This is definitely some spoilers, but I do sort of feel for Wise here. Being named after the man your mom cheated on your dad with is plenty rough, and her coming to terms that her mother isn't really evil so much as having serious issues with self-worth that are remedied with high-living without the means to afford it. That sort of hit close to home for me.
This is definitely some spoilers, but I do sort of feel for Wise here. Being named after the man your mom cheated on your dad with is plenty rough, and her coming to terms that her mother isn't really evil so much as having serious issues with self-worth that are remedied with high-living without the means to afford it. That sort of hit close to home for me.
Wise is definitely the best part of the series, but it's a pity she's not "main character" enough, because it really does focus too much on Oedipus-teasing to get into. (I do hate it less than imouto stuff, but it's still too bitter a pill to swallow.)
Wise is definitely the best part of the series, but it's a pity she's not "main character" enough, because it really does focus too much on Oedipus-teasing to get into. (I do hate it less than imouto stuff, but it's still too bitter a pill to swallow.)
I understand why they did that focus, given that Pochi is involved. But Pochi in general tends to include some rather bittersweet things (Ane Naru Mono, porn aside, is about an orphan who no one in his extended family wants to take care of and his sole caretaker, his uncle, is in the hospital with seemingly poor chances of recovery) and mixes them with a sexual element. Its sort of like Clive Barker (but with less weird sexual flaying) or David Cronenberg (but with less fleshy pistols penetrating a man's chest-VHR-vagina).
This is definitely some spoilers, but I do sort of feel for Wise here. Being named after the man your mom cheated on your dad with is plenty rough, and her coming to terms that her mother isn't really evil so much as having serious issues with self-worth that are remedied with high-living without the means to afford it. That sort of hit close to home for me.