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The Beginning After the End, Vol. 1 (The Beginning After the End (Comic))

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King Grey has unrivaled strength, wealth, and prestige in a world governed through martial ability. However, solitude lingers closely behind those with great power. Beneath the glamorous exterior of a powerful king lurks the shell of man, devoid of purpose and will.

If you are not used to these styles, this book will be very difficult to read and come off as amateurish and low quality. If you are used to it, the reading will go smoothly and you'll find yourself laughing at the humor quite easily. The elves seem to have no culture except a mild racism towards humans. MC lives there for what four years and we see just about nothing of them because of the time skip. The princess has a crush on him, the grandfather talks familiarly with him about him marrying the elven princess with a vocabulary like idek, an old man from the southern US? and he doesn't associate with the King and Queen. Whom he lives with. He has an enemy amongst the nobility who just sort of stops being a problem because. This book I have read in first 4 hours (bye-bye, my sleep, the dream world of this series is much more attractive). Mother! I’m about to begin my journey to become the greatest mage in the world! Do not make me out to be a constipated infant!”Another thing the author did really well, in my humble opinion, is how he sometimes split the point of view of certain characters instead of just having the point of view from the protagonist, this help understand how supporting characters feel and make you care about them way more. Also, the way he does it is so natural that you don't feel lost not knowing who is narrating the story. Der erste Band einer Graphic Novel stellt sich recht häufig als eine etwas längere Einführung in die Geschichte dar und diese hier ist da keine Ausnahme. Für mich lebt diese Erzählung von den Bildern und dem Vergnügen einer erwachsenen Seele bei ihrer Wiedergeburt als Baby zuzusehen, denn das ist es so weit: ein erfolgreicher König aus einer martial art Welt (auch wenn diese deutlich westliche Komponenten hat scheint seine Macht aus der Nutzung seines Qi zu kommen) stirbt unter mysteriösen Umständen und wird standepede in einem komplett anderen Universum wiedergeboren. Er erinnert sich noch an alles aus seinem vorherigen Leben und hat die Auffassungsgabe eines Erwachsenen, muss sich aber zuerst mit den Einschränkungen eines Babykörpers abfinden. The story wanders a bit as Art has some adventures thrust on him even so young and I'm not quite sure what I think of those. They worked as plot but I'm not so sure they worked as supporting the core family dynamic. Read this first in manhwa version, and the usual I finished reading all updated chapters and waited for another update then I forgot happened. Encountering this again on my recommendation list, and read until latest update, realizing in the later parts that I already read this. Losing my patient to wait for another update, I decided to read the book.

It’s only expected that as Arthur grows there will be more challenging adventures that will show his true potential. I had so much fun reading this first volume that introduced what will surely be a long, emotional, and satisfying story. Between Arthur’s quirky baby scenes and the training montage, there was never a dull moment in The Beginning After the End, Vol. 1! Well, at first I found the comics @ Tapas (and yes - the best comment was "They say I was born a commoner's son"). But then... something happened and whoosh! Wir starten die Geschichte bei König Grey und bekommen gerade noch mit wie er stirbt und wiedergeboren wird als Baby Arthur. So hat er die Chance, noch einmal von vorne anzufangen, in einer Welt voller Magie. In comparison, I prefer the manhwa instead of the book. The manhwa for me will get atleast 3 stars. Though the book really described details, the author do info dump and it is hard to make sense of sometime. I am at volume six, and I already skim through some explanations, since I just want to read the important parts now.I can see an attraction like, I want to know what happens next, what he's building up to, whether this gets good at some point and lives up to what it could be. It's not worth the headache of every single other part of the thing tho, the full extent of which I have not bitched about here. A friend had recommended this to me AGES ago and after reading the manga, I proceeded to Hoover this down because I NEEDED to know what happened next. I love that while the MC IS powerful, he isn’t OTT powerful. Those older than him with more experience can and do overpower him, but he LEARNS from these interactions and he strives to better himself so he can protect those he loves AND he trains those he loves to be able to defend themselves. I love it!

The whole magic system seems to be based on some sort of videogame-like blueprint and I really didn't need to read so much about the mechanics of it in such a short time. and Tess. I do hope sometimes the author developed Lukas Wykes into a becoming more intelligent sub villain, so that it was much satisfying to see his suffering. In comparison, Tess has a great premise in the start with her having an elf ancestry and royal lineage. Despite that, her character become seemly more immature further in the book like how every intelligent woman goes dumb when they fall in love. She have gone under several situations and I expected her to learn from it nonetheless it just fueled her to prove that she is strong seemingly just want dive through without considering the current situations. Though I think its because family sheltered her and she never realizes the gravity of the situation. For the main character, just like how I said earlier, the author repeat the same scenario and it just shows how the main character developed in terms of strength but his attitude almost stays the same. The first thing to be noted is that this series follows the literary style of Japanese web novels. That means the fourth wall is broken a lot and the characters will make side comments directed at the reader. Overall, it reads a lot like a blog or a diary. That's why you'll see things like Arthur's POV when different characters narrate. The story telling itself is a mix of wuxia/xianxia and Japanese, meaning there are things like ki cores and absorbing energy from the atmosphere, but instead of ki, it's mana. This is an interesting premise, very well written. King Grey dies and is reborn fully cognizant of his past life. His new world includes a family full of love and support and that's something he has never had before. And the magic is close enough to what he is familiar with that he becomes a magical prodigy at age three. Which might have tipped us into a power fantasy (and that's still part of the story, actually), but what really grabbed me is how poignant it is for Art to cherish his family so much because it is more valuable than anything he had as king. There’s no way you can read T he Beginning After the End, Vol. 1 and not be eager to experience more of Arthur’s adventure, so for more The Beginning After the Endcontent, head to Tapas, where you can read the original webcomic, and stay tuned for news on the print edition of The Beginning After the End, Vol. 2!This is not the first time I'm reading this particular theme (reborn in a fantasy world with all memories and skills from previous life, as a baby), but man, this is well executed! I had a lot of fun reading this book, and I am very much looking forward to the rest of the series (currently waiting to get my hands on the audio format of book three). Zu der Geschichte kann ich noch nicht viel sagen, da wir erst ausführlich in die Welt und das Magiesystem eingeführt wurden und jede Menge Charaktere kennengelernt haben. Die Story ist dabei noch nicht so weit vorangeschritten. Aber ich bin gespannt, was uns noch erwartet und hoffe, dass Band 2 etwas dynamischer wird. As the years pass, Arthur becomes more and more comfortable in this world, positioning himself as a young but respected figure. However, deja-vu strikes as a war brews between Dicathen and the Vritra, a clan of banished deities now ruling over a faraway continent. Arthur must rise as a leader, despite his fear of becoming the war-hardened monster he once was in his past life. As the war rages on, Arthur discovers that he was not reborn to this world by chance… nor was he the only one. [1] Das hört sich theoretisch ziemlich cool an, aber Art findet es so gar nicht gut, dass er nun ein Kleinkind ist und seinen Eltern bedingungslos ausgeliefert ist. Der Geist einen Erwachsenen im Körper eines Säuglings, nicht unbedingt die Traumvorstellung für einen ehemaligen König. Aber Art ist ehrgeizig und arbeitet hart an sich. But while the first 2-3 books are fun progression lit, the author doesn't seem to get better at writing. The author uses familiar tropes of training montages, finding party members, discovering lost magical equipment, encounters with mysterious entities, being separated from family in tragedy, and stumbling into a vile rival, but they don't use them very smoothly. It feels very episodic, but not explicitly so, just skipping around like it's being retold competently by a pre-teen who read all of the book the day before. By book 4, it's starting to slog a little, but with a semi-exciting conclusion... but book 5 is just a glorified training montage. And the book has a weird MC with a weird romance that seems permanently awkward and uncomfortable, with basically 0 enjoyable moments. Maybe 1.

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