
Game number 105 has concluded. Thank you very much. I am Yumi from the store. The number 94 is currently supporting 2 players. Hey, are you just watching? How can you understand the game? If you look carefully at the words, you can grasp the details… Seriously, who does this guy think he is? He talks like he knows everything. It’s really annoying seeing someone named Taro wandering around like that. Weather Town 2.
I’m sorry, what’s wrong?
Since there is no intervention on the table, isn’t it not a “goto”?
Aren’t you just finding a winning machine?
What is “uchidome”?
It’s not specifically prohibited in the Japanese judicial system.
However, it seems that one will suffer painful consequences because “the net of heaven is vast and its mesh is wide, yet nothing escapes.” Therefore, the cost-performance ratio is likely poor.
It is depicted as a wrongful act deserving of divine punishment, just as one can understand by looking at the last panel, even though there are no laws by human standards that can judge such supernatural abilities.
It’s not a crime, is it?
The law doesn’t violate anything, but the question is whether it’s ethical or not, and I think Professor Ueno is aware of that too.
I can’t prove it, but if we assume that there is a person with spiritual powers among the pachinko staff and that they could prove the existence of noobe, I think that would be enough to be recognized as cheating.
I don’t want to end up as a pachinko parlor employee after becoming a psychic…
I thought that even if I work normally while being single, I would still be poor, but maybe I don’t have money because I bought spiritual items.
I only have an image of gloves, prayer beads, and crystals.
It’s no wonder he gets angry since I talked big to that dad who makes money from spiritual abilities and then did this.
Well, I’m using my ability, but…
A pachinko pro must have some level of knowledge to judge machines based on observation.
I think the person who was trying to sneak the demon’s hand into the crane game to get the prize is more out.
In the first place, does reading a machine that hits count as cheating?
It’s easy to understand that using telekinesis to manipulate balls or nails is not permitted.
Since it’s a world with supernatural abilities like spiritual powers, it makes sense that there are supernatural rewards as well.
Doing things like this will probably lead to bad rumors about the shop, and it might end up being deserted, so it’s not good, right?
It feels like there will be a ban with no particular reason!
But it feels like there aren’t any particular divine punishments for those making a fortune with spiritual powers in that world.
I also looked for machines where I could win using dowsing.
Even now, there are still people who occasionally choose machines using dowsing in real life…
Since I’m a teacher who uses spiritual abilities for the sake of people, like my father and my mentor, I can’t really abuse them, can I?
In the past, since the main focus was on the mechanisms, if players stayed on a well-tilted mechanism for too long, it would keep paying out, which is why there were limits on play.
Nowadays, with pachinko, if you’re lucky, you can hit a jackpot of 90,000 balls, so even if you win big, you don’t get suspected much.
The ultra-modern feel of the last panel is amazing.
Isn’t it lucky that you can normally get compensation?
That means the earthbound spirit is telling us, right?
Just because you’re not breaking the law doesn’t mean you won’t face the wrath of the spirits…
We’ve been talking about things like that for a long time, so this is out…
It’s surprising that this depiction can be used as-is because the concept of a stopping point has made a resurgence after going full circle.
I saw people making circles with their fingers to see if it was a winning machine or not.
Why don’t you convert Nube into money?
I understood the system of stopping the game.
I don’t understand the benefits of knowing the finishing platform…
It seems like pachinko is not for me.
Using psychic abilities, predicting the near future and winning horse races must be super easy, like having breakfast.
I wonder why gambling works in that world.
I am so poor, yet I have the mysterious nature of being disliked by the god of poverty.
Even without using tools, they’ll come at you with twists and stops saying, “You’re a pro! Banned!” and they are not tolerant of anything other than regular play at the pachinko parlor.
The store’s rules allow them to expel customers they don’t like.
A psychic can communicate with animals.
You can collude in the paddock.
I have saved lives and futures enough times that I should receive much more without any guilt.
Isn’t the range of psychic abilities too broad, including precognition, telepathy, memory manipulation, and out-of-body experiences?
Counting is not illegal in a legal sense, but…
Because the casinos prohibit it individually.
If it can be detected, it would be thought that the store would respond by banning the individual.
It’s the kind of thing where I’m going broke because I’m spending a lot of money and treating the students all the time.
In other words, pachinko parlors hardly ban anyone who’s not a big influence on the payout.
As long as it doesn’t escalate to destroying the table, it’s just a warning for slamming it.
It’s the kind of thing where there’s no direct pressure, but the staff says they want you to refrain from coming anymore…
But if it’s just for one day, it’s still something you can get away with.
Isn’t it true that if you kick out someone who wins big occasionally, the regulars will gradually leave?
Is it what we now call a complete set?
People who are doing settings won’t be said anything.
Nube is almost always broke because he rarely asks for money, quickly treats others, and doesn’t cheat with his psychic powers (he occasionally does in the gag parts).
It’s no different from making a judgment based on intuition.
It’s impossible to judge this.
What’s this, a Newtype?
By the way, where is the hell element in the title of this manga, “Hell Teacher”?
I can’t make a judgment on that, but if I keep doing this every time, I’ll be told I’m banned.
It’s impossible to manage solely on a teacher’s salary, but due to the spirit of helping others and the foolishness of being human, there’s no time for anything while being poor.
That’s how spiritual abilities are, huh…
Only to the extent that it can be converted to cash in case of real trouble.
If that’s the case, I wouldn’t receive much punishment thanks to my usual good deeds.
I feel like there was a story that suggested that being poor might be related to hating money.
Because my dad was a money-hungry person.
Teacher with a demon from hell on his right hand.
I didn’t want to get the crane game prize; it was more of a reaffirmation that even a demon’s hand can’t physically pass through it.
I don’t hate money.
I hate my father, who was a money-obsessed person.
The good father became a money-obsessed person because he couldn’t save his sick wife.
The side with that kind of machine is to blame.
It is said that if one wanted to, they could make a lot of money through wrongdoing, but Nube, as an educator and a spiritualist, lives modestly, making him seem far too much like a saint.
Because the teacher met a good teacher during childhood, their mind was not distorted, but their sexual tendencies definitely became warped.
It does feel like the guilt deep within the person is drawing punishment towards them.
The original concept or character image of my father seems to be a blocking father figure like Uminara Yozan or Hoshi Ittetsu, but at the core, he is just too much of a genuinely good person…
I know something really messed up happened in the situation below, so even if I could, I absolutely don’t want to do it…
NUBE is often referred to as a saint, but Yukime was only 16 years old at the time of their marriage!
The depiction of old pachinko machines had an implicit understanding that it looked like it was exchanging for goods instead of money.
What is the problem?
Superpowers cannot be judged by the law.
Even if you buy winning horse tickets aiming for them with predictive abilities, you can’t prove any wrongdoing.
I feel like I was really scolded when I was directly doing various things with the demon’s hand, but was that in the UFO catcher?
The prohibitions of pachinko are not laws, so they can be judged at the discretion of the store.
This is a violation of manners! Exit!
“I can do things like that too.”
By the way, not depicting the scene where money is exchanged for pachinko is just a self-imposed restriction; it doesn’t mean it can’t be drawn.
Applying enough pressure to break glass with a stuffed animal is serious business.
My father is said to be making money in a shady way.
In this world, spiritual phenomena often lead to destruction not only for the person involved but also for those around them, so it’s not uncommon for people to spend several million yen on serious exorcism.
That’s almost like saying GS Mikami.
Well, considering Nunbee’s dire situation, it seems better to exchange for living supplies than to cash out.
Was this the episode where they went wild after being told they had a limited time to live?
Whether it’s a scam or not, pachinko parlors just normally ban customers who keep winning.
Whether it’s a machine or psychic ability, it’s considered cheating because the store is obtaining information that the customer should not know through means that the store is not aware of.
If you can’t prove it, then it becomes safe; if you hide the devices when doing cheating with machines, everything becomes safe.
I guess it would be like being able to determine and play a slot machine with setting 6 right now.
I was surprised to hear a story about being kicked out for using a technique that would normally be common in regular games, called a twist shot.
I don’t know what I’m sensing with my psychic abilities because I’m not familiar with pachinko…
If it’s just about making little by little with a positive balance, that’s one thing.
If you continue to win in a way that is clearly nonsensical for a long time, I think anyone can see that you’re doing something out of bounds, and it will also lower the store’s reputation.
The local hall that said stopping at level 4 is prohibited, let alone stopping at level 3, has closed down.
That day, he was just a lucky guy who happened to win big.
If you keep repeating that in your daily life, it’s far too presumptive of guilt…
Did they pass away after this?
You need to explain the reasons why you don’t like it in a way that is easy for a third party to understand.
If it’s about winning big five times in a row, statistically there should be a customer like that at least once a month.
Once the line of what’s unacceptable and what’s acceptable is broken, one can easily fall into depravity because no one punishes it.
The ultimate destination is a shape-shifting monster.
The only crime that I couldn’t make an excuse for with psychic abilities was when I broke the glass while trying to win a stuffed animal in a UFO catcher.
It’s not about the prohibition of refusing taxi rides as stipulated by the Road Transport Law.
Individual shops have the freedom to ban customers regardless of their agreement or disagreement.
If he wanted to, he could win big money by betting on horse racing, but he doesn’t do it because of his conscience, that’s Nube.
If you’re going to say something blunt, then it’s about how a gambling hall filters out those who win while avoiding worsening the impression of those around them…
Is this the story when the Grim Reaper came and told you that you were going to die soon?
I think it’s extremely unreasonable to receive divine punishment for this.
The other fraudulent psychics (the real ones) are not punished differently.
Regardless of whether or not they can explain it to a third party, from the perspective of the pachinko parlor, they have no choice but to kick out someone who is just very lucky.
No matter the reason, having someone who keeps winning would be a problem for the business.