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The Killer of the Reincarnated: Cheat Slayer. 
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💾 ►►► DOWNLOAD FILE 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 Killing the People Reincarnated into the Other World: Cheat Slayer is a Japanese isekai manga written by Kakegurui author Homura Kawamoto and illustrated by. Slaughtering all the other worlders!? A tale of revenge covered with hate and greed, begins now――!! Read the latest manga Cheat Slayer Chapter 1 at Readkomik . Manga The Killer of the Reincarnated: Cheat Slayer is always updated at. As mentioned, the premise of Cheat Slayer is that its main character kills the most overpowered reincarnated warriors in the land, essentially. 9 Hide Ads Login Sign Up. Add to My List. Add to Favorites. Type: Manga. Genres: Action Action , Fantasy Fantasy. Demographic: Shounen Shounen. Serialization: Dragon Age. Score: 5. Ranked: 2 2 based on the top manga page. Isekai Tenseisha Koroshi: Chea Ranked Popularity Members 1, Visit MALxJapan. Check out the official BanG Dream! Girls Band Party designs for your profile's About Me! More characters. No characters for this manga have been added to this title. Help improve our database by adding characters for this manga here. Not Recommended. This is the main reason the Imaginator is overrunning the world. No matter how long you wait, nothing ever begins. Boogiepop Series] Please, if you are one of the people in the community who spread free hate on Isekai just because they are Isekai, I urge you to read this review carefully. Isekai Tenseisha Koroshi: Cheat Slayer is Homura Kawamoto's newest publication. Perhaps this name is not strange to you, reader, after all, he is famously known for his other work that won an anime adaptation in two seasons, Kakegurui. However, I must say that a possible large number of people who now step on the page of this manga probably do not know him, since the greatest source of popularity of this work is not its author, nor its history. The key behind which many are here is the reputation this one recently gained for being canceled after its one and only chapter. Even though I've watched Kakegurui, I personally fit into this group that heard about Isekai Tenseisha Koroshi for its cancellation and only later came to find out about its author. Like one of those people, I also barely knew about the work and I began to consume its only chapter out of curiosity. So I did and, now that I'm done, I can say I'm completely surprised. Surprised in the sense that an author of such a popular work managed to descend to that level. The story of Isekai Tenseisha Koroshi is incomplete because of its interruption. All we know so far, briefly, is that in a given fantasy world where the work takes place, there is a group of nine reincarnated heroes. The guild of these nine heroes, "The Insurgents of God", is seen as protective and heroic in that world, fighting the apparent evildoers, the demon lord's troops. The nine reincarnated build a virtuous and immaculate image in front of our protagonist, Lute, who, as often happens with young people in front of their idols, is inspired and also projects themselves in them. However, Lute's reality changes drastically as he sees his village under attack. On the outskirts of town, he and Lydia, his childhood friend, are taken by surprise and murdered — or at least they would be, but Lute survives. While he doesn't completely lose consciousness, the protagonist peeks out of his eyes and experiences a reality check. In front of him, Lydia, already dead, is raped by one of the reincarnated, while two others look on from afar. The reincarnated heroes that he had so much respect for, in fact, are worthless degenerates who have little respect for any form of life in that world. And so, Lute's thirst for revenge is fed, whereby he will later ally himself with an unknown witch and the story will follow or would from there. Everything this chapter tries to convey, in terms of history, aims to shock the reader and build in him a certain layer of hatred on the nine reincarnated. And yet, I would say it fails in that very department. As this is an incomplete, one-chapter story, I can't demand too much depth on the characters or why they all do their deeds. It would be unfair. However, I find it difficult to cling to the protagonist or truly feel the impact of him having a childhood friend killed and raped in front of him when his reaction is so expressionless. As he sees the villains' disgusting attitudes, he doesn't believe it and convinces himself that what before his eyes is a dream. This would be understandable, given the strong reference he sustains about reincarnated people and the human being's frequent habit of undertaking self-deception as an adaptive mechanism. He doesn't want to believe this is real. The magnitude of his feelings is not well emphasized and soon we see Lute thinking about the difficulty it would be to defeat the reincarnated being he a normal person, amidst the expository dialogues of the witch who cured him. I mean, where is the expressiveness of this character? Where is the shriek of pain that would make the reader feel sorry for their miserable situation? All we have for that is his childhood friend's statement, before the sad moment happened, and a few uninspired shots. Do you see what I want to expose here, dear reader? Not only does this single chapter contain almost no substance, it fails in what little it does. The pacing in this chapter is extremely fast, in my opinion. Reincarnates are barely introduced properly, so the first page and a few frames make up our introduction to them. Most of the characters just make their appearance and have very few lines so far, with the exception of the Shin Walford-inspired character. The protagonist's cathartic moments are quickly replaced by the witch's explanations and derogatory speeches by the nine reincarnated under over-caricature expressions, in an attempt to push hate and more hatred towards these characters down our throats. But, after all, we all know the reason for this lack of commitment to the narrative itself. From the first second we skim the cover, it's already possible to understand why. In Isekai Tenseisha Koroshi, the author is not concerned with telling a story, much less adding substance to it. This is because Isekai Tenseisha Koroshi is an obvious, unhealthy attack on the Isekai phenomenon. And, beyond an attack, I would consider the work dangerous and hypocritical. You see, although I like some of the examples in this sub-genre, I wouldn't say I'm a big fan of Isekai. Both cited inspire characters that the author of Isekai Tenseisha Koroshi applied as villains in his work. The point is that my opinion about the work is not negative because of favoritism about work "x" or "y", but rather related to the hate speech character that the manga carries and, consequently, how much it feeds this reproduction in the community. Just look at the discussions that have arisen around this story. The vast majority of them do not concern the problems that certain Isekais might sustain such as romanticizing the lives of NEETs and ignoring their real problems. They are more populated by childish taunts that are made to Isekai's fans and comments blaming them for canceling the work. A good portion of this audience is the same one that generalizes Isekai's works and puts them all in the same boat. I'm not saying that there is a majority of those who liked the chapter, but the presence of this thought is evident. And this vision is resonant with the work itself, as the author did exactly the same and generalized the sub-genre, choosing characters from popular franchises that have no relationship to each other and arbitrarily demonizing them without backing to the real story. For example, what does the tone of KonoSuba, a parody, have to do with Re:Zero, which constitutes a serious plot of psychological drama? What to represent a character similar to Ainz Ooal Gown would have to add to a possible criticism of the romanticization of the Hikikomori or NEET phenomenon, given that, in Overlord, as far as the anime adapted, we hardly know about the protagonist's past, nor if he fits in this archetype? What would representing a character almost aesthetically identical to Kirito could add if, contrary to what Isekai Tenseisha Koroshi suggests and then tries to go against in reincarnated ones, his story does not carry any trace of romanticizing anti-social status? Instead, in certain chapters like Days of Begginings and the parking lot scene in Alicization Lasting, there's even a focus on anti-social disturbance as something negative and the construction of apathy, indifference to reality. So much so that both worlds are conceived as having losses and benefits, never just one side of that coin. And, above all, what would the inspiration for Sword Art Online be doing there, if it isn't even Isekai? The danger of this discourse is almost instantaneous: the author, more concerned with pointing fingers at the sub-genre, did not lend himself to choosing coherent examples, both with each other and with the main idea he wants to convey. As much as I don't like to assume things unsure and print accusations, this lack of correlation makes it seem like he's barely read the works. The attack is unfounded and seems to give us only a single message: "Isekai is the problem. Because some of its examples represent questionable moral elements as a good thing? True, but proliferating hate speech against works that has nothing to do with it is irresponsible. Furthermore, even if you, the reader, for some reason want to argue that, in your opinion, certain animes referenced there are within that group, the message is still not justifiable. Propagating hate speech against NEETs and demonizing them in your work will not only not solve the problem or promote healthy debate. On the contrary: it will only make it worse. People in this situation are victims of a phenomenon, whether caused by socioeconomic or particular circumstances, and need support and lifestyle changes. It may be wrong to portray this phenomenon as normal. It is not. It's not okay with this type of behavior, and many of the people in this situation can actually be questionable in their conduct. However, branding these people as bad is definitely not the proper treatment. It will make the veiled prejudice about them grow and the hand that society should extend to rehabilitation will be the same one that points to ostracism. Don't say I'm jumping to conclusions. After all, in certain passages, the work doesn't even try to hide this discourse. In a world whithout powers, he was nothing more than a hate filled dog who followed orders. Despite wanting to fall in love more than anyone else, he pathetically coped with his loneliness throught the world of 2D. A truly laughable piece of trash. A piece of trash like him should have died in the crevices of society like the other pieces of trash After all, what else this single-chapter work once again presents is the pervasiveness of an extremely questionable ethic and service as a self-insert. This time, however, the projection is not with the fans of Isekai, so condemned by the community, but with the haters. The protagonist, Lute, is a perfect vehicle for this, as he is the perfect way for those with hatred for the sub-genre to vent all of their anger. Which target would be better than several famous Isekai near-protagonists? At this point, it doesn't even matter what the problem is, since the one who criticizes it also endorses or reproduces it. And I share the same opinion that a large portion of Isekais are repetitive, recycling various concepts of setting and character, and that many are poor in substance. It is in the nature of human beings to wish that everything simply resolves itself immediately. We want things to work out effortlessly, and so we are full-eyed when we listen to immediate and generalizing proposals like the one diffused in this work. But that's not how things are going to fit together. Attacking Isekai fans, generalizing works simply because they belong to a sub-genre, or just reproducing that there is a problem with Isekai without questioning how they are drawing attention to it is not the right way to go. A healthy debate is what fits here, precisely what this manga did not propose. Of course, there is always the possibility that the author is not wanting to draw attention to that side of the work, and is just an interpretation. It's possible. However, while the most talked about face is the attempt to criticize the sub-genre, that remains my opinion. Reading this work made me sad. Sad to see the speech that the author wanted to endorse, but even more sad to see it echoing in the community later. Even though, personally, I'm not a big fan of Kakegurui, it's a big disappointment for me. I don't like writing inflammatory reviews about certain works at all, but in this case, I couldn't help it. This is not the place. Nice 0. Love it 0. Funny 0. Confusing 0. Informative 0. Well-written 0. Creative 0. More reviews by Marander 4. Read more. Show less. I hate the fact that it got canceled. But I understand why. It was not a parody, the author attacked other manga. It was a direct and explicit attack. But for such a thing to exist something must be very wrong. And I think this kind of approach is good of the author , bear with me for some paragraphs. A lot of us enjoy the satisfaction from this wish-fulfillment story of isekai well including me. For our pleasure, we are ready to ignore things they promote and encourage. Glorification of people who failed at life if done poorly. If done better stories can aim to show regret or a new chance at life, seeking justice. But in the end, all of these things are just used to create a glorified overpowered character. To fulfill our wishes. This does not have to be the actual intent of the authors. This block of text maybe does not make sense to you so here are some examples of what I mean. I mean in Mushoku Tensei the year-old guy would like to do it with Eris who is like It is mentioned how he loved to suck his mothers tit. The redo of healer is just all wrong, no debate on if rape is ok, rape is never ok. Or a small but important case of the slime isekai. Well, there is a rule that you have to kill people to become a demon lord. How does the author make him complete the goal? I mean he kills some helplessly underpowered soldiers who wanted to kill him. But it does not end there he has to kill another who have surrendered. I mean he saves his friends but do you have to kill relatively innocent soliders following orders? If even one of them was innocent the whole thing would be wrong right? Some poor farmer got recruited and now what? It does so without any compromise. No room for clever words we just have to deal with this. This approach is good because it shows how big and alarming the problem is. You can go to the reviews or redo fo healer and find some guy trying to justify his fantasy. More reviews by amoniak 1. The first chapter feels like it was written by a dude with a raging hatered for isekais when he never watched a single one of them. What story we do have essentially involves our main character getting killed by a reincarnated individual. He then watches said reincarnate kill and rape his childhood friend. He is later resurrected by a witch and the two decide to kill all the reincarnates. As far as I can tell all 9 of the main antagonists take very heavy inspiration, essentially stolen, from already established works those likely being SAO, Re:zero, Mushoku Tensei, Konosuba, Hamefura, Tanya, Reincarnated as a Slime, Isekai Shokudo, and Overlord. This wouldn't really be a problem if the author was going to actually parody the original works in a comedic or light hearted way; but, instead he decided to make all the parodied characters rapists or casual accessories to rape in order to drive his lazily contrived revenge story. After the backlash it received there will not be a continuation; however, It's still shocking how the writer of such a beloved series like Kakegurui could stoop into writing such an amateur revenge plot just to try and make some money off of the isekai wave. More reviews by Epic42 7. More stacks. More recommendations. Murabito desu ga Nani ka? More news. More discussions. Can't wait for it release! Add Detailed Info. Edit Synopsis No synopsis information has been added to this title. Help improve our database by adding a synopsis here. Edit Background Isekai Tenseisha Koroshi: Cheat Slayer was discontinued due to similarities between the antagonists and other notable characters from various series. More characters Characters No characters for this manga have been added to this title. More reviews Reviews Nov 1, Marander Not Recommended "'The problem lies with your own frailty of resolve that forces simple, easy to understand answers and resolutions on others. Nice 0 Love it 0 Funny 0 Confusing 0 Informative 0 Well-written 0 Creative 0 More reviews by amoniak 1 Show all Read more Show less Open Report Jul 13, Epic42 Not Recommended The first chapter feels like it was written by a dude with a raging hatered for isekais when he never watched a single one of them. Cancelled only a month after it started lol Weebookey - Jun 28, Why does it still say publishing on MAL? LyfeCantStopIt - Jul 3, Discontinuation of serialization Tensoru - Jun 28, Finally something worth reading!
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