276°
Posted 20 hours ago

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

£9.9£99Clearance
ZTS2023's avatar
Shared by
ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
82
63

About this deal

As it stands right now, the world has a lot more room to grow and is fully imagined in the later books.

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). 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. So I try to join with facebook but it messes up and I'm like "Why am I even trying to keep on reading this.A former King in both martial strength and authority, thrown across time and space into a realm of who knows where and when. Arthur is a “genius” in this world, thanks to the memory of his past life, but he certainly can’t tell his parents that.

Together with Solo Leveling, these two manhwa are what introduced me to this genre and to the world of web comics. It does not look like it is going to be the most original ever or the characters are going to be specially bright by themselves. Der Geist einen Erwachsenen im Körper eines Säuglings, nicht unbedingt die Traumvorstellung für einen ehemaligen König.Ansonsten sind die Zeichnungen völlig ausreichend, der Hintergrund ist oft nicht vorhanden und der Fokus liegt auf den Charakteren und der Mimik und Gestik. As you can imagine this led to some hilarious scenes and also contributed to some very interesting character dynamics. However, I think wanna discontinue reading this one and maybe someday I'll pick this up again if I forgot it.

With the help of a lost elf princess and the Elven Kingdom of Elenoir, Arthur begins his long journey to find his true place in the world. Equipped with the knowledge of a powerful king in his mid-thirties, Arthur navigates his new life as the magic-wielding child of two retired adventurers and gains purpose through each of his experiences—something he lacked in his previous life.The humor is pervasive but didn’t resonate with me, that might be another reason I struggled to enjoy this. I am in disbelief in how the conflict arises and how it sometimes easily resolves when the Main Character arrives. If the author had either explained the process of these bonds a little more emotionally, or had taken a little more time to develop them on the page, it would have been much less irritating. Without these cookies, we won't know if you have any performance-related issues that we may be able to address. The story isn't quite what I had expected due to all the chatter about it, and it's nice to be pleasantly surprised.

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. A powerful king is reincarnated into the body of a baby boy and is raised by brand new parents in a world that he knows nothing about. He was a King on earth who spent his entire life fighting for his country (kings on his previous world were mainly champions and didn't really govern). The only part I was not a big fan of was that sometimes the lines of the illustrations looked blurry, but I don’t know if it’s due to this drawing style or just a printing issue. The MC's new technique feels like a deux ex machina despite the fact that the technique could have been shown to result from the "on-page" training that the author does show us!There were a few minor spelling and grammar goofs, but they didn't detract from the reading experience. 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. But the most important of Arthur’s lessons comes in the form of learning about this world of magic—an intriguing system that is just as fascinating to the reader as it is to Arthur. Once as a baby he was trying to meditate to build his mana core, and his mother walked in thinking he crapped his diaper, which it turned out he did. I get frustrated with lack of character development, either it is the supporting or the sub-villains characters and even the main character, I don't know it is because there are still on their teenage years and puberty is still in their system.

Asda Great Deal

Free UK shipping. 15 day free returns.
Community Updates
*So you can easily identify outgoing links on our site, we've marked them with an "*" symbol. Links on our site are monetised, but this never affects which deals get posted. Find more info in our FAQs and About Us page.
New Comment