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Manga Rec Thread

I came across an isekai that I was actually immensely pleasantly surprised by with "The Exiled Reincarnated Heavy Knight Is Unrivaled in Game Knowledge" which might actually be the only time I've seen someone both explain why someone who played a game might have better system knowledge than a society that lived it [that being that making a lot of mistakes for your build can be crippling or fatal if you're going out to be an adventurer or a soldier or something, and those are the people who are gonna rack up the most levels and thus be able to actually try shit out, so experimenting rather than going with proven things is risky when you don't have the ability to just role a new character or click a button to skill reset or whatever and you can't consult an online guide made by data miners] that made a fair degree of sense, and also actually was honest about the whole thing of "This class is actually bad" because his own efforts to minmax it just resulted in him being about as strong as a 90s/2000s anime adventure protagonist so he still struggles a fair bit.

Bro literally just said "Look I think armor tanking is really cool so I'm gonna see if I can jank up a way to make the build serviceable, not great, maybe not even really good, just serviceable, because now instead of being really good at the worst kind of tanking, it can also do pretty respectable damage" and it's actually depicted that way pretty consistently rather than "Woe is me, weak class, lemme just use this super obvious immediately available exploit to become super strong." and it works out pretty well. Fights often end up coming down to nicely drawn out brawls and clever tricks with positioning or taking risks or the environment as much as anything else, and he relies a reasonable bit on his team mates who are all pretty great too without making the mistake of going too far in the opposite direct and just being kind of a loser or a gimmick.

It's not exactly high class fair, but overall once it gets rolling and gets a few of the mandatory genre things out of the way [getting kicked out for having a shitty class and having a weird yandere cousin who wanted his familial position didn't super bring much to the table...but it's also kinda irrelevant fairly quickly, just felt like the author was obligated to have it and got it out of the way], it's actually pretty great to follow this brick shithouse and a cute clown rogue and their friends just going on adventures.

Also for some inexplicable reason Dollar-Store Shikamaru is here and he's somehow better at being Shikamaru than actual Shikamaru despite being a flaky guy with a bow.
 
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"The Exiled Reincarnated Heavy Knight Is Unrivaled in Game Knowledge"
Yeah, agreed whole heartedly. I really like the MC and his party (Luce especially) and the fact none of the party feels like an NPC follower. They have their own complex stuff going on and they're equally as important to what's happening as the MC. The fact a lot of major fights come down to the MC's info advantage and his ability to capitalize on small opportunities is great. Not a lot of protagonists in his position really need to think like that just to scrape out a win.
 
Sold me the moment I got to this.


EDIT: Okay, yeah, clown rogue is absolutely worth it. And honestly, I kinda wish there were more manga, especially Isekai manga, where the protagonist went for something as out-there as clown rogues.
Yeah, agreed whole heartedly. I really like the MC and his party (Luce especially) and the fact none of the party feels like an NPC follower. They have their own complex stuff going on and they're equally as important to what's happening as the MC. The fact a lot of major fights come down to the MC's info advantage and his ability to capitalize on small opportunities is great. Not a lot of protagonists in his position really need to think like that just to scrape out a win.
I'd actually say that it's less scraping out a win and more that he's "suited to the task at hand", shit's hard, not a cake walk and they do have to be clever, but it's really just immensely refreshing to have a protagonist who actually like...has to actually be in the fight so to speak. It's never a case of "Well let me just stomp the enemy into the ground and aura farm for a second" but at the same time there's never the problem of "The protagonist is completely fucking useless and just flails the entire fight or is a one note gimmick that's only helpful for [insert contrived reason]."

He's a tank with some CC and he can do some beefy damage if the fight goes the right way and he actually slugs it out and that is depressingly fucking rare these days across the board compared to "overpowered wank character" or "useless bitch who never actually improves."

Also yeah, Luce is peak. Honestly, there's a lot of peak. The most random fucking characters will be unbelievably great and super memorable.

When the plot decides to show up it's also super fun. The first truly big villain is a bit rough because IMHO it seems like the author struggled to hit his stride with a kinda "Detective Conan" style reveal that was a bit too ambitious but over all it was still solid on the fundamentals and the current arc shows a lot of refinement.
 
I'd actually say that it's less scraping out a win and more that he's "suited to the task at hand", shit's hard, not a cake walk and they do have to be clever, but it's really just immensely refreshing to have a protagonist who actually like...has to actually be in the fight so to speak. It's never a case of "Well let me just stomp the enemy into the ground and aura farm for a second" but at the same time there's never the problem of "The protagonist is completely fucking useless and just flails the entire fight or is a one note gimmick that's only helpful for [insert contrived reason]."

He's a tank with some CC and he can do some beefy damage if the fight goes the right way and he actually slugs it out and that is depressingly fucking rare these days across the board compared to "overpowered wank character" or "useless bitch who never actually improves."
I wonder how much of that owes to the types of games the authors enjoyed playing? It kinda feels like most of the "Isekai'd into a game" writers weren't actually all that big on playing games or were more used to MMO games.

Honestly, it was why I like Surviving the Game as a Barbarian—it genuinely feels like the guy was transported into a Darkest Dungeon-esque RPG instead of just the nth copycat of League of Legends or something.

...fuck, I dearly want a manga about a character reincarnating into a game as a ranger and becoming a sniper instead. It feels like there's a lot of potential there, especially if the ranger doesn't immediately get OP skills that lets them shoot arrows across the field and do infinite damage, and instead has to work to build up the strength to move up in bow poundage and skill/accuracy to land those hits.

EDIT: Mostly so that we have the eventual endgame of them sniping out a Boss using a Dragonslayer Bow or something similar.
 
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