I hate it when characters die from mysterious illnesses. Hestia also died in her last turn.
Diana being this mental is kind of sad to me now, because it feels like she was made into a selfish villainess and she's being blamed for Kael depression and suicidal ideation. Blaming a woman for rejecting you is some real incel logic. Makes me glad Hestia (and Kael) have chosen to move on. While I think Heli could have done more, Diana rejected a lot of help and just bulldozed her way through norms thinking she was special. So she's about to reap what she sowed.
I won't say made into though. It's like she's playing victim. That she was the only one who is special so it was natural to be loved. That makes her arrogant enough to dismiss other's feelings.
I won't say made into though. It's like she's playing victim. That she was the only one who is special so it was natural to be loved. That makes her arrogant enough to dismiss other's feelings. Hana
I meant from an authorial perspective. Like why the author chose to write her like that. Obviously Diana has made all the wrong choices because she bought into being the chosen one. But it's interesting that this all went down only a short time after her marriage.
So either the author just decided to murder their manga cause they couldn't think of an ending - OR, this is the ending they thought of and they might need some help because too much Final Fantasy have led them to believe that fighting God is a plan.
I hate it when characters die from mysterious illnesses. Hestia also died in her last turn.
Diana being this mental is kind of sad to me now, because it feels like she was made into a selfish villainess and she's being blamed for Kael depression and suicidal ideation. Blaming a woman for rejecting you is some real incel logic. Makes me glad Hestia (and Kael) have chosen to move on. While I think Heli could have done more, Diana rejected a lot of help and just bulldozed her way through norms thinking she was special. So she's about to reap what she sowed.
I won't say made into though. It's like she's playing victim. That she was the only one who is special so it was natural to be loved. That makes her arrogant enough to dismiss other's feelings.
I meant from an authorial perspective. Like why the author chose to write her like that. Obviously Diana has made all the wrong choices because she bought into being the chosen one. But it's interesting that this all went down only a short time after her marriage.