
Indeed, God is crap.
I thought it was a thread about Chinese mythology, appearing like a Chinese god, but it was different.
Is this kind of garbage person really acting like a god?
>>3It’s probably just that people have arbitrarily treated you as a god, as you said.
It’s like this.
I wonder if the one who was normally turned into a goddess could have just said that the reason I’m here is because of someone named Kohaku.
If it’s someone who has been in that country for hundreds of years, that’s one thing, but why would the country collapse if the power of those who have only followed for about 30 years disappears?
>>7If you rely on something for several decades without independence, I think you’ll become pretty worn out.
It seems that even the government relied on divine oracles.
>>62How were you managing until then…?
>>63Even if there were administrative forms before that, after several decades, I think the necessary personnel and know-how for operations would have been lost.
>>69They said that if we didn’t hold festivals for three years due to COVID, the know-how would disappear, so there are probably many things that would vanish if we don’t do them…
>>63If you stop something that has been around until then, it will become completely disconnected in about 10 years, and it will be extremely difficult to revive it.
Even in modern times, it’s often heard that it’s dangerous to easily quit without using something.
>>63Many from the previous generation have likely retired, so the know-how on how things were actually done is probably lost.
>>148Even if knowledge remains, it is difficult to utilize it effectively.
After all, it would be bad if the people with the know-how didn’t take action…
>>148Speaking of which, I heard that while there was a serious study on the bubble collapse in China, by the time the bubble actually burst, all those who were researching it had already retired…
While I was drawing erotic art on the bulletin board and talking with like-minded people, someone started calling me a god on their own, leading to unwanted harassment and arguments. Eventually, the few understanding fans disappeared, and the atmosphere turned sour, so I decided to leave.
>>8The end result of being attached to an artist on the bulletin board.
>>8I think the bulletin board will be unaffected by the decline of just one lively regular thread.
The idea that the word “skill” refers to something not obtained through the person’s own training feels a bit off.
Well, I suppose it doesn’t really matter if it’s just a bulletin board artist.
Why is it that this Kohaku-kun, being an important person, hasn’t been able to communicate properly?
Is it a country that suddenly prospered thanks to gifts from others?
Finally, it has reached the phase of being revered by the gods.
>>14Isn’t a protagonist loved by God a classic example of a cheat gift type?
>>17I thought that kind of thing usually gives off a vibe of a single figure with their arms crossed, as an understanding observer in the background…
I’ve never seen someone who is not just loved but also revered like this before.
>>17It seems to have existed since the time of myths…
Strong game feel.
>>15Even dumb games could come up with a slightly better scenario than this.
Well, even in myths of reality, they are generally not very good…
If that person is such an amazing existence, can’t we do something for them before they have to leave the country?
>>20I haven’t read it, so I don’t know the exact answer, but…
I think it’s a common saying that you shouldn’t interfere too much with others.
>>27If you’re not supposed to interfere too much, then don’t follow along.
Having multiple spiritual presences that support me has always been a given.
I think it just feels like it coincided with the ban.
The Pied Piper of Hamelin.
Did you grant a blessing? Then I want to do it too!
It’s quite common to have a pattern where you need to tone it down, or you’ll become a fool.
>>24Isn’t the strongest disciple in a way in that pattern?
>>28It’s correct, but…
I’m not jealous of Ken-chan because he’s learning everything by himself…
There might be some kind of flow up to this point, but…
It’s tough when only this part is stuck.
The country is finished when it can only be maintained by relying on a few such people.
So… this means that it will become a world for humans only, resulting in a great victory for humans, right?
>>29It’s like the energy that was being used for the infrastructure suddenly disappears, so isn’t that a huge defeat?
>>34Why would you use something that didn’t exist just 20 years ago as infrastructure?
>>37Can you throw away your smartphone right now?
>>37If we start saying that’s not acceptable, then a society dependent on computers and servers would become strange, wouldn’t it?
>>104I’m just about to rely on AI right now.
>>34If you can read, write, and do arithmetic, and if nature is normal, you can easily maintain a medieval level.
There are plenty of people smarter than the author.
>>29???
These types of exile stories are generally pretty harsh, aren’t they?
Well, if you say it’s like a god, then it’s like a god.
Well, gods probably don’t really care about humanity, or they might just think of us as toys or pleasure devices.
We can’t manage if we are suddenly sent back to the Stone Age in exchange for gaining autonomy.
Well, the gods from various myths actually do move with quite a live feeling.
Will everyone who disregards Kohaku-kun be punished?
>>40Is there anyone who knows the truth of the matter, even if it does happen?
What would you think if you heard that the country where Lady Kohaku was exiled has perished?
>>41There’s no such thing as lingering attachment.
>>47That’s cruel.
I hope the king, who is cute when he doesn’t say everything at once, can somehow bounce back.
Well, don’t hold a grudge, okay?
The members of the mythical beast species are too narrow-minded…
Many innocent people are so unfortunate…
That’s probably what gods are like.
Leaving it all behind shows kindness.
>>49There are plenty of gods who unleash divine punishment because they were neglected.
Even if I can’t see the gods, I have this huge dog with me.
It’s a bit bold to be able to do it in a way that can be dismissed.
It’s okay that God is a selfish piece of trash because that’s how reality is.
>>52I have seen a nameless person who has met God for the first time.
>>52Zeus is just a worthless guy who can do anything.
I’m confused because I don’t know whether everyone in the country recognizes Lady Kohaku or how she is treated.
Even if I know, I don’t think my impression of them will change…
Don’t say it all at once.
It doesn’t feel like a type of god that looks at all of humanity from a transcendent perspective.
It’s not like this.
Even the story of Noah’s Ark definitely involves good people being caught up in it as well.
I think that in modern Japan, where there are no monsters, if something that has become widespread over the past 20 years suddenly became unusable, a significant number of people would die.
If my smartphone suddenly stops working, I would really feel like I’m in trouble.
>>59Was Jobs expelled…?
If it were 20 years ago, having at least a flip phone would be some consolation.
>>60If I suddenly had my smartphone technology taken away from me and was given a feature phone from 20 years ago, I think I would die.
>>66Isn’t it okay if it’s just a smartphone?
I have a computer…
>>68About 20 years ago, would that be around the time of Windows 7?
>>75What a relaxed attitude.
>>68If I were to liken it to the example in the thread image, I feel like we might lose the benefits of processing speed and go back to the dial-up era…
>>76In the first place, isn’t it that we can’t use digital?
>>99Even terrestrial digital broadcasting started in 2003, which is before 20 years ago.
>>66Isn’t it pretty manageable even with a feature phone?
You can also use the internet.
>>72In the first place, a smartphone is a small PC with calling functions, so there’s still a lot of potential to adapt.
First, check for psychological reasons why the skills can’t be used, and I quite like the character of the king, especially the last line, “Hey… don’t say it all at once.”
I wonder if the terrible original work hit the comic adaptation jackpot.
I think there is a structural problem in the way that being exiled and feeling pleased about it (exile serves you right) cannot achieve a sense of satisfaction without breaking consistency somewhere.
It seems quite common to think that God punishes other people due to His attachment to one individual.
It would be rare for that to be a group.
Even the eight million deities can give out some serious punishments when they get a little annoyed, just like Christ.
>>71In Christianity, a proper warning comes before that.
>>105Since I blew the trumpet seven times for the warning, a disaster that will destroy the world will occur ♡
>>114Gentle…
Match pump…
What?
“Did other people ignore that person’s qualities and character and say, ‘It’s because Lord Kohaku is here that we are receiving blessings’?”
So, if Lady Kohaku were to disappear, would that mean you would lose the benefits you were dependent on?
It’s just like a drug dealer’s tactic.
>>73Rather, doing it consciously seems like it would create a more interesting story.
The punchline is exile.
A country that was saved by such fickle people would have perished either way.
It seems like they’re claiming to be the ultimate, one-of-a-kind tamer, but I only read the free part. It’s understandable that the tamed creatures aren’t visible, but they didn’t even try to show their strength and just ended up getting hurt and leaving on their own, making it all quite sad and mostly unrelated to the king.
Although it’s said to be at most a few decades ago
If the technology that allows the country to develop dramatically is compromised, there’s no way we can keep going…
It’s like suddenly having electricity seized from modern society, right?
No way, no way.
Even if I don’t do anything wrong, if someone named Kohaku dies when their time comes, it’s all over.
>>81In that case, I think it will probably understand the will of that Hakuko and grant the blessing as it is.
>>81In the end, it means that the country that became entirely dependent on such ambiguous things was foolish.
>>81It says that the country cornered the master, so there are no lingering feelings, and isn’t the trigger not death or migration, but the persecution?
>>81You look like a dictator.
I guess I wouldn’t be troubled without my smartphone.
It’s more painful to revert the internet connection back to ADSL.
Why don’t you realize my greatness and awesomeness without saying anything?!
I’m being bullied for unfair reasons, but I’m respected by big names.
It’s probably just a joke, but it’s really gross.
Even if I’m told to go back to the time when all the water supplies in Japan suddenly became unusable and people had to draw well water, that’s just impossible.
Good citizens living in this country will also perish without exception.
>>89Well, that’s something God often does…
>>89There’s no denying that they are still an idiot who couldn’t see Kohaku-sama’s qualities.
>>89If there are ten good people, this town will not be destroyed.
I don’t want to go back to the peak of Flash after its vulnerabilities have been exposed…!
>>90Let’s go back to GIFs instead.
I happened to find a white dove that I liked, so I was throwing feed in the park where it often hangs out.
Since the white dove was bullied and stopped coming to that park, I also decided to stop going to the park.
It’s irresponsible to say to keep feeding them; I don’t care. Just be thankful they’re not getting exterminated.
For example, when you’re told to work with a manual from 20 years ago starting tomorrow…
Perhaps the most troublesome aspect is the discovery of the manual itself.
I never thought the day would come when I would return there.
Even they themselves seem unaware that they were such an important person…
>>101You can’t just destroy a country! Go home! It would be great if I could do something big…
>>108It’s quite suspicious whether it’s the type of god that properly reports such things.
>>101They only know about the three they have tamed, nothing else…
Just thousands of god-class beings are watching over us on their own.
Twenty years ago, huh?
If it’s a 2005 flip phone, it’s still pretty convenient…
I don’t care, but if you’re a god even after rotting, I want you to stop treating humans with honorifics.
>>103If you read the thread, you’ll understand, but it’s not a god.
I always think that the term “skill” makes people recognize it as a technique that the person has acquired through effort.
I think it would be clearer to name it “Kago.”
If the country was destroyed because the divine messenger was treated carelessly, then…
It becomes a common story.
If the data remains unchanged but the hardware is reverted to an earlier era, it feels like it would choke on the capacity.
I’m confident that our company would end just because the cloud system services have been discontinued.
Well, if suddenly starting today they said you can only use the PC9821, the country would be doomed…
>>118It seems there are still some active infrastructures like that…
There’s no way, right?
>>124Until recently, floppy disks were the infrastructure of Japanese government agencies.
>>124Some local city halls are still using Windows 2000, but it’s rare to go back further than that…
>>124It might exist, but I don’t think it’s used everywhere, just in some places.
Transportation, administration, hospitals all come to a halt, traffic lights don’t function properly, and both television and radio broadcasts are interrupted.
It feels like communication methods were almost exclusively landlines 30 years ago.
>>141I don’t understand what kind of situation you are envisioning.
If it were 30 years ago, beepers would at least be common among high school girls.
>>152It’s a situation where, like in the thread image, the developments of the past 30 years have disappeared overnight…
You can’t use a pager right away since the service has already been discontinued.
>>166It’s unrealistic and troubling that there has never been any experience or concern over the past 30 years about the supply of necessary services being interrupted.
Usually, systems are built with the assumption of what to do when there is a disruption.
You can redirect all the costs spent on faith to something else.
That’s great!
One
Air
to
Language
wa
Na
i
Well then
In cases like this, the side that did the expelling gets all worked up, while the expelled side becomes happy, and that moment is the peak of excitement; after that, it just ends, right?
>>122It’s the same as a confession scene in a romantic comedy.
I wonder what would happen to humanity, or rather civilization, if we could no longer generate electricity satisfactorily.
>>123The nuclear power plant myth has collapsed, but somehow it all worked out…
>>123That said, even in modern times, planned power outages often occur nationwide in developing countries.
>>123The human species will likely survive, but civilization…
Is the story about the angels who came to the town and were gang-raped by the residents from Abraham?
The whole nation getting what it deserves is just too grand in scale…
Speaking of which, the big warehouse will die in September.
I wonder if those without names will become like this too.
Being a spirit, it is indeed a being more capricious than a god and has no sense of responsibility…
Don’t be dependent on such things.
>>131From the situation depicted in the thread, it seems that they probably don’t even recognize that we were dependent on those kinds of people.
Well then, I’ll set the infrastructure-related XP to 11…
It’s a trash-like world with a trash-like protagonist.
It’s frustrating because those gods who behave however they want never suffer any consequences.
There used to be a story about how there would be a few seconds of error on Windows, which is why the PC98 was still in active use on the production line.
I wonder if it finally supports Windows.
It won’t perish.
It would certainly be tough in many ways.
>>139If the internet suddenly goes down tomorrow morning and all electricity, including batteries, disappears, I think we wouldn’t last a week.
>>151The inability to generate electricity means that it does not occur in the human body either.
At that moment, all living beings, including humanity, will die.
>>151Electricity has been used as infrastructure for over 100 years, so it’s completely different from this.
>>140Please listen without getting angry.
Isn’t that obvious?
>>140Well, if that’s the case, it’s a story where humanity faces unreasonable circumstances without even knowing the reason, so it does exist…
>>140Wouldn’t it have been nice if you had someone from the mythical beast species use some kind of magic right in front of you?
>>195If you had such an idea, you wouldn’t be expelled.
These guys have a level of nobility like that of Greece.
I think it’s a type of god where the premise is that they take responsibility for looking after humans, which is fundamentally different.
There seems to be quite a few stories about gods leaving the country with the outcasts and perishing.
The story where the protagonist desperately tries to stop the messenger of God from coming down and destroying the city.
>>146The main character (the daughter of the spirit) was nearly killed and exiled while the dark megacorporation was imposing sanctions to destroy the country, and during that time, her mother spirit came to take revenge and turned the entire land into sand.
The perpetrators involved in the killing became materials for human experiments.
The protagonist proceeds without knowing anything about that and ends with the wedding.
>>146Ten people! If there are ten good people, please manage it somehow! Just ten will do!
>>246Hmm… (I’ve confirmed for sure that they’re not here, but it seems cruel, so maybe I’ll let them do it until they’re satisfied…) Okay.
A plot that seems to be found in Christian narratives.
>>149I think that Christianity would mercilessly come to destroy it.
>>154Christianity tells you to do it like this, and if you break that, there’s punishment, so it shouldn’t become so unreasonable.
Well, it’ll probably be over by around volume 2 anyway.
If the country only prospered from the favor of the gods’ support activities.
It can’t be helped that it turned out this way.
It’s understandable that people can’t believe it because they can’t see it, but it won’t be a good thing to neglect proving the existence of something when I want to prove my own worth.
Shete is here.
When looking at reality, it’s hard to understand the value of something like a popular god that cannot be seen.
I tried reading it, but it’s hard to understand because I couldn’t see it, and I didn’t receive any terrible treatment, so isn’t this treatment a bit much?
>>165The “banishment serves you right” kinds of developments are usually just too much.
>>165That’s just how gods are.
Because Christ wanted to eat figs in winter but they weren’t growing.
There are villages that, as a punishment, will never bear figs again.
>>177Aren’t you remembering it quite strangely?
The fig is in a season where the leaves are lush and green, and it’s not in the village but rather just a fig by the roadside.
>>165It’s not like I punished you or anything…
>>165I was just doing well by coincidence in the environment of the country where my master lives.
If my master is going out, I’ll just go with them.
Even though you’re a god, you haven’t conveyed the importance of Kohaku-kun to your believers?!
You’re stupid.
Even 30 years ago, the internet existed in some places, and there were also pagers and mobile phones.
If we are to destroy the current communication infrastructure, we have no choice but to return to 40 years ago.
>>170It’s not about going back to the infrastructure of that time; it’s a matter of suddenly returning to 30 years ago from the current state of infrastructure, so it would probably be complete destruction.
>>182It’s okay, it will work out somehow.
Places that use cloud systems will die.
>>188I don’t think there’s any part of it that hasn’t been influenced by the cloud until it gets to me…
It will probably, or rather almost definitely, result in the provider disappearing.
>>182In the first place, it wasn’t suddenly given to me by someone.
It is something that was nurtured in order over time as a technology.
As expected, it’s off as an example.
>>170It’s strange how you think that’s possible when you’re saying electricity can’t be used.
>>191It’s not really appropriate to use the inability to use electricity as an example, so it’s a matter of how you look at it.
Somehow, humanity will be completely wiped out at that moment.
Does being a tamer mean you tamed a god too?
It’s pathetic that the protagonist isn’t at fault because their subordinate does things on their own.
>>172Mildras of Dragon Quest V…
>>179Nero from FGO…
I feel like there is a discrepancy because the religious view is Japanese, but the visuals are fantasy.
>>173It’s like this in Greek mythology too, so that’s not really a problem…
All the big companies storing data in the cloud are facing huge damage.
It’s terrible that the characters around the protagonist have become stupid just to show off at the national level.
I don’t want Japan to be without any protection for just the month of October.
The term “phantasma” has nuances of ghosts or evil spirits, so if you offend them, it might just be that you perish as a result.
It seems contradictory to believe that something you can’t see can provide benefits, but that was also the case with early nuclear power development.