- #1
So he buys the alcohol and the water bubble or whatever when it's super cheap, right? And then he uses it the most efficient, effective and incredibly innovative way later, right? BUT HOW DID HE KNOW THAT HE WOULD BE ABLE TO DO ANY OF THAT???
It makes LITERALLY NO SENSE when you stop and think about it. Unless he could predict the future, he would have NO WAY to know that he would end up on the lifeboat or whatever at night surrounded by the fish creatures who fear fire and hence buying the alcohol would be useful. The water bubble is somewhat more forgivable because at least it was recommended as a useful item, but everything else?
The author wanted him to pull a clever one but forgot that it's not clever if it's literally just the hand of the author.
[collapse]Likewise, his "plans" in later arcs are mapped out to an impossible degree - he predicts what everyone is going to do down to the slightest action and then... the characters do exactly what he predicts. Again, it's not clever - it just feels like the hand of the author. High Energy QR Code suffers from this a little, but it's pulled off much better and the MC in that has to adapt his plans due to unforeseen circumstances etc.The mystery of how the game world and reality are connected is what kept me reading this - the arcs are fun to read if you disengage your brain and don't think too hard (or you'll have a melt down about the wonky logic - see above).Overall, a series that's easy to get swept away in while you're reading it, but if you stop to think, you'll find the flaws very quickly.