Zom 100 Bucket List of the Dead Vol. 9 by Haro Aso Goodreads
Zom 100: Bucket List of the Dead, Vol. 9
Akira's life, who continued to work endlessly in a heartfelt company, had lost his personal brilliance. However, when Zombie Apocalypse attacks a large city, he is driven by the urge to exist for himself. Right now, Akira has a chance to handle all the list of 100 lists. One day, Akira and his crew suddenly heard an announcement, "Akira, I will die as it is."
Akira and their crew heard the announcement of the vaccine in the near future, and headed to Osaka for the investigation. However, Dotonbori's zombies were not ordinary zombies. Takemina, a friend of Akira and Kencho's research institute, also comes to support the crew. The three revive their old dreams. Discover a bar together and get financial success! What is the economy of zombie apocalypse?
Page 176, smooth cover
Published in the first edition of October 19, 2021
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Haro Aso
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416 Review 35 Comments Search by the word review Display 1 to 30 out of 35 reviews 2. 311 Review 200 SubscribersThe crew goes to Osaka in search of a zombie vaccine, where both zombies and heroes are raising the hurdles. When you need a financial magic to make the best phone, your friend Takemina will help you, but capitalism is greedy.
There is no doubt that the latter is the best philosophical discussion in Zom 100. Zom 100's philosophical discussions were different, but this part was very original and interesting.
The zombies have not evolved. The zombies have not evolved. The zombies are not evolving, so it's just a ferocious. Even if everything is over and everything goes well, even if you do almost nothing for the zombie, it is meaningless to confuse the situation, but it is a very fun way.
Osaka lives in canned food. As a result, an advanced system led by the boss of the cans factory and the hig h-socity group living in the castle is born, taxing taxes, and attracting casino workers by commitment to wealth. This group is regarded as the only source of zombie vaccine of heroes.
In order to get ourselves, men open the bar and recruit Takemin, a little hard to understand, who understands profits. I really like his character. Including the fact that he is also in a long line of disillusioned people we meet every day (Bonus Point on Lube Goldberg joke).
By the way, philosophically, is it fan service to see "imaginary scenery" when the guys ask the girls to serve drinks in Frank Bikinis and the girls refuse (poor thing, it's funny here too)? This is a lot like "let's have cake and pie" but I appreciate that BI is as greedy as Shizuka. At least in the art, all the details are worked out.
After the boys realize they can't control the bar, they fall into the casino. This is both a cautionary fairy tale and one of those deadly "all or nothing" games that can't be based on pure chance. Nobody pays attention to this.
This is the first sign that the threads of the story start to pull, and instead of attracting a lot of attention, it starts to slowly slow down. Then the bar becomes popular thanks to various interesting tricks, a rowdy night out changes the pace pleasantly, and all this leads to a not-so-expected heel turn.
But one thing that surprises me is who is involved in this, and from here the story starts to roll naturally. The idea that Akira blew his comrades to bits gives no time for rest, and the author, who tries to justify everything, probably knows that.
They quickly dismiss the idea that he was simply deceiving the highest leadership, making him a literal traitor and fool. As for whether it's capitalism or not, it kind of negates all the character development that's been worked on up to this point.
The idea is only mentioned for a few pages, and it's completely flat. I'm glad they didn't take the obvious route and ask a newbie to do the blowup, but I can't say that choosing a more unexpected option would automatically make something better.
The other storylines are good. I particularly like this manga, but I'm rarely moved by it. Of course, the current plot about capitalism eating our planet alive isn't unwanted, but it's also heavy and unfinished at the same time.
3 stars - The attempt is commendable, but the execution leaves a lot to be desired, and does a fair bit of damage to what's already been done.