewhat read between the lines might have been strong.
I didn’t think it would lead to stage destruction.
It seems like it will take some time until there is progress, as we haven’t even crushed the mirror for the first time yet.
As a result, the teacher was probably just looking at the students too much.
It was disappointing to see in the comments that someone had found out that the teacher’s education was really needed.
The psychic is too strong, so there’s no charm in the psychological tactics that make gambling exciting, which makes the game part of this manga really boring.
I really have no choice but to endure until the end for a nice exchange.
>>62You think reading each other’s thoughts is some kind of ESP or something.
There are multiple victory conditions, so I don’t even know what each side is aiming for.
Because the interplay exceeds the level at which readers can be described in a literary manner.
I can only keep up with games like Shishigami’s, where I can talk under the assumption that I don’t understand to some extent.
I sometimes think that it would be good to use coins after determining the winners and losers based on the basic Jump Raku.
I think this time the enemies are quite boring, even setting aside the game’s difficulty to understand.
It might have been better to switch with the teacher.
>>68I can’t shake the feeling that this time around, it’s going to be more about Mahutsu-san’s backstory than the enemy.
It’s like a character that was prepared for that half.
It’s actually a style where the deep level of reading akin to an esper is so profound that it doesn’t show that to the readers.
I think there are quite a few readers who want to see a solid logical matchup like in the case against the police combo.
I can’t help but feel a sense of predetermined harmony that Tough Tsu-san will win and the opponent will die at the point of a one-headed fight where definitely one of them will die, right?
I want a sudden turn of events like Charis’s calculator falling underground.
Well, I finished understanding it, but if I say “triangle,” it would be too much for Mr. Mafutsu to have completed his countermeasures and started a counterattack! That would lower the status of the triangle too much, right?
After canceling the first move of ~~ in the mirror with a little more dancing in a triangular palm, Mahutsu-san will get serious.
Even if they say that gods and doctors are stronger than Kanai-kun, I can’t feel it.
The mirror is being destroyed every time.
This is a work where reading each other’s moves is naturally the main focus of the response battle.
Isn’t it just that the author isn’t putting in the effort?
>>75The direction the author wants to take hasn’t changed since the time of Enban Maze…
>>75That’s an awful verbal abuse!
>>75If I were to say whether I can write or not, looking at the long texts of VS Reimeisenshi, I think it’s not impossible to write.
It feels like they’re sort of accepting that and leaning towards a psychic-like offense and defense.
Putting good and bad aside
God unknowingly learned love and leveled up, and on top of that, is estimated to have the strongest physical prowess in the making.
It’s off topic, but the story was that the triangle can emulate brain friends simply because its processing power is high; I wonder if a calculator brain could do that if it really wanted to.
It’s just that even though I’ve explained what reading each other’s moves is like in the battle with Shishigami, the readers somehow still can’t understand it.
The game itself doesn’t seem interesting.
Listening to the pull is not interesting.
I believe it’s a one-of-a-kind gambling manga that fights solely with the charm of its characters.
The denial of the triangle seems like it will indirectly serve as a lecture about how the calculator is relying on the brain teacher.
Does everyone understand the depiction of the mind games in this match?
Hi!! I’m so happy to be able to read the latest chapter!
There’s not really a sense of being an invincible monster just because Tsuchiyata can handle it, you know, Triangle?
>>87He started saying that he can choose the stress he takes on himself.
What was up with the calculator’s hype when it first appeared… I’m wondering about it in my mind.
>>99I guess it probably made me feel stressed…
At the moment, I like the coin one the most as a game.
I forgave the teacher battle because of its ending, but I don’t feel like this one will end smoothly.
Compared to the teacher who crossed the line with distorted justice, here it really feels like death is inevitable.
Because neither what the protagonist wants to do nor what the other person wants to do is written at all.
Well, the readers can only be left out in the cold.
I wonder if the rich watching this are enjoying it…
>>92When I don’t really understand something, I just eat and chat.
If you’re going to wrap it up nicely, it could be that they couldn’t understand their parents and die as a punishment from them?
Despite fully investing in the character up to this point, the calculator still isn’t that great… Are they still saving up? I’m trying various things, but I wonder if it’s just not working out or what.
>>94I have a desire for all the One Head members to be absorbed and become a monstrous being, transforming into the final boss.
>>94I think it’s a good character…
It seems that even if this triangle dies, the calculator wouldn’t be sad…
I considered that by incorporating Mafutsu-san, the other personalities would be affected and all would die, but rather, it seems that incorporating Mafutsu-san would lead to the calculator in the neglected triangle killing everyone else.
The calculator becomes an unpleasant fan in front of Mafutsu, so it would be better to separate it a bit more.
The rock-paper-scissors game where everyone plays by showing their cards is really funny because for no reason everyone is like a psychic.
Tsuchiyata is empathizing with the painter.
It felt very much like a playacting.
I mean, every time I’m shown such a boring game, I wonder why the game development team portrayed it as if they were confidently and passionately putting their heart and soul into making it.
In the end, what can this calculator do or what does it want to do? That seems kind of vague.
The time when I was thinking, “I want to crush Mahutsu-san as an enemy,” was when I shone the brightest.
The bank part is boring, so it might be even more dull with your calculator being the main focus.
>>108That said, the journey while Mafutsu-san is playing a crappy game is quite boring too…
It might be the most interesting when everyone except Mafutsu is playing the game.
>>110I don’t know who will win or lose.
Since Maftu is the protagonist, he will probably win.
It seems like it will take a while to reach a conclusion since there will be a mirror cancellation in between.
The bank part is quite interesting, personally speaking.
This resolution will likely lead to further developments.
I think it’s amazing that just by playing rock-paper-scissors while being cocky, they manage to make a manga.
If it’s not a rock-paper-scissors game, it’s hard to distinguish between winning by luck and actual skill…
I can’t think of a more interesting development than Mafu-tsu-san enduring the explosion and counterattacking.
The triangular character wasn’t that creepy after all, which might be a disappointing point this time.
It’s not that the triangle is bad, but rather that the creepiness of the characters’ threshold keeps rising.
>>116I kind of understand.
With each passing time, the hurdle for being a madman is getting higher, isn’t it?
Part of the reason is that the teacher was too good.
I wonder if they will do something like a college student lynching episode again.
But if we’re going to do it, with the combination of Dawn and God, it would result in the opponent dying… so that’s not good!
It may be extravagant, but I want to see something like the painter battle again.
>>119That’s a nice way to win, isn’t it?
There’s no physical endurance or psychic abilities.
At the point when it was hinted that even if Kicchomu is pulled down from the leader position, the Papa (temporary) battle is still ahead.
This battle is just a passing point, isn’t it?
>>122Well, the way people around us see it is more like a sibling fight, haha.
Just listening to the commentary when in a favorable or unfavorable position makes me feel good.
I don’t understand the reasoning at all.
I think the one-head rule isn’t a very good setting because it makes the protagonist’s victory feel guaranteed.
>>126In the first place, Mafu-san won’t lose…
>>126Mr. Mafutsu is always being put in a game where losing means he’s out.
The teacher was an incredibly straightforward madman, but the difference is that Sankaku is a madman who cannot comprehend things to begin with.
>>130If you are truly practicing what you’re saying, then you are definitely a madman.
As a result, behaviors that manifest outwardly end up being no different from a cheap, cocky psychopath character, which is difficult.
The fear of having one’s personality taken over can’t be fully understood unless you are the person being stolen from, right in front of you.
The bank part is losing, but he comes in like “heh heh heh… just as planned,” which is always too funny.
This way of enjoying it is definitely a deviation from the norm (especially when Mafutsu has a serious expression for no particular reason) and even typical exchanges like mirror cancellations are quite interesting, so I kind of like Mafutsu’s gambling.
I have a feeling that the whole Kicchomu group is going to be taken in.
The madman who begins to cry, moved by the enemy’s growth, is highly complete as a madman.
It’s the opening hype turn, and I heard there’s a really strong one! Nice to meet you! When I reached out for a handshake, I really felt the stature of a one-head!
If anything, understanding others and making them understand is something Matsufu-san always does.
It’s always the case that I lose in the beginning, so I’m getting a bit bored.
I remember the time in Kingdom when I was always using the warp strategy.
>>137Isn’t there quite a pattern of making it seem like you’ve lost the reading but actually trapping them?
In the end, what is the purpose of this manga?
>>138I want to gamble.
>>138Defeating the Dekizuman?
Whether it is the Maphuts or an unseen gambler, or something else entirely, I still can’t grasp it.
The teacher’s introduction using two weeks, first showing their good teaching after the incident and then the morning glory part, was just too impressive.
It was really too good.
If understood, it becomes scary and the character ends up committing suicide.
If you want to make an impact, you need to kill a named character before the match; otherwise, it won’t have much of an impact compared to before.
Even if you kill a massive number of unknown mobs, it’s still the same as being nameless…
The teacher was really a good teacher in the good parts…
The teacher was really a good character, but during gambling, the reactions weren’t that great here either.
It really feels like the gambling part is becoming more and more of a bottleneck.
>>145Mafutsu’s winning strategy is just too much of the usual pattern…
Honestly, in terms of gameplay, something like the Divine Healer Tag Battle is the most interesting.
It’s a bit long for a single match to be published weekly.
What is popular is always a roller coaster where the overall situation changes rapidly.
The author’s lack of ideas must be tough too.
You’re relying too much on the rock-paper-scissors card game!
>>148The rock-paper-scissors card game is difficult to understand at first because the results are shown through pictures.
When I watch Enban Maze, I feel like I could draw so much more than just rock-paper-scissors, but I wonder why that is.
Is there anything else besides the rock-paper-scissors card game we’re doing now and the one with the gatekeeper?
No way… That Mafu-san is being completely outread and pushed into a corner…
>>152Isn’t this the usual thing?
When broken down, this manga is basically a rock-paper-scissors card game.
It’s a choice between when I’m intentionally making you read and when I’m really losing to you in reading.
I was made to read under the guise of a false guise.
The endless appeal of “real Mafutsu is not like this” feels one-dimensional.
I don’t understand the reasoning behind winning the reading at all.
No matter what superhuman mind-reading abilities one might have,
It’s impossible to read the positions when both sides reveal 4 cards simultaneously.
If there’s a strategy like playing in order or the position of the cards having meaning, then there is strategy involved.
Isn’t it impossible to read things like this or the game of Reimei Shishigami?
>>157You wrote properly about how Shishigami reads people’s hands, right?
>>159From the side, the reason why Shishigami was able to read Reimei’s hand was explained in that long passage, but the fact that Reimei was perfectly reading Shishigami’s placement from the beginning was definitely more like an esper, right?
>>167If we were to say it in terms of rock-paper-scissors, Shishigami would probably want to line up rock, scissors, and paper nicely from the left, and that kind of reading of people was on another dimension, right?
The Holy Grail that I won with just words from a state of truly losing is definitely unique.
Even things that aren’t rock-paper-scissors are mostly games of luck, so the differences are the college student battle, calculator battle, police battle, and tag battle?
…When I look at it this way, there are quite a few…
The comment “My triangular friend started to understand the rules before I did” was no good.
Me too.
I was continuously swallowing blood to avoid being seen at dawn, but the Holy Grail is a bit too lawless, isn’t it?
When it comes to reading, you first have to understand people’s thoughts, so with manga, it often makes you wonder why you can read it.
When actually fighting, this guy’s behavior tends to give me a sense of understanding.
Someone explain it to me…
Since I read it in the order of “Junket” → “Emban,” it felt like I was criticizing Mahutsu-san for not sucking up some unknown poison, and it didn’t go well.
What does it mean if our eyes met…?
>>169Considering the previous victims, it seems like there was found to be arrogance or assumptions…?
I think I realized that I might have overlooked some kind of rule.
If we’re discussing it and still overlooking it, then it would mean that everyone is overlooking it.
Even though there are amazing mind games happening between the players, it progresses quickly without being depicted, so in the end…
I feel a lack of excitement because I have the feeling that Mafutsu-san will do something amazing and win anyway.
If it were a situation where losing wouldn’t be surprising, I might be a bit more nervous, but since losing equals death, it’s basically impossible.