I'll Tell the Truth

I'll Tell the Truth

by (japan) Yuki Shinichiro

Length:
82Kwords14chapters
Latest:
Ch. 14List of Sources
Activity:
Updated 2y agoScraped 2d ago
1Comments
90Favorites
0QD Score

About This Novel

Shinichiro Yuki, a rising star in the world of Japanese reasoning, sharply explores modern life from the perspective of Generation Z, deeply describing the traps of the Internet age and the horrors of human psychology. Can you see through the "small inconsistencies" and "big madness" hidden in daily life? "Interviews with the Tragedy": A part-time college student engaged in family tutoring noticed "mutations" in a certain family... "Dating App": A father who was worried that his daughter would fall into a social quagmire could not refuse the encounter on the dating app and began to carry out subversive actions... "Pandora": A couple who suffered from infertility finally welcomed their child. At this time, another daughter who claimed that "I was born through your sperm" suddenly appeared. What cruel truth is hidden in Pandora's box? "Triangle": The threesome were in high spirits at a remote reception. Who would have thought that the "reunion" after a long separation would be full of murderous intent... "Please forward": A primary school student who dreamed of becoming a video blogger and grew up on the island was alienated by the islanders after a certain case occurred...

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Official(1)Scraped 5d ago

EE
Ee0000 Aya10mo ago

good

Some of the settings are interesting, but after reading it, you will feel that it is an easy-to-summary story, and the logic of most of the characters' actions is not normal: in order to scare the daughter who was suspected of going astray, he killed seven people, oh, so I know why your daughter went astray because you are not normal; you were cuckolded, arranged a bunch of things with your friends roundaboutly, and then killed people, and finally went in hand in hand with your friends, right? It's really about loyalty; there is also a primary school student live broadcasting this story. I feel that the primary school student's thinking is no different from that of adults. I quite like the third story, which seems to be full of humanity, but does the fact that the protagonist and the suspect look alike hint at a dark possibility?

1

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