
Do you really understand the feelings of a daughter whose parents have been put in a gacha?
You can’t redraw it.
I feel that there aren’t many social games implemented for parents and children.
Does this way of speaking make it sound like a comic where it’s been transformed into a gacha machine?
>>3I think this is a scene typical of director Yoshiyuki Tomino’s works, where the characters lose their composure and end up saying lines that are incoherent if transcribed as they are.
>>6Stop being vague about whether you’re seriously saying this or deliberately making nonsensical statements!
>>39Sometimes, the purpose of using analogies becomes more about the desire for personal gain rather than kindness, which makes the actual analogy ineffective as an analogy.
Parental Gacha
Garpan’s Miho and others.
I didn’t recognize who it was right away because it didn’t look like them.
Well, it’s true that mobile games seem to be in a house-owned gacha state…
>>7Although they are made fun of, the head of the house who protects the children pursuing the tankery is admirable.
I think if my parents were like that, I would consider it a failure in the parent lottery.
Aren’t you having Miho say something that parodies a scene from some manga?
It seems like Mode Red from FGO doesn’t care.
In the sense that we don’t know whose child will be born, a promiscuous head of the household is like a gacha.
I feel like the child gacha sounds more natural, but parent gacha seems to be used more.
>>11In short, it’s just that people who want to assert their misery are using their dissatisfaction with their parents for that purpose.
>>11I also think that kids have more of a gacha feeling, but the current parent generation doesn’t really engage in gacha, so it’s probably not taking hold.
Eventually, when the generation that pulls gacha becomes parents, they might start hearing about child gacha as well.
It’s a bit better that the parent generation doesn’t say much about the child gacha.
>>15(Sometimes there are)
It’s strange that the phrase “Life is about the cards you’re dealt” doesn’t stir up such controversy.
Parental gacha and dependence.
Child gacha rerolling has been put into practical use through prenatal diagnosis and other means.
The kid gacha is a bit too raw, so to speak…
>>19It can become a simile…
Child gacha is easy because you can reroll it.
You can’t call it a gacha because you can cancel it before it pulls and it’s a big miss.
The term “parent gacha” seems to be just a change in wording for a timeless expression of rebellion against parents during adolescence.
I think “child gacha” is simply nothing but abuse…
>>24Oh really? I thought it was a term referring to differences in upbringing, like in Silver Spoon.
Child reroll…
Isn’t it that the failure of the child gacha is due to poor materials?
It’s a word that becomes more unsettling the more you pursue it.
It’s better not to be too involved with people who try to understand things by substituting them with gacha or RTA.
>>27If there are people who seriously think that way and use such words, that is certainly dangerous.
If you were serious.
>>28I think it’s more dangerous if they’re making a fuss thinking it’s a joke.
>>30“I feel like the situation of trying to understand things and the situation of making noise don’t overlap…”
The intention of a gag is completely different between just throwing around provocative words without sensitivity and discussing it on a meta level as wordplay.
I’m curious about where the line is drawn for what is considered not dangerous if using the term “child gacha” itself is absolutely unacceptable for those who are so-called “politically correct.”
>>30People with low intelligence immediately say things like “That’s dangerous!” to appeal to their common sense, don’t they?
I wonder if there are any social games where you can play as a character who is being pursued.
Wow, it’s like a failed parent gacha pulled by a free-to-play user!
If child gacha becomes widespread, it seems that quite a few non-existent people would appear, which is no joke.
In the tank game, WoT, which has collaborated many times, the head of the house hasn’t come.
The child gacha is something that has become quite a big issue due to prenatal diagnoses…
Compared to the seriousness of the child gacha, the parent gacha definitely feels like something a child would say.
If the genes are different, then it’s a different person, so it can’t be born from different parents, and if it’s not a mix-up, then the parent lottery can’t exist, but the child lottery is indeed true.
There is a difference in emission rates, but…
*This is a gacha for parent characters.*
It seems like it’s the daughter’s fault for not being as popular as her parents…
Parents are the first experience of society’s absurdity that you can’t change with your own efforts.
It happened in BORUTO too, but if my real mother is in SSR or dressed in a Santa costume, it would make me feel quite strange.
It’s too vivid for a child gacha.
The child gacha is just the result, but does that mean the parent gacha is already insane from the assortment stage?
In the first place, children are not born by spinning a gacha, they are just forced to be born.
Even though I feel like I hit the jackpot with this parent, I recognize that being born as a result of the gacha is a good thing in itself.
>>47Aren’t you just saying that you’re not pushed to the point of wanting to commit suicide immediately?
Is it okay to resummon?
Parents can educate their children, but children cannot choose their parents…
It’s important to recognize that there are environmental factors that cannot be easily overturned by effort, but I think the words used to express that are too light and too intentionally provocative.
Some people reach a point where they believe they should attain liberation because simply existing in this world is painful, even without committing suicide.
If you want to convey that someone is naturally incapable, I think there are better ways to express it.
I get a sense of lingering regret, as if there was a chance that I could have won just by getting a miss in the gacha.
>>53There must be parents who secure an easy life for their children, but mine are different! This is ridiculous! It’s a comparison-based statement like that.
I’m basically an early-blooming type that becomes somewhat useful in the beginning, but my abilities plateau in the mid-game, making me like a subpar SR.
>>55It’s amazing how “SR,” which is supposed to stand for “Super Rare,” has become something that holds the same value as a low-value uncommon.
If I draw a losing ticket, I’ll be scolded, so I have to say it’s a win at R…
>>57There are elements of money greed buried even in a place like this, so it’s a deeply flawed business, this gacha.
They say things like school gacha or workplace gacha, but for some reason, I still find myself in a position to pull.
If you don’t level up even with SSR, there’s nothing you can do.
In the first place, children do not have the authority to choose their parents, so the expression itself is strange.
>>61It’s called a gacha because you can’t choose.
>>62It’s not that I can’t choose for myself, but rather I can’t even pull the gacha myself, so it makes quite a difference.
>>61It’s a child gacha, isn’t it?
A society that demands high rare-level power even for commonly frequently emitted items forces children to stack buffs even at the expense of their well-being.
As a result, the decrease in the working class with lower income is said to lead to the collapse of the social system.
It’s not that you can’t choose randomly; it’s because it’s predetermined that you can’t choose.
For some reason, those who are supposed to pull the gacha are mistaken into thinking that they are the ones pulling the gacha.
It’s like saying that the characters obtained from gacha are a disappointment to the users.
Someone who uses the term “parent gacha” seems like they are not ready to be a parent.
If I were to have a child and they had a disability, the thought of “definitely a failure in the child lottery” would cross my mind, so I can’t become a parent.
Fortune-telling slips like “chūkyō” (medium luck) or “daikichi” (great luck)
Thinking back, it’s a clever expression.
The head of the family definitely has more costume variations than my daughter.
In the first place, the gacha only spins during the householder’s time, so seriously, without the householder, the operation of the social game cannot stand, or something like that.
It’s that popular, huh…
>>76The popularity of the heads of the schools is surprising in that the popularity of anyone other than the two heads of Nishizumi and Shimada schools is shockingly low.
The user base is mostly middle-aged men nearing 60, so the younger girls don’t excite them at all, and they have no interest in anything other than the old, lewd women.
>>77That’s healthy… healthy?
>>80I think it’s a failure as content that only users who chase after the butt of a cosplaying old lady, having thrown away high school girls, tanks, and the academy, are left.
If that’s how you’re going to enjoy it, then you might as well read any random erotic manga instead of this work.
The variety is far beyond imagination…!
It’s fine to talk about the “parent lottery” or “child lottery,” but you should stop saying it in public!
I can understand why it would be exciting to think of them as classmates…
I know someone who had their ancestor turned into a gacha.
It’s incredibly inappropriate, but I fear that when the parent generation becomes accustomed to gacha games and expressions like “child gacha” emerge, we might eventually see posts like “genetic disorders! Failed child gacha! Shoo to the baby post!”
>>86Give birth properly and return it to the rightful place, then let them call it erotic.
That’s why the Tankery operation isn’t surviving just because of the main house’s strength!
The only time it becomes a topic of conversation is when it’s about the headmaster gacha!
>>87Where is the source?
I think it’s a normal line if the daughter character, who occasionally appears in gacha with seasonal outfits, says it.
I thought it was a bit exaggerated since it only appeared a few times, but there are a lot of headmasters…
It’s an anime with quite a lot of characters, isn’t it?
It is content that can cater to a wide range of age groups.
I heard that the total screen time of the headmaster here is less than 10 minutes, so why is such a character being praised so much…? Was it a character with an important role or something?
>>93The character Nishizumi on the screen is not particularly popular or anything…
>>93With a composed expression, there are half-sisters.
I interpret it as the result of emphasizing that particular point to the maximum.
>>98It’s not about the stomach; it’s just an older woman squeezing out the offspring of a promiscuous couple born in the same year.
>>100Are they siblings born in consecutive years with different fathers?
I apologize.
In a jump manga popularity poll, it’s not necessarily the case that the character with the most appearances is the most popular.
People who had a child gacha that was a disabled person are really unlucky, aren’t they…
>>96In the old days, midwives would kill the baby and treat it as a stillbirth, so the era in which I was born is truly unfortunate.
The idea that disabled people have the right to live and that families have a duty to support them for life is ultimately just a beautiful sentiment seen from the outside. The claim itself is fine, but to say that it should be an obvious worldview shared by all of humanity is frankly insane.
>>97To be blunt, don’t you think it would be fine to execute all disabled people starting now…? I think everyone feels that to some extent.
The headmaster gacha is always the hot topic, but since the service has been long, there are also plenty of other characters available regularly.
Hurry up and give birth to the next generation.
Every time, there are people who start saying that only the head of the school is the one who gets attention.
It’s been 5 years since the app started, and now it’s the 10th year with the participation of the master…
Images summarized in the previous thread were posted, but there were also quite a few other characters.
It’s not the case that there were more appearances than the main characters; it’s just that they were unusually pushed compared to their role.