By Harunori Biyori and Hitaki Yuu. Released in Japan as “Otome Game no Heroine de Saikyō Survival” by TO Books. Released in North America by J-Novel Club. Translated by Camilla L.
Apparently, according to the afterword, having a volume that LOOKS like it’s going to be a typical otome game “nobles at the academy” book and then not having it be that at all is a habit with this author. In my last review I mentioned that I would like some academy hijinks and a few less stat screens, and I absolutely did not get my wish. In fact, there was apparently more academy content in the webnovel version that was cut out, in order that we could add more fights. Because, rest assured, this series still knows what its readers really wants, and that’s – no, not stat screens – pages and pages of Alia fighting and brutally murdering many, many, many bad guys. They can be traitorous knights, zombie villagers, or vampire demons, and none of that matters. If they are threatening Elena, they are going to die. That said, there really are an awful lot of them, and worst of all, they seem to have a plan…
We are now finally at the start of the game. Elena is there, with Alia as her aide and bodyguard. Clara is there, destroying her life and health in order to try to figure out a way to be with the man she loves (surviving has become secondary). Karla is there, and she’s still trying to live her best life, which is to say having a double-murder with Alia in the smoking remains of the world. Elvan is there, and boy, he’s a wet rag, isn’t he? And Alicia is there, which might be surprising, given Alia *is* Alicia. But another Alicia is there, and even though she’s not quite the right one, she’s still doing her best to get with all those otome game hotties. And if that means that she ends up destroying the actual game plot, oh well! As for the kingdom itself, well, political assassinations, kidnapping, and upheaval. You know how it is.
There is not quite a “the bad guys win” ending at the end of this volume, but the good guys certainly are having a tough time. I have to admit that I was a bit disappointed that the fake Alicia was not one of the hundred or so people that Alia slaughters in this book, because my god, not only is she annoying, but she’s unintentionally doing what the kingdom’s enemies are trying to do deliberately – weaken the crown prince and make him a wussy puppet they can control. Elena has been emboldened by her encounters with Alia, and cares deeply about the kingdom, so all those who want to manipulate everything for their own ends think she’s a horrible potential ruler. As such, they send assassins, they send kidnappers, and even the demons are in on the fun. Half this book may just be Alia cutting folks, but there’s a good reason for it.
So Elena and Alia are not dead, but they’re not in a great place right now! This remains a fun series, though folks who want standard otome game villainess stuff might look elsewhere. Alia has murdered the typical story in its sleep.
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