Murabito Tensei: Saikyou no Slow Life - Vol. 4 Ch. 16

@Yamibi: Yeah. It's only bad in this chapter and not down right awful anymore. It improved.

"We should just kill those pigs..." We've got ourselves a self-insert here.
 
@Yamibi
for a slice-of-life genre story is a plot actually even necessary? Since its basically just about his day to day life and the people he meets...

And by the way is it just me or did those "tea cakes" look like rolls of tape? and who refers to themselves as sire?
 
@rafaelse @sleepymonkey
It's actually baumkuchen
Baum-Kuchen-8.jpg
 
That image at the end was nice, showing a lot of different Isekai characters.
From Right to left
Shield Hero
Sword Reincarnation.
Lazy Vampire
Re Monster
Skeleton Reincarnation
Yasei no Last Boss Arawareta!

I can't recognize the Fluffy and the guy sitting on the floor, or the lion looking thing.
 
Those first pages like what, hey where is captain idk lemme just go look for him next page immediately find him then how did noone find him!!
 
@Aichan - Sire is just an archaic term for a parental figure. Like, a king is the sire (father) of his kingdom, a vampire is the sire (parent) of anyone he directly turned into a vampire, in horse or dog breeding you have the sire (father) and the dam (mother), and so on. Basically, with those four guys being the heads of the mafia families, calling the old dude "sire" is the same as calling him "the godfather."
 
so the old man's like the boss of the bosses? shit, he's....uh...a Vongola?

okay i'll show myself out for that bad joke
 
@chibit fluffy is from skeleton reincarnation

@dharman Rou from Re:Monster, but depending on his evolution his prefix changes. Goburou for goblin then Aporou for Apostle or some shit. Don't remember all his names, just Rou
 
@CelticMutt

While I do understand your point, I still disagree with the usage here. The way you use 'sire' is by adding possessive noun, such as "my sire" referring to "my father" or "his sire" referring to "his father". Or as a verb, such as 'sired', "He sired me" or "His actions sired the formation of the kingdom". 'Sire' without either refers specifically to a ruler figure, such as the king, the emperor or the prince of a principality.

It is the same reason why you don't call your school teacher or your superior officer 'Sir Roberts' even though you often call him with sir, such as "I fell asleep, sir". It is because "Sir *name*" is specifically reserved to refer to knights.
 

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