I'm dead now
toilet quartet!!!
completely unprompted TBHK crossover for fun ;)
Idk I really like the idea of tsukasa of having to take care of something more smaller and innocent than himself
im hyping myself up i really do not know how to panel LMAO
@musicalmoritz i offer this sacrifice to the aoinene queen
thinking of making a sketch series where I rate his fits
(drawing this instead of studying) (I'm really cooked wtf am I doing)
Been reading the manga :>
(After adding tumblr and twitter responses, the second option won!)
After a moment of deciding, you decided to Look at the signs on the wall⦠maybe there are clues⦠which made you notice the evacuation map on the wall. The evacuation map showed the nearest exits and the classrooms that had first aid. Luckily, it seemed like the cooking classroom was one of them⦠which makes sense. Somekids might accidentally cut their finger or something⦠yikesā¦
The way to the cooking classroom seems to beā¦. down the hall to the left. Huh, you had a feeling you shouldāve went there, darn it! Maybe you shouldāve trusted your instincts betterā¦
You speedily walk towards the classroom, hoping nothing too bad happened. You knock on the door before entering the classroom. There was a student busily moving around the room, grabbing different ingredients from the cabinets while cursing under his breathā¦. He must be Akane.
āHello, are you Aoi Akane? Your teacher asked me to supervise you.ā
The student snapped his head back to stare at you before slightly bowing his head. āOh of course, hello there. Thank you for taking your time to watch over me.ā
He then rushed back to whatever he was doing⦠maybe heās really busy. You didnāt really know what to do and just stood awkwardly near the door. It was a bit weird but you didnāt want to intrude on a studentās project or something⦠But you also didnāt want to do nothingā¦. You opened your mouth to ask if the student needed any assistance when he asked you first.
With nothing better to do, you agreed.
You take the list and head out to the nearest grocery store. As you head there, you decided to read the list and woahā¦. yikesā¦. this handwriting is really dogshitā¦. itās hard to readā¦. and you promised to get them so you canāt really back out now⦠Maybe you should try and get it rightā¦. the crossed out ones are probably not needed so at least that gives you something to work with⦠That leaves 4 ingredients that arenāt crossed out, which isnāt too bad.
-> There will be 4 polls! Pick which one you think is the correct ingredient!! Poll will be closed tomorrow ^^
im a bit shy ack >< but... my face reveal (ā¢ļ¹ā¢;)
Ok Iāve been convinced! Hereās my face revealā¦
This chapter has been a lore-heavy one that opened the door to a lot of possibilities.
We always knew multiple gods existed via multiple mentions throughout the series, but the pit god was the only one introduced as such. We now welcome our second 'God', the Sand Clock.
You may ask, "How is the Sand Clock a God?", and I will reply with "Because it's so similar to the Pit God, it feels like a cruel joke".
Its origins unknown, with a will of its own- It wants to be used so it can claim its prize.
"Turn the clock upside down, make a wish, give up your present, and you can redo your entire life". Simple enough, isn't it? Make a sacrifice and get a chance at happiness.
It operates in a very similar way the pit god does, it just works by a different mechanism; It wants you to use it, it lets you use it as much as you'd like to reach your desired outcome, and when you're done wasting your soul away trying, it takes its due compensation in a very 'natural' and ironic way.
It either claims the lives of those who use the clock for themselves or the lives of those they want to save.
One who used it to become rich died at the hands of bandits, one who used it to gain fame died at the hands of envy, one who used it to gain love died with the one she loved- And finally, the one who used it to make another happy made it so that person never existed.
The theme of "happiness" reared its head once again- a honest desire to make another happy turned to ruin. We saw it with Tsukasa and Amane in the Red House, we saw it with Hanako and Nene in the Severance, and we saw it just a few chapters ago with Nene and Amane. We now see it with the watchmaker and his niece. In an honest attempt to make her happy, her existence was erased instead.
After he experienced tragedy himself, the watchmaker decided to seal it. Desire is a part of human nature, so a human couldn't be tasked with guarding this cursed item.
As both a solution and punishment for himself for his actions, he used his own flesh and soul to create Kako, the Clock Keeper- A perfectly inhuman supernatural who would never fail in fulfilling his duty to guard the Sand Clock.
This reflects in the Clock Keepers' Yorishiro, the Key. It's the very key used to unlock the Sand Clock's seal and it is proof of Kako's duty, his purpose for existing. He was created solely to guard the clock, and having his yorishiro destroyed means destroying his entire reason for his existence.
Kako's inhumanity is meant to combat the Clock's ability to fan the flames of desire. It does not allow him to fall prey to the Clock. And it's proven up to a point- Nene tells him of Akane, the Guardian of the Present's death, along with her other friends' death. But Kako is unfazed. Like Akane said in the Clock Keepers arc, they do not value human life at all.
However, it is important to note that it's not perfectly inhuman. The watchmaker only used himself to create Kako, so who created Mirai, a clockwork doll in the likeness of the watchmaker's niece, if not Kako? Does it not contradict his intended inhumanity?
Which leads me to further think- He stored his yorishiro, the key to the Sand Clock, inside Mirai. Wasn't it so he wouldn't be able to use the Clock for himself, so he wouldn't be able to abandon his duty, as he would be forced to destroy the machine that looks like his niece to do so? A bitter reminder of the tragedy that follows.
It is also important to note that it is specified that Kako was created to prevent the Sand Clock's use. So why is it that Kako claims that his purpose is to "use it perfectly"? Is it his pride in his inhumanity that his actions would be based off logic and not desire?
It is something that is so important it precedes mass killings. That it's fine if dozens, if not hundreds of people die, if this something is unharmed.
Most importantly, Kako says it's a secret, but it's something that even if it was revealed, Nene wouldn't be able to threaten Kako with it.
That opens up three possibilities:
It's something beyond Nene's reach, something that Nene can't do anything about anyway;
It's not a something, but a someone; Nene refused to destroy Sumire, who was a human yorishiro- So how could she threaten Kako at the expense of someone?
For me, it's the most likely one: It's someone or something Nene cares about, someone Nene would never want to come to harm.
I do have my own ideas, but I reached them via my intuition and not solid evidence, so they're not meant to be explained here.
The alarm rang since chapter 124. The cat assumed it's an alarm for an intruder, and it's confirmed in chapter 125 by Kako.
But see, Kako says that the alarm rings when someone invades the Boundary. But it didn't ring the moment Nene entered the Boundary, did it? It took one and a half chapter for it to ring. Which means Nene is not the invader the alarm went off on.
Perhaps you remember in chapter 121 when Akane ran his mouth in the Red House about going back in time and the curse of the Red House heard him?
"Still, a clock that can control time... That could be trouble."
Akane, Aoi and Teru put their lives on the line to get Nene enough time to get to the clock and turn back time. But that time seems to soon expire, and Kako will have to confront the issue he didn't bother prioritizing. He will have to confront the arrogant belief that he used the Sand Clock correctly, just because he was made 'perfect', 'beyond human'.
Nene's determination is to be admired, for sure. For the entirety of the chapter she is told how the Sand Clock is a curse that brings the user to ruin. In the previous chapter, she is told about how others who attempted to turn back time were turned into mechanical dolls and forced into the Clock Keepers' Boundary for eternity.
She does not waver.
However, is that a good thing?
"I heard what you said, and it doesn't make any sense at all."
No, she does understand. She made it clear that she understands that if she takes the Sand Glass, ruin will await her.
But she doesn't want to acknowledge that she understands. Because if she does, she would acknowledge her own doom. Not only her own, but possibly others' aswell. Or rather, she feeds into the mindset she started having since chapter 91.
She... No longer values her own life nor her own personal happiness. As if befitting her role of a 'kannagi', she has a dangerous mindset- She starts thinking she's fine with sacrificing herself for others.
She doesn't care that she risks more than just her life anymore. She cares about reaching her own goals for others' sake. I, as of now, do not see a good outcome for Nene. Hanako picked up on this mindset and tried to rid her of it early in 91, but it would seem he failed.
I wonder how things will progress from here.
they/them || i like to draw a lot actually š || shy!! || twt @hill_ll_p š
256 posts