I'm curious about MC's background. She mentioned she was once so thirsty she drank her own urine, and it seems she might have been emotionally abused by her teacher, who bought her discoveries in exchange for some sort of protection.
I happened to read in f******k some spoilers. Someone said that everything becomes alright between Kaiden and Ellisa. I just wanted to confirm if really its true. I wanted to ask the person if its true but i was too timid. I hope there's still no confirmation about it as to who the male lead is
Please let it not be true! That emperor is trash! Even going so far on injuring her! FL even says how a douchebag he is! Whatever his circumstances, it is not an excuse for his actions!
Ikr seriously i was shocked the person said something like they will grow to love each other and be together again.
Didn't part 2 of the novel just started? How in the world would they even know that unless they're the author themselves. Sounds like someone speculating/trolling in the comments section again like in that other manhwa.
Ugh FL hardly cares for emperor, it wouldn't make sense if they suddenly have "feelings for each other" since you know, she let him die back then?
I agree with you for the first part, but just want to say it, people ending up on the wrong path because of their past is much more common than you think.
I definitely don't disagree with you, the environment people grow up in can have a huge hand in shaping who they are. It's just that the way that the trope is applied always irks me. Having baggage and trauma doesn't always result in someone being a bad person, a lot of people have difficult lives and are still decent. the way the trope is often used is meant to absolve the character of any moral responsibility of their actions because they have a sad backstory. which I just don't agree with. past a certain age people are most definitely responsible for their own actions. Where being brought up as someone who never had to face the consequences of their actions or carry any real responsibility would most likely result in a serious lack of empathy and egotism, which also gives a plausible explanation to why this person would feel entitled enough to never accept that the harm they cause is their own fault. Also the trope is so overused I just think it's refreshing to see something new.
In the latest scanlated manhwa chapter (17), it ends on a cliffy with Leon's kidnapping. Is this... the emperor's doing or another party's?