This review contains spoilers

Actually insane.
There is so much to talk about this reread that i don't know where to start, but the way of how love is treated deeply here in such different ways is actually insane.
The way of how it will deceive you as of that scene of Jessica and Kanon's ghosts together with Jessica crying saying they're wrong about suspecting Kanon(making our love about those characters treat what they're saying as the truth, because nonetheless it would be too cruel, right? Kihihihihihi) or with Battler's love making him far away from the truth, because he can't suspect his beloved ones.
But, also, without love, without beliving in the witch, how can they escape? If they just belived in the witch and tried to resolve the epitath they could actually survive.
But how can they believe in a chessboard game where the enemy is actually playing to lose, right? Without love, it cannot be seen.
But, well, in the end, after such a tragedy, with trauma and the witch's belief in his mind, after driking a whole bottle of alcohol, hearing Genji's confession and probably poison's scent in Kinzo's room, he was finally be able to see.

(There is so much more to say, as Yasu's conflict, with Shanon and Kanon relations with Beatrice, or with the second twilight being probably a sex scene with some parts of the text being a support for it, as:

Beatrice:"(...) Now! Kanon, let's have a look at your blade!!(...)"
Kanon:"A thing like this...Can't even be used to trim the roses."
Jessica: "Kanon-kun,....What's..."
Kanon: "I didn't want.. To show you."
Beatrice: "So, you've taken it out. .....How does it feel to expose your subhumanity in front of the girl you care for?"

but that would be so long so yeah.)

Reviewed on Dec 30, 2023


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