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01-26-2023, 12:39 AM | #371 |
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KAMEN RIDER SABER EPISODE 14 - “MY HEART AND SOUL, DWELLING WITHIN THIS SWORD”
Solid episode, with a lot to recommend it, even if it’s still a very Saber approach to a plot-heavy episode. Lemme get the negative part out of the way first: this whole Calibur/Book Club plot continues to be first draft-level vague, with almost nothing specific motivating its tension this time out beyond our heroes’ desire for revenge and the inherent Villainy Is Bad ethos of this franchise designed to sell toys to Japanese children. Calibur’s constantly inadequate refrain of Universal Truth is now ably assisted by a boilerplate Humanity Sucks conviction, rendering his normally taciturn disinterest for the Sword of Logos into something almost insufferably generic. He’s just a sneering villain now, with nothing to say – but more verbose in his personal defense. That’s a bummer. The Book Club stuff is similarly a shrug, where I don’t understand what they want, why they want it, or what they’re planning on doing with. It’s been fourteen episodes, and their plan is still frustratingly opaque. Like, they want power! And it’ll help them rule the world! The end! That is… boy, it wouldn’t be good enough for this show’s first arc, let alone something more than a quarter of the way through. I’m beyond sick of them. But! Besides that? Pretty good episode. I like how the show honors Kento’s baked-in martyrdom by letting the entire cast shoulder the burden of his goals in his absence. It’s a testament to Kento’s character growth that his quest is forcefully picked up by the entire Sword of Logos, who visually honors him throughout the episode by using his Wonder Ride Books to combat the Book Club. It’s a nice little We See You moment by Touma and the gang, to literally carry Kento’s weight in this story. And to use it in an episode with wall-to-wall action? Even better! As this is clearly a two-parter, we’re in a fully action episode of Saber, for better or worse. I’m not as much of a fan of extended action sequences, but for those of you who want to see well-choreographed action across multiple locations with basically the entire cast, this episode is happy to exceed your expectations. There’s a bunch of clever tactics (I loved watching Kenzan, Slash, and Buster trade Wonder Ride Books to try and outwit the Book Club), and no shortage of exciting momentum shifts. It’s as solid a long-form TV fight as you’re likely to get. For me, though, the episode highlight was exactly what you’d think: Rintaro gets a power-up, flanked by an energetic Mei. It’s mostly the second half of that description that did it for me, if I’m honest. King Lion Daisenki is a neat form–I like the cannons and more flattened-out lion head and blue Dragvisor–but I’m mostly here for Mei’s exuberant commentary. It’s so fitting for Rintaro’s power-up, you know? He comes in all forthright and commanding as a swordsman, and Mei’s like YAY CAT ARMOR <3 in the background. It’s that mix of Rintaro’s serious professionalism and Mei’s genuine enthusiasm that makes the two of them endlessly fun to watch. I’m definitely finding little pleasures in this show, despite the main plot being a slog for me. (Even Rintaro’s new power-up mostly comes out of nowhere, as Rintaro and Mei just have to wait for it to finish baking, like it’s the world’s most book-shaped loaf of bread.) The teamwork of the cast this time out was exhilarating, and any one of them is compelling enough to keep my attention for an entire scene. But they’re in this story against villains who continuously fall beneath my sinking expectations, in service of an apocalypse that lacks any distinguishing characteristics. I need this part of the show to change! Soon! — PREFERS UNHAPPY ENDINGS Takayuki looked up into the sky, hoping things would be different. They weren’t. Still a glowing, gigantic book in the sky; still ringed by rotating flames. It had been almost a day since he’d first seen it, along with other shop owners in the building. They’d discussed what to do, but no one could quite decide on which city service might be responsible for dispelling the nuisance, or if closing up would be safer than waiting out the supernatural event. As the owner of a liquor store, Takayuki voted in favor of continuity of community: namely, keeping their various shops open as a way of helping their neighbors feel a little more normal in light of unprecedented events. (Secretly, he knew that folks would probably want to get hammered if an apocalypse was imminent, but that wasn’t the argument he thought might win over the room.) But that was a day ago, and the glowing book’s presence was starting to feel normal. Which was its own level of troubling. The longer it stayed there, not doing much of anything, the more worried he was getting. Previously, it had been something he thought would either disappear or kill them all; now, he was afraid of what this status quo might actually be. He was sweeping up in front of his store, when Desast wandered by. “Morning, Desast,” Takayuki greeted the demon swordsman. “Hey, Takayuki,” Desast responded as he meandered towards the storefront. Desast had become a routine presence along this block the last few months. He claimed to be a demon swordsman, but no one really knew who he was. Some folks thought he was an overly dedicated cosplayer. Some folks thought he was an eccentric retiree. Takayuki didn’t much care, and didn’t waste any curiosity on Desast’s story. If he wanted people to think he was a demon swordsman who was looking for worthy opponents, Takayuki didn’t much care. It was a nice distraction from the day, and that was good enough. “What do you make of that?” Takayuki gestured to the sky with his broom, as though there were any other possible topic of conversation that he could be referring to. Desast looked up briefly, then looked back at Takayuki. “Make of what?” “The–” Takayuki sputtered in astonishment, then caught his cool. “Oh, HA HA, very funny. You got me again. The book, funny guy. What do you think’s up with that gigantic book?” Desast tilted his head slightly to the side, his rictus mask typically unreadable. He stared at Takayuki for a moment, and then spoke. “What, that? Hell, man, that’s the book that’s gonna end the world. You guys are maybe an hour away from two worlds colliding, and the Megid gaining the power to fulfill their darkest, sickest desires. It ain’t gonna be a real good Tuesday for you chumps, I’ll tell you that much.” Desast’s attitude was… controversial in the neighborhood. Some folks took his prickly demeanor as confrontational, or at least annoying. Takayuki was one of many who was able to see past Desast’s lack of refinement and poor social skills, to the people-person underneath. He was caustic, but approachable; smart-mouthed, but genuine. He had a disarming way of connecting with people, despite the bizarre costume and mask. So while Desast’s comments might have seemed inappropriate to others, Takayuki understood what he was trying to do. Things were uncertain, and Desast was just trying to lighten the moment with some humor, gallows or not. Better to say the most ridiculous thing, and laugh at the absurdity of it, than focus on the more terrifying unknowns. Takayuki snickered at Desast’s joke, and got back to sweeping. “That’s a good one, Desast. You sure come up with the craziest crap.” “Whatever you say, Takayuki. I’m gonna get going, maybe see if there’s anyone to brawl with before the curtains come down on your whole world. See you tomorrow, if you’ve got one.” With that, the demon swordsman slouched off towards the park. Takayuki looked back up at the glowing book, a little more relieved than he was earlier. “You bet. See you tomorrow, Desast.”
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01-26-2023, 12:55 AM | #372 |
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So I really do enjoy this episode. While like you said the villains in Saber are lacking (Though I do feel the Book Club does reach their full potential later on as best they can), the heroes are absolutely on point.
From the quiet and somber start of Touma staring at Ikazuchi, to all of them getting super pumped up and handing out all of Kento's equipment to utilize. Then everyone making use of them as well as new tactics in the fight? Incredible. Everyone's spirit is on display here, everyone is fighting their hardest. And surprisingly no Dragonic Knight which... I didn't even mind? Especially when we get something as cool as Dragon Alangina. The idea that one of the Swordriver Rider's gets to use another one's main book? That's something really cool and seeing Touma dual wield and do combination fire and lightning attacks was great to see. I think the only part of the fight I sort of rolled my eyes at was the book swap between the veteran members? Cause while cool in concept... only Daishinji actually bothers to use his alternate book's abilities to clone himself. Granted, this is why I consider Slash one of my favorites, dude knows how to work those books. As for King Lion Daisenki... you basically hit the nail on the head of what I loved about this debut. You have Rintaro's earnest determination to fight his hardest, coupled alongside Mei cheering him on with all her heart/charisma, and you get a really good debut! The suit is pretty alright to me, I do like how it's a more tech and streamlined version of Fantastic Lion in a sense. It's very much a manufactured form compared to the more natural knightly look that Saber gets. And that might be why I prefer how it came about compared to Dragonic Knight? While I'm alright with Touma holding his determination and not giving up to access his magic book he got in Avalon, Rintaro's way of getting it is a lot easier to digest. You've got Rintaro just straight up asking "Make me a power-up" to Daishinji who complies and then proceeds to wait until the power up is done cooking. It just... works nicely for me. Also the story... oh man this story. I feel like you've got a real good handle on Desast and him writing wise. There was just a huge grin on my face as I kept reading further and further in, seeing about this sort of side story of a neighborhood that Desast just frequents that has no idea what his deal is but quite a few like him cause he's quirky. Great job, though I will offer a bit of criticism in that I think you renamed your guy at least once during this. |
01-26-2023, 01:04 AM | #373 |
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Everyone's spirit is on display here, everyone is fighting their hardest. And surprisingly no Dragonic Knight which... I didn't even mind? Especially when we get something as cool as Dragon Alangina. The idea that one of the Swordriver Rider's gets to use another one's main book? That's something really cool and seeing Touma dual wield and do combination fire and lightning attacks was great to see.
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Also the story... oh man this story. I feel like you've got a real good handle on Desast and him writing wise. There was just a huge grin on my face as I kept reading further and further in, seeing about this sort of side story of a neighborhood that Desast just frequents that has no idea what his deal is but quite a few like him cause he's quirky. Great job, though I will offer a bit of criticism in that I think you renamed your guy at least once during this.
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01-26-2023, 03:41 AM | #374 |
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And this is what King of Arthur ultimately culminated with. Rintaro getting his own power up.
And like En-chan, I have to say I kind of prefer it over Dragonic Knight in, oh, pretty much every way. It’s got a cooler jingle (even if I mishear “ju-oh rai-oh” as “ju-oh rider” and “King Lion Dai Change” as “King Lion Dai Henkei”.), a suit that fits its user’s aesthetic, even the toy makes it easier to press down on the cover to trigger announcements/finishers (which may sound petty, but let me tell you, I don’t know how many times I thought I was going to break Dragonic Knight by pushing its cover. That spring is very tight) But enough telling, more showing. Transcending nature is the blue mane clad in armour and roaring on the throne… And in other words, the cannon fire warrior! Furthermore, Lion Transformation! And like Dragonic Knight, the suit has its own version of the Booster, in the form of the King Lion Booster (basically, the same toy, but with a swapped out animal head and a two way switch allowing the sounds to swap out). As for the episode, all I can say is that you can’t go wrong with a good old fashioned free-for-all. Complete with some very simply part swaps to give us some new forms (and it makes clear that the form simulator’s having Saber and Blades lacking Espada’s golden faceplate is canon, and not a glitch. How intentional that is is up in the air). Next time, the most prominent writer and most prominent director for the Ultra Series come together to conclude this arc of the series. Why I’m bringing that up… well, you’ll see. |
01-26-2023, 01:47 PM | #375 |
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KAMEN RIDER SABER EPISODE 14 - “MY HEART AND SOUL, DWELLING WITHIN THIS SWORD”
Lemme get the negative part out of the way first: this whole Calibur/Book Club plot continues to be first draft-level vague, with almost nothing specific motivating its tension this time out beyond our heroes’ desire for revenge and the inherent Villainy Is Bad ethos of this franchise designed to sell toys to Japanese children. Calibur’s constantly inadequate refrain of Universal Truth is now ably assisted by a boilerplate Humanity Sucks conviction, rendering his normally taciturn disinterest for the Sword of Logos into something almost insufferably generic. He’s just a sneering villain now, with nothing to say – but more verbose in his personal defense. That’s a bummer. Quote:
I like how the show honors Kento’s baked-in martyrdom by letting the entire cast shoulder the burden of his goals in his absence. It’s a testament to Kento’s character growth that his quest is forcefully picked up by the entire Sword of Logos, who visually honors him throughout the episode by using his Wonder Ride Books to combat the Book Club. It’s a nice little We See You moment by Touma and the gang, to literally carry Kento’s weight in this story.
And to use it in an episode with wall-to-wall action? Even better! As this is clearly a two-parter, we’re in a fully action episode of Saber, for better or worse. I’m not as much of a fan of extended action sequences, but for those of you who want to see well-choreographed action across multiple locations with basically the entire cast, this episode is happy to exceed your expectations. There’s a bunch of clever tactics (I loved watching Kenzan, Slash, and Buster trade Wonder Ride Books to try and outwit the Book Club), and no shortage of exciting momentum shifts. It’s as solid a long-form TV fight as you’re likely to get. Quote:
For me, though, the episode highlight was exactly what you’d think: Rintaro gets a power-up, flanked by an energetic Mei. It’s mostly the second half of that description that did it for me, if I’m honest. King Lion Daisenki is a neat form–I like the cannons and more flattened-out lion head and blue Dragvisor–but I’m mostly here for Mei’s exuberant commentary. It’s so fitting for Rintaro’s power-up, you know? He comes in all forthright and commanding as a swordsman, and Mei’s like YAY CAT ARMOR <3 in the background. It’s that mix of Rintaro’s serious professionalism and Mei’s genuine enthusiasm that makes the two of them endlessly fun to watch.
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Despite the Sentai film runtime (although I've praised Ryusoulger Dinosaur Panic enough times now so it's totally possible to tell an awesome story in 22 minutes if you do it right), I think Bacht managed to make a strong impression as a villain with his nihilistic philosophy. He thinks he's the hero, cause unlike the other Swordsmen, he's willing to do what they won't. To defeat evil once and for all, by sacrificing good along with it. To return duality to singularity.
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01-26-2023, 02:17 PM | #376 |
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Some people can take any villain's words as gospel though, particularly with the help of that phrase, which paves the way of moral relativism and refusing to acknowledge which is right or wrong and deeming everything as determined by perspective like legitimately convincing that the villain thinking themseles as the heroes as having merits, using this to paint everyone as exactly the same (e.g. blaming the heroes for not understanding their perspective) or something.
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01-26-2023, 05:14 PM | #377 |
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As for the episode, all I can say is that you can?t go wrong with a good old fashioned free-for-all. Complete with some very simply part swaps to give us some new forms (and it makes clear that the form simulator?s having Saber and Blades lacking Espada?s golden faceplate is canon, and not a glitch. How intentional that is is up in the air).
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Well Kamijo does get explained more here, he seems to be set up as the type who was once noble but got maddened by certain revelation thus he changed to be hellbent on going after the universal truth. But the execution doesn't seem to be going well, as it's really not clear on what's going on with Kamijo (though I still wondered in the world what happened between Kento's dad, as Touma just sticks up to Kento's dad as well here, but it seems to be bias over Kento).
I definitely think he's coming back. (Tassel even says that Kento "vanished", so the show isn't trying to make you think Kento's actually dead.) I honestly suspect that Kento is Calibur right now, but we'll see how that all plays out.
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01-26-2023, 07:06 PM | #378 |
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Fish Sandwich also watched Kamen Rider Saber Episode 14
Two more reasons I'm not as big a Dragonic Knight fan as I should be: - It was always marketed as a set with King Lion Daisenki, and anytime I see those two in an image together, I realize King Lion Daisenki is even more up my alley. (A testament to how good the suits are, because again, Dragonic Knight is already amazing.) - Dragon Alangina! What a beautiful payoff! The way the Swordrivers work meant everyone immediately wanted to see one of those three Riders using the other two's main Books, and while we don't get both of them here, just Touma using Kento's Book works on so, so many levels. Storywise, it's obviously great. It's also a perfect conclusion to Touma's shtick of using all the story Books on top of that. (Plus, thanks to King of Arthur, Saber dual-wielding swords also has precedent.) And then design-wise, I mean, Lamp Do Alangina is gold, so it inherently looks the part of a big power-up, even though it wasn't particularly meant to. It's a very memorable little form. And apparently the fans aren't the only ones that thought so, because Bandai later went ahead and produced a set of gashapon figures seemingly inspired solely by how cool this stretch of Saber was. And like, yeah, it's pretty sweet! I think you can see it in how glowing my praise of it at the time was, but the series as a whole was REALLY starting to click into place for me as we reached the end of the year. Nothing but good things to say about it. From the whole 弔い合戦 vibe with everyone fighting to honor Kento, to the cool menace of Calibur, to just how much Ishida clearly loves using Mei (recall also Fantastic Lion's debut, with the comedic falling bit). As well as he should, because Mei is great! I mean, it's not even just in Ishida episodes, of course, but I feel like he in particular always seems to have extra fun directing those moments.
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01-26-2023, 07:09 PM | #379 |
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And like, yeah, it's pretty sweet! I think you can see it in how glowing my praise of it at the time was, but the series as a whole was REALLY starting to click into place for me as we reached the end of the year. Nothing but good things to say about it. From the whole 弔い合戦 vibe with everyone fighting to honor Kento, to the cool menace of Calibur, to just how much Ishida clearly loves using Mei (recall also Fantastic Lion's debut, with the comedic falling bit). As well as he should, because Mei is great! I mean, it's not even just in Ishida episodes, of course, but I feel like he in particular always seems to have extra fun directing those moments.
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01-26-2023, 10:21 PM | #380 |
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KAMEN RIDER SABER EPISODE 15 - “OUR RESOLUTION, AND WHAT LIES BEYOND IT”
*sigh* This was an episode of relentless revelations, and I didn’t give a shit about most of them. They were either so basic that there was no point holding them off until the 15th episode, or so convoluted that they’d’ve needed a full 15 episodes of fleshing out to be comprehensible. We’ll start with the So Basic one, since that’s the first to appear chronologically. The Book Club finally decides to explain their and Calibur’s scheme to the Sword of Logos, and it’s so unimpressive and generic as to be hilarious in retrospect that this show thought it was worth keeping secret. They’re after a map/instruction guide to the various Wonder Ride Books, which will allow them to rebuild the– whatever, the big book that started the world. Afterwards, they could reset reality to whatever they wanted, and rule everything. It’s the sort of plot that the show ABSOLUTELY should’ve had the villains talking about with each other for months, since not only does it not change the tension or tone of the series if you knew about it all along, it actually gives it enough contours to feel like there’s a deliberate strategy behind the various weekly battles. (I mean, not a ton of strategy. I definitely don’t understand how any of the Avalon stuff was supposed to help them with opening a portal?) Withholding crucial context just made weeks of episodes feel aimless and inconsequential from a plot standpoint, and the mystery left in its place was never intriguing enough to invest in. When we finally get to the end of the road with the Book Club, they’re just hitting all of the most basic beats of a tokusatsu villain: We need to get enough collectibles to get godlike power, and then we’ll make you all suffer. That’s what they had us waiting for, instead of providing the minimum amount of information. It’s a stunningly poor decision, in retrospect. As for the So Convoluted reveal, I… Jesus, I barely know where to start with Kamijo’s confession. So, he’s a dedicated member of the Sword of Logos. He’s good friends with Fukamiya. One day, Fukamiya decides that he needs to sacrifice Luna to bridge the regular world with Wonder World, and gain Universal Truth. Kamijo sees that this is both lunacy and heresy, and takes down Calibur. (Not pictured in this flashback are the armies of Megid the other Swordsmen fought, so I guess Calibur raised an army via delivery app or something?) This is all vaguely in line with what we’d been told, even if the Fukamiya stuff still seems very He Just Went Crazy. But, this is all tracking so far. Then. Then, Kamijo comes to the conclusion that Fukamiya didn’t just go crazy, he was made crazy… by the Sword of Logos. Somehow, someone in the organization was the REAL traitor, and Kamijo needed to become Calibur (?) in order to destroy the Sword of Logos (??) by allying with the despotic Megid (???) so that they all could end all life on Earth (????) which would also give Kamijo the secret of the traitor inside the Sword of Logos. Kamijo decided that any sacrifice – including literal sacrifices, like the one Fukamiya made of Luna, which Kamijo found so abhorrent that he needed to murder Fukamiya – were totally okay, as long as they were in the name of rooting out corruption. I honest to god do not understand any of this. There’s a thematic thread this revelation is reaching for (Kamijo lost everything by turning on his friends, while Touma gained everything by depending on his friends), and some plot-oriented The Villain Was Just Misguided horseshit, but none of it makes a single lick of sense. Kamijo’s villainy didn’t just happen, he’s been doing it for fifteen years. He happily worked with the Megid, who are legit apocalyptic monsters. He doesn’t care if any of his former friends are murdered in front of him, or by him. He doesn’t care if the entire world is destroyed, or at least subjugated by fiction monsters. All this guy was trying to do was find out which coworker screwed over his buddy. All of this is way out of proportion! You would’ve needed fifteen full episodes of insight and introspection and analysis to make Kamijo’s story seem like it's tethered to recognizable human motivations or psychology. To toss it into a two-minute monologue? You have got to be out of your goddamn mind. You had MONTHS of subplots where you could’ve explained this, debated it, unraveled it, etc. There’s barely any room for Touma to react to it, let alone try and understand the insanity of Kamijo’s reaction to his friend’s insanity. I don’t know that Kamijo’s story could’ve worked under the deftest hand, with the most runway, but it’s a complete misfire here. The rest of it was good, though! I liked all of the Mei and Sword of Logos stuff! Up until the Book Club saw their master plan disintegrating and went NBD and wandered off! That was kind of disappointing as a viewer! I’m very scared for the future of this show, you guys! — PROMISE IS A PENDULUM Of all the things that had changed for Mei over the last few months, the strangest wasn’t the proliferation of magical swordsmen, or the surprise appearances of fictional monsters, or even the secret society that lived at the North Pole. Those were all unusual, sure, but the strangest thing had to be that she’d started viewing Touma as dependable. She’d spent who knows how many late nights trying to prod Touma towards finishing a manuscript; an incalculable amount of time hounding him about deadlines. While he’d never exactly let her down, she’d begrudged him the impact his writerly habits had made on her life. But here she was, surveying the savage beatdown the Sword of Logos had just received, and praying for Touma to return from the Wonder World. She saw the wounds on Rintaro and the other swordsmen, and she saw the malevolent grins on the faces of the Megid. This was a fight that was going badly, and may have already been lost. The Sword of Logos had tried pushing past the Megid in order to prevent Calibur’s ascendance, but things were looking too grim. They needed Touma, and they needed him now. He’d made that promise, that he’d be there for them. Touma had his flaws – she kept meaning to talk to him about those hats – but when Touma made a promise, that was all there was to it. If they could only hold for Touma’s inevitable return from a floating book portal, after overcoming a maniacal traitor, they’d all be saved. But… it wasn’t just Touma who’d made that promise. She had, too. She’d fought to be included in Touma’s little group of sword buddies. The promise wasn’t that Touma would always be there for them. The promise was that they’d always be there for each other. She was counting on Touma to save them, but what about Touma? What was he counting on from them? Well, she knew exactly what Touma was counting on: he’d needed them to destroy the pillars empowering Calibur and the Megid’s plan for ultimate power. If they stopped fighting now, Touma’s battle against Calibur might be in vain. They needed Touma to fight for them, but Touma needed them to fight for him. So that was what they’d do. She couldn’t pick up a sword and fight a monster (yet), but she sure as hell knew how to badger a handsome young man into trying harder. If the months of threatening and cajoling a lanky daydreamer had taught her anything, it was exactly the right buttons to press when you needed someone to get across the finish line and deliver on their promises. If they needed Touma to get back safely and help them, they’d start by finishing their end of the fight. After all, they’d promised him.
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