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Oh?
The one that was written as “Katapuroseka” at the time of serialization and couldn’t be tolerated.
>>1
I just looked at the icon, don’t mess with me.
It’s not just silly, it’s grotesque…
>>2
It is grotesque not only in a physical sense but also in a psychological sense.
I wonder if it’s moving.
It’s easy to forget because there are many gag scenes, but he was slashed in half while being drug-addicted, regressed to a childlike state, and had lost both ears, his right leg, and right arm, ultimately dying in a state of confusion.
I think it’s one of the most tragic in the work.
I must have long since lost track of which one I was…
>>5
My mind is in a daze…
It was purely pitiful that he wanted to go back to his hometown halfway.
>>7
I hope you return to your hometown happily.
>>7
Being born in Shizuoka and being sent to the 7th Division was a common occurrence back then, so it can’t be helped, but even returning home after the war, not being able to go back to my hometown really makes me think that these guys were acting too badly, doesn’t it?
But at first, he was a really awful guy… Still, I think it’s sad for him.
It’s being used really carelessly, but when I think about it, it was a traitor.
>>12
This guy was originally anti-Tsurumi.
I betrayed my subordinate because my resentment towards Sugimoto overpowered me.
Continuing to suffer from deficits and dying in a haze of medication (by modern standards)…
If it were actually split in half, where would consciousness be?
>>14
We don’t know because there is no one to convey that situation.
Why not try as the first person to convey it?
It’s sad that Sugimoto doesn’t seem to be aware of me at all.
>>15
Sugimoto seems to not forget the person he killed, so he probably remembers.
I may not remember which is which, but…
It was after I got my leg cut off by Hijikata Toshizō when I started bombarding myself with morphine; until then, I was still doing okay.
>>17
Is it normal to talk to my severed ear as if it were Yohei’s ear?
I’m glad we were able to reunite at the end…
Because the optic nerves cross in the brain, does it mean that even if there is consciousness at the point where they are split in half, nothing can be seen?
I thought it was quite a good way to die considering what I’ve done.
>>22
It’s all death row inmates like that…
To be honest, even though they are a person from wartime, their personality is quite something…
Because Lieutenant Tsurumi used Ogata to kill Major General Hanazawa, they were neglected and couldn’t return to their hometown, so they are truly unfortunate fellows.
It’s gross and the guy is a jerk, but there’s no reason to be driven to this level of mental collapse… I was made to feel so messy that by the end, sympathy won out.
I wondered if I was such a terrible person to be treated this way… but upon rereading, I realized that right from the start, I was so despicable that I was trying to ignore orders and torture Sugimoto.
>>26
I’m relatively worthless and despicable.
It’s understandable to be killed for being a worthless piece of trash, but to be driven this far into a mental breakdown feels a bit much…
If you try to ignore orders and torture someone, you’ll start with one of them dying because of a counterattack, so it’s basically self-inflicted.
There was a face that was facing each other in the thumbnail, right?
When I see that… this comes to my mind.
>>33
It’s Proseka that has already been mentioned above.
Even though the war is over, it’s frustrating to be stuck searching for gold with no guarantee of being able to return home.
Of course, I’d abandon someone who’s got a hole in their brain and stick to the center.
It felt like a punishment game just to survive this far.
A scene that evokes the feeling of finally being able to die.
>>35
This is it, right?
I’m glad there was somehow a bit of salvation before you died.
There are experimental results from patients with corpus callosum section.
As a result, in the early stages, if the processing of an image seen by one eye can be handled by the opposite side of the brain depending on the division of brain function, one can express or write about it, but it tends to feel almost like a separate existence.
If you study for a long period of time, you can behave somewhat as a single entity, but it’s as if one side of the brain senses what the other side wants to do, and there’s no actual collaboration between the left and right brains.
>>37
In other words, if technology were to advance to the point where it could keep someone alive even while being cut in half…
Will they really become a twin state with completely separate personalities?
The human body is quite a fuzzy structure.
>>44
Some people are born with only a right brain or a left brain, but they can still live normally.
If we can live by dividing, I think that person will develop and adapt separately like twins.
>>44
If there isn’t a certain degree of flexibility or redundancy.
If one part fails, the entire thing will fail in conjunction…
Unlike cheap pieces, this character doesn’t have any influence on the majority, so it gives off a rather dull impression.
>>38
Well, how should I put it?
That guy is a lot more normal than him, right?
I love that it’s this guy who asks Sugimoto, who is giving up his sled in the recollections of Japan-Russia, “Is that okay?”
>>39
At that time, perhaps because it was wartime, Corporal Tamai was kind to his allies.
Because I’m garbage, it doesn’t matter.
I’m losing every time, but I’m still dealing a decent amount of damage to Sugimoto…
>>43
It’s also subtly dealing damage to Tossy.
When dealing with Hijikata, they were actually putting him under considerable pressure until they got distracted by Sugimoto.
It’s amazing that they were fighting using even chopsticks that I didn’t know what to do with.
It’s scarier to be stabbed with chopsticks than to be attacked with strange hidden weapons, right?
The surprise attack with chopsticks was quite effective, wasn’t it?
The ultimate ideal has become something that ordinary people cannot understand.
I was decent enough to work with the center to wake up from the Tsurumi Theater and return to my hometown, but in the end, it was destroyed by drugs.
>>54
I feel like there hasn’t been a subordinate who believed in the theater and stayed entranced until the end.
>>55
It’s a bit subtle to say “subordinate,” but maybe they were intoxicated like a father.
In a sober state, after bombarding Goryokaku with five destroyers, you won’t sink it, right?
Every time I lost a limb, I shot up morphine…
(This is seriously Project Sekai…)
Mosu Father thinks that his son is practically like a hostage, so what will happen…
The conclusion here was so refreshing that even the last panel was cool.
It’s no good to have serious responses in a thread like this.
By the end, I had grown attached to all the characters…
Many of the inmates on death row, as well as others like them, seem to be generally satisfied and die without complaints.
Even for those whose lives were ruined, the ability to see what they wanted to see at the end before they die.
Why did only Jack the Ripper suffer and die so badly? Why just him…?
Being forced to fight Sugimoto under Tsurumi is, to put it mildly, a punishment game.
I can’t look directly at that icon from Project Sekai anymore…
There were quite a few who found solace in death.
The same goes for the thread image.
The picture in the thread is of the same person, but if a doppelgänger appears, you would think it’s your other half, so it’s fine.