Home Parallel World Light Novelist Chapter 229 - 228: Forums Light Up With Theories Within Minutes of the Episode Ending!

Parallel World Light Novelist

Chapter 229 - 228: Forums Light Up With Theories Within Minutes of the Episode Ending!
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Chapter 229: Chapter 228: Forums Light Up With Theories Within Minutes of the Episode Ending!

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Nozomu blinked, his eyes fixed on the screen. As a veteran anime fan with years of experience, he could immediately tell what the first episode of this series was doing. It was planting seeds. Every single detail was a hook or foreshadowing.

Whether it was Soraki’s father, the mysterious Dr. Ichiki, Aoi, the hospital itself, or that conversation about the red and blue buttons, it was all deliberate.

There is a famous rule in storytelling: if a gun is mentioned in the first act, it must go off before the end. Someone like the Warrior of Love, who crafted a masterpiece like Madoka Magica, would not waste a single second on useless filler or pointless details.

Every frame was a clue. It reminded Nozomu of the style used by that other genius, Shiori Takahashi, in To the Moon. The first several Chapters of that novel were entirely dedicated to laying groundwork, only for the final Chapters to weave them together into a devastating payoff. Nozomu loved this style of writing because he had the patience to appreciate the slow burn.

He continued watching as the protagonist, Soraki, searched for anyone in the hospital who might remember him, desperate to reclaim his lost memories. On his way, he passed a painter who accidentally spilled white paint onto a man’s expensive suit.

His first day at the hospital yielded nothing, so Soraki returned the following morning to continue his inquiries.

Finally, he encountered a young man named Riku. Although Soraki had no memory of him, Riku greeted him with overwhelming warmth and enthusiasm.

Riku was Soraki’s childhood playmate. They had spent years together in this very hospital because Riku’s younger brother, Kakeru, suffered from an incurable disease known as LMD. Since they were all children trapped in a medical facility, they had become inseparable friends.

During their conversation, Riku’s voice suddenly turned low and somber. "Soraki... you’re asking around about Aoi, aren’t you?"

"Yeah," Soraki replied, his voice trembling slightly with hope and caution. "Where... where is she now?"

Nozomu sat up straight. The episode was halfway through, was the heroine, Aoi, finally going to make her entrance?

"She’s dead," Riku said, his voice steady as he looked Soraki in the eye. "She died seven years ago."

Nozomu’s jaw dropped.

’What? Aoi is dead? She’s just... gone?’

If she died seven years ago, then why was she listed as the main heroine in all the promotional materials for 7 Years From Now? How can a dead person be the lead of a show?

Nozomu suddenly felt a chill. The atmosphere of the animation had shifted from a nostalgic drama to something much more eerie and unsettling.

When Soraki and Riku met again the following day, Riku shared the dark rumors surrounding the hospital. He explained that after a mysterious explosion seven years ago, the facility had completely overhauled its staff. Furthermore, Riku had overheard a heated argument between a veteran doctor and an intern; the intern had accused the hospital of abandoning children like Kakeru who had LMD, essentially letting them die. The very next day, that intern was fired and somehow lost all memory of his time working there.

Riku was convinced the hospital was hiding a terrifying secret from the patients and their families.

Driven by Riku’s conviction and a deep-seated, instinctual trust Soraki felt for his old friend, the two decided to break into the hospital’s archives. They needed to find the truth about the events seven years ago and discover why the facility targeted children with LMD.

Inside the dark archive room, Riku found the files he was looking for, while Soraki stumbled upon his own medical history.

Seven years ago, Soraki had suffered from a life-threatening heart condition. He had received a heart transplant. The date of the surgery was April 1st, seven years ago. Nozomu’s heart skipped a beat. April 1st, seven years ago, Soraki got a new heart, was cured, and then lost all his memories. He looked at the next line in the file.

The donor for Soraki’s heart transplant... was Aoi.

Nozomu was completely hooked. So, for the last seven years, the heart beating in Soraki’s chest actually belonged to Aoi?

The animation flashed back to a memory of their childhood. "Next time, I’ll be the one to press the button for you. Next time... I’ll press the red one." 𝓯𝙧𝓮𝓮𝒘𝓮𝙗𝙣𝒐𝒗𝒆𝓵.𝓬𝓸𝒎

The image of the gentle, smiling girl faded into the cold reality of the medical records. Aoi, who had been suffering from the terminal LMD, chose to give her heart to Soraki upon her death so that he could live.

Nozomu paused to organize his thoughts.

First, this medical facility had gathered a group of sick children seven years ago. Among them, Riku’s brother Kakeru and the heroine Aoi were terminal LMD patients. Soraki, however, was a heart patient. Riku was perfectly healthy but hung around because of his brother.

So why did the opening of the story emphasize a promise between Aoi and Soraki to meet on April 1st, seven years later? Why was the show titled 7 Years From Now? Who is waiting for whom? Obviously, the title refers to Aoi... but how can a dead girl meet a living boy? And what was that explosion seven years ago?

Soraki received a heart on April 1st, left the hospital, and forgot everything.

This is a total brain-bender.

A casual viewer might just turn their brain off and wait for the show to explain itself, but Nozomu was a thinker. He hated unsolved mysteries; they made him feel like he had ants crawling under his skin. But the final minute of the episode had one more surprise in store.

As the boys were searching the archives, the hospital staff discovered them and cut the power. In the darkness, someone crept up behind them and knocked both Riku and Soraki unconscious with a blunt object.

Just before he lost consciousness, the animation emphasized that Soraki smelled a familiar, distinct fragrance.

It was the same scent he had noticed throughout the hospital, and the same scent as the medicine Dr. Ichiki had given him earlier. The screen faded to black. When Soraki finally opened his eyes, he was back in Dr. Ichiki’s clinic.

"Oh, you’re awake?" Ichiki asked with a warm, friendly smile.

"Where am I?" Soraki asked, his eyes hazy. His gaze drifted to the clock on the clinic wall. The date on the calendar next to the clock was March 29th. Soraki’s expression turned to one of utter disbelief and confusion. He and Riku had broken into the hospital on the night of March 31st.

"What day is it today?" Soraki asked, his voice trembling.

"It’s March 29th, of course," Ichiki replied, a strange look crossing his face.

The ending theme began to play softly.

Nozomu’s pupils dilated. ’Wait, they broke in on the 31st. He gets knocked out, wakes up, and it’s two days earlier?’

’What is this? This is not a pure romance at all! This is a high-stakes psychological mystery!’

’And what kind of cliffhanger is that? Dammit, Warrior of Love, you’re a madman!’

The moment the premiere ended, the anime community exploded. Forums and social media were flooded with theories.

"Did anyone catch that ending? Why is the protagonist back two days in the past? And why is he with Dr. Ichiki again?"

"I do not know, man. The amount of detail in this first episode is insane. My brain is about to melt."

"With Madoka, the weird stuff started in episode three. With this, it is episode one! I am so stressed out!"

"Honestly, are you guys blind? Have you learned nothing from Madoka Magica? You do not recognize this trope?"

"What trope?"

"Time travel! He wakes up and he’s back two days in the past. It is the exact same phenomenon as Homura Akemi’s time loops!"

"..."

"Holy crap, you’re right."

"Time loops? He’s using that mechanic again?"

"But it is different. In Madoka, it was magic. In 7 Years From Now, how is a normal high schooler looping through time?"

"Who cares how? It’s the Warrior of Love; he will make up some explanation. It’s a fantasy setting. You do not go into an isekai show and complain that the physics of the portal are scientifically inaccurate. Just go with the flow."

"So Soraki has the power to rewind time? Is that the hook?"

"I’m not sure, but the first episode already had me in tears. When I saw that medical record and realized Aoi gave him her heart... it was so beautiful and tragic. She was so kind."

"I still want to know if his amnesia is linked to the time-warping."

"I honestly thought this would be a boring teen romance. I was so wrong. I’m officially obsessed."

"I was so confused at first, but after reading these comments, it is starting to click. Thanks, guys!"

"I have a feeling the heroine’s death is not as simple as it looks. And that hospital is definitely evil."

The first episode was a masterclass in efficiency: 60% world-building and hooks, 20% character backstory, and 20% plot progression. Yet, the audience did not feel like it was dragging. This was largely because the flashbacks made Aoi such a likable character, only for the show to reveal she had been dead for seven years the moment the audience started to care about her.

Then, the show doubled down on the tragedy by revealing she died to save the protagonist. These layers of emotional manipulation had already left fans reeling.

While it was only the first episode and the truly tear-jerking moments were likely still far off, the hook was firmly set. Not just for Madoka fans, but for casual viewers as well.

The following day, the ratings for the premiere were released.

Average rating: 3.76%.

While it could not compare to the 6% peak of Madoka Magica’s finale, it was a phenomenal start. Since this was not a direct sequel, it could not perfectly inherit the previous show’s momentum. For a mid-budget production to pull these numbers on name-brand recognition alone was a massive win for the studio.

Compared to Madoka Magica’s 1% premiere, this was a dream start.

Industry veterans spent the night scouring forums to gauge the public’s sentiment. The plot and the mystery had successfully captured the audience’s curiosity.

Whether the ratings would climb higher or fall off would depend entirely on how the Warrior of Love handled the payoff.

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