Before diving into the events of the latest chapter, let’s set the stage. The previous ten chapters saw the transmigrated villain—now calling himself simply "Yuki" to distance his identity from the original character—executing a cold, calculated "hostile takeover" of the manga’s original plot.
The art is gorgeous, the pacing is tight, and the dialogue crackles with cold fury. Yuki has officially become one of the most unique isekai protagonists of the decade—not because he is powerful, but because he is reasonable . And in a genre defined by melodrama, reason is the deadliest weapon of all. Before diving into the events of the latest
Instead of following the crude, forceful methods of the original antagonist, the transmigrator uses . They recognize that the "hero" of the original NTR story was often flawed or neglectful. By treating the "victim" (the female lead) with genuine autonomy and respect—something the original script never allowed—the protagonist creates a narrative paradox . The "villain" becomes the only source of stability in a world designed to be chaotic. The Subversion of Betrayal Yuki has officially become one of the most
However, our protagonist refuses to play the part. By Chapter 82, he has successfully diverted several major "flags," but the "System" or the world’s narrative force is fighting back, trying to force the tragic ending at any cost. They recognize that the "hero" of the original
Yuki’s response is devastating.
By Chapter 81, Yuki hadn’t stolen a single heroine. He had, instead, dismantled every power structure that enabled the original NTR plot to exist. Chapter 82 is where the other shoe drops.