Actually

chocobuun November 9, 2025 8:57 am

Reminds me of the game “12 minutes.” Surprisingly the plot is interesting. And ngl his revenge is actually the best cruel revenge he could’ve thought of, taking the dad’s loved one.

Spoilers:
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It’s a shorter story. The ending is kinda open, there’s still questions yet to be answered. What I’m actually curious about is the dad’s pov, like why exactly he acted that way. And why did is he so cruel to one family while so loving to the other, what made that difference. I don’t even think they went into full detail of the “dangerous work” they do.

Now the ML is messed up. You can definitely see how he ended up that way. He was abused, tortured with several weapons, made to eat like a dog on the floor. Same with his sister. He grew into a version of the dad. So it’s clear that the dad was the source of all the problems. Even the sister was also traumatized like the ML. She don’t give af about ML getting with the FL, she even supported it, as long as the dad was dead. We also don’t get much closure seeing the dad. He just has some heart attack or something and gets pulled away to be hospitalized and that’s it. I would’ve wanted to see more discussion at least between the dad and the ML or the FL. The dad deeply traumatized those siblings and neither got a real good ending. Which ngl I do feel sad/bad about. Cause these siblings were put through suffering only to end up alone. (Obviously FL shouldn’t have had to go through that too).

As for the ending, I’m surprised the ML let her go more than once. But he did show up at the end, to give her a handkerchief, and then walked away. And even when she loved/missed him, she did choose to leave. But I’m still wondering why he’s even there. It feels off that he would just come all that way and hardly do anything. If this ending were really about both of them letting go, it would’ve made more sense for him to let go during that farewell scene, not have him go to the country she’s in and then imply that?

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