
Whoa!! Hmm? Huh?
Hmm!
This is a born soldier…
This week’s Golden Kamuy makes me want to read it over and over again.
I hear there’s a nationally beloved mascot comic author who reads this meeting over and over again.
>>3
Seriously, Fujiko F. Fujio…
>>3
Hmm hmm
That’s why the final “biiiin” is just too scary…
Does it happen even without a brain injury?
>>7
It seems that it happens when the brain’s commands cannot reach.
It seems possible that it could occur even with a spinal cord injury.
Legs straight
Lieutenant Tsurumi, who keeps having terrible experiences after encountering Wilk, Usami, and natural crazies.
Since Tsurumi isn’t sweating, this is the paperback version.
It’s scary that there are quite a few women who empathize with this.
>>12
Whose feelings are you empathizing with…?
>>12
Empathy… Empathy!?
I don’t mean I love it because it’s crazy?!
>>12
Have you ever experienced something like “Biin!”?
Mmm mmm
I think this is the scene where Tsurumi finally fell apart.
I didn’t feel any friendship at all; in fact, I didn’t even know if I was being resented…
Make sure to say it properly, don’t just explode out of nowhere…
>>16
Hmm!
>>16
If the landmine hadn’t been stepped on, I would have sent them off with a serious face, pretending to be friends…
This completely ruins the lieutenant’s future!
A monster that suddenly emerged from an ordinary family…
Based on the passage about the sperm detective, it’s way too creepy to think that someone is regularly visiting this site to ejaculate.
This is not a character that should exist in all-age manga.
>>23
I would be troubled if I were in an erotic manga.
>>20
The reason I was kind and friendly to this guy was entirely disregarding future considerations; I was just being a friendly soldier.
Psycho homo
I laughed so much that I could barely breathe.
>>29
It seems like a cervical spine injury.
Lieutenant Tsurumi, you’re doing great recovering as much as you can from here…
>>30
Activate the Orichar here!
Isn’t this a pretty terrible turning point for the lieutenant, too?
>>31
It’s not just demotion, but this is where the bad habit of trying things out has developed.
Are you trying to kill me?
Why does it grow at the end?
After all, the cheapest pieces are scary.
Lieutenant really took care of me until the end.
>>36
I don’t know what will happen the moment I stop caring about this thing…
Ogata, who stopped this guy’s breath, is really impressive.
Ogata and the others, well, I can kinda understand the reasons for their shortcomings.
Don’t let monsters sneak in.
The backstory leading up to this point isn’t depicted, so I don’t know when it became this way.
Nagano is strange, isn’t it!!
They are an excellent piece in terms of combat effectiveness, and they are also obedient to orders with a level of loyalty that borders on devotion, but their downside is that they do things on their own that they don’t need to do…
It’s tough to manage and not become an inverted anti…
I thought the lieutenant was too low for the ability, but a reason was presented.
At first, I thought he was just some ridiculously strong spy…
I think it’s inappropriate to do this in a place where it’s obvious that Ogata is being pampered, even though this was available.
You’re letting a mere cheap piece throw off your plans too much, Lieutenant Tsurumi.
>>48
It’s probably because you sprinkle powder on cheap pieces without thinking and brainwash them excessively.
>>51
Because of the thread image, I’ve learned that it’s good to do that! In a way, I could say that the lieutenant also had his brain fried.
>>51
This cheap pawn wasn’t even sprinkled with powder, just normally moving gently like a soldier, but it ended up fixating on me on its own…
>>51
Ogata has come…
Chasing after Manager Kadokura is so terrifying.
The author of the nationally popular mascot manga has an unsettling preference for manga like this or Ushijima-kun…
>>50
I actually like things like Donkey Kong and the like, so that’s rude.
Despite being a cheap piece, both the joining cost and maintenance cost are too high.
Isn’t it the weirdest that Sensei Henmi, who drew something like this thoroughly, even gained the evaluation of being a nationally popular manga?
Inexpensive and ridiculously strong, the best cost-performance piece.
It’s a manga that intricately depicts Ainu culture.
Don’t turn into “Look at this, let’s mass produce this!”
>>61
If it occurs suddenly, it’s an accident that is cheap yet expensive, but if it can be produced stably in large quantities, it’s cost-effective…
>>64
It’s falling apart in midair!
I wonder what would have happened if I hadn’t been thrown off by this cheap piece.
I thought that Tsurumi deliberately orchestrated this development, but is that not the case?
>>63
That person tends to leave things up to chance.
>>63
To cover up the fact that the big shot’s son died, my career has come to a halt, so if you did it on purpose, that’s just foolish.
>>63
I think there was somewhat of a temptation to persuade.
You probably didn’t imagine it would turn out like this, in such a rage-filled killing spree…
>>63
It’s definitely easier for the child who was killed to succeed, and judging by the lines I see him talking to the master later, this is irregular.
I haven’t modified it, but it looks like a monster army.
I was intentionally complimenting in places where it was easy to eavesdrop.
No one could have predicted that a 12-year-old kid would freak out, kill a friend, and then threaten “You’re an accomplice, right?”
Cheap pieces from the thread image.
It seems that there is a fairly decent popularity among girls.
>>74
Doesn’t every division generally have its own dedicated fans?
>>78
When the anime was airing, Tsukishima was in the top 10 of the all-genre dream girl rankings…
>>67
Unless we fight to the death, we can’t bring out excessive violence or bears… no, I feel like there were bears…
Route branching
I think I was aiming to get a faithful and cheap piece as a bonus alongside the main one.
I later understood that killing the main person in love is both frightening and amazing, so it’s different.
>>77
This guy was originally not supposed to join the military as he was set to inherit his family’s business, so he’s not even on the list of candidates.
Normal kids don’t crush someone’s vital points just because they got angry.
No one can imagine that.
The Meiji era is scary.
The original role was to comfort the child of the deceased when they were fussing on the battlefield.
“I think it was about being used as a reason that ‘my childhood friend is supporting me too.'”