Ugh, chapter 300 of 'Berserk' hit me like a freight train. I was emotionally wrecked for days after reading it. The Eclipse arc is brutal enough, but that specific chapter? It's where Casca suffers unimaginable trauma, and the Band of the Hawk is practically wiped out. Griffith's betrayal is so visceral—he sacrifices everyone to become Femto. Judeau and Pippin die protecting Casca, and Corkus gets slaughtered mid-sentence. Guts loses an arm and an eye trying to fight back, but it's hopeless. The panel where Griffith steps on Guts’ face lives rent-free in my nightmares. Miura’s art makes the horror feel too real, like you’re trapped in the nightmare with them. I still get chills thinking about how casually Griffith discards the people who loved him most.
What makes it worse is the aftermath. Guts cradling Casca, who’s broken beyond recognition, while the surviving members (barely anyone) are left to pick up the pieces. The sheer scale of loss here isn’t just physical—it’s the death of trust, camaraderie, and any hope for a peaceful future. It’s the kind of storytelling that scars you, in the best and worst ways possible.
From a thematic standpoint, chapter 300 of 'Berserk' isn’t just about death—it’s about annihilation. Griffith’s transformation into Femto requires the sacrifice of every member of the Band of the Hawk, and Miura doesn’t shy away from the gore. The death that stuck with me most was Judeau’s. He’s this skilled, kind-hearted mercenary who spends his last moments shielding Casca, even as he’s impaled. There’s a quiet tragedy in how he smiles at her, knowing it’s over. Pippin, the gentle giant, gets torn apart mid-fight, and Corkus, the cynical one, dies screaming. Even the horses aren’t spared! The Eclipse is a massacre disguised as destiny, and the chapter forces you to confront how powerless humanity is against the God Hand.
The real gut punch? Guts survives, but at what cost? He’s maimed, traumatized, and forced to witness Casca’s suffering. The chapter doesn’t just kill characters—it kills innocence. Griffith’s rebirth is framed as transcendent, but the cost is everyone’s humanity. It’s a masterpiece of horror, but I can’t reread it without feeling sick.
If you’ve made it to chapter 300 of 'Berserk,' you already know it’s not for the faint of heart. The Eclipse is where hope goes to die—literally. Griffith’s sacrifice wipes out nearly the entire Band of the Hawk, and the deaths are gruesome. Judeau, Pippin, and Corkus are standout casualties, each dying in ways that reflect their personalities. Judeau’s last act is protecting Casca; Pippin fights to the last breath. Casca’s fate is arguably worse than death—her mind shatters. Guts loses parts of himself trying to save her, and the betrayal is so visceral, it feels personal. Miura’s art makes every scream and splatter hauntingly beautiful. It’s a chapter that lingers, like a wound that won’t heal.
2026-06-14 15:35:26
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Zephyr is the last air dragon in existence. For a century and a half, she has searched for her mate. Finally, she decides to have a true dragon with Avani, the last earth dragon and only remaining male dragon. Her son, Ancalagon, is the last of the pure dragons.
Ishir is a Bengal tiger shifter. He became friends with Avani before he was captured and placed into an Arena. There he met Tana, the fire dragon. He befriended her, her hybrid daughter and eventually her Lycan mate. He has been working to rescue shifters and sometimes even missing humans as his job for years. It was during a meeting to discuss taking down a new Arena that Ishir met Zephyr and realized that he was mated to a dragon.
When Zephyr recognizes Ishir as her mate, she refuses to acknowledge him. After all this time, she finally finds her mate when she’s just had her son. But a dragon can’t stay away from their mate, and in a moment of weakness, she goes to Ishir, spending a night of passion more intense than anything she could have imagined.
However, when she returns home, she finds that her son has been kidnapped, taken by hunters. She begins searching for him, half crazed to protect him from the people who so willingly kill shifters.
When she finally finds her son, Oliver, the lead hunter makes an agreement with Zephyr. She will work for him in exchange for her son’s life. Now Zephyr will have to go against her very nature, becoming an assassin to kill those she is sworn to protect in order to save her son.
Can Ishir find Ancalagon, protect the shifters and save Zephyr from herself, or will she lose herself to save her son?
Hypatos
My life has always belonged to House Ares. Every battle, every scar, even the arm I lost, was given in its name. Loyalty forged me into a weapon, and I never questioned it… until I loved the one woman I could never claim. Losing her left me hollow, a man shaped by duty and nothing more. Then Saea steps into my world, sharp-tongued and fearless, seeing through every wall I’ve built. She doesn’t belong in my world, and I shouldn’t want her. But for the first time, I do. Even if choosing her means betraying everything I’ve ever sworn to protect.
Saea
I’ve always known my place, pouring drinks in an Olympian tavern where warriors and gods look right through me. Men like Hypatos don’t see women like me, even when I’ve been quietly watching, quietly caring, learning the weight of his grief from a distance. Wanting him is reckless. Believing he could ever want me back is worse. But when fate pulls us into the same fight, something changes. For the first time, I’m not invisible to him. For the first time, I dare to want more. A future where we stand as equals… if Olympus doesn’t destroy us first.
After three years of gathering herbs, I finally returned to Green-Pouch Valley.
But my master, Mr. Gu, was not there. On the ground, only a dark red pool of blood remained, soaking his cloth robes.
My senior brothers and sisters, usually so lively, were nowhere to be found.
My master's wife, Auntie Qin, sat collapsed beside the pool of blood. Her once-black hair was now mostly white, her voice a hoarse whisper as she called to me.
"Shuang'er, your master traded his life for the valley's ascension. You must go to the Nine Heavens and offer your thanks."
It was only then I understood. The Celestial Lord, Jun Che, in his quest to forge an immortal body for his mortal wife, had coveted my master's rare Celestial Bones of Healing.
He used the promise of ascension for everyone in Green-Pouch Valley as bait, then brutally tore the bones from my master's living body.
I was born with a strange affliction, a void where joy and sorrow should be. The others in the valley secretly called me a cold-blooded monster.
Now, as I stared at the blood-soaked robes of the man who had saved me and treated me like his own daughter, my expression remained blank.
"Auntie Qin, did Master do this willingly?"
Auntie Qin's eyes instantly reddened.
"Jun Che is the Celestial Lord. His word is heavenly law. How could we ever defy it?"
I gave a faint nod.
"If it was not what Master wanted, then Jun Che deserves to die."
Auntie Qin's face went pale with fright. She lunged forward and clutched my arm.
"Shuang'er, your master's last words were for you all to protect yourselves, not throw your lives away fighting an unwinnable war against the heavens."
I pried her fingers off one by one and looked up at the glittering, golden Celestial Realm beyond the clouds. A faint smile touched my lips.
"Auntie Qin, Master taught me that a healer's heart must be compassionate."
"But he never taught me that gods can't be killed."
Alexander III, the greatest king of the world died mysteriously at Babylon on 11th June 323 BC. But prior to his death, there was a prophecy that predicted the end of the greatest civilization. The story begins when Cassandra, the seer daughter of the priest of Parthenon gurgles out a prophecy that predicted the end of the greatest civilization. She along with her brother, Argus, the male hero, and beloved Fabian are set to travel to Delphi, the place where prophecies are unveiled. On the long perilous journey, they meet many adventures. In one of Cassandra would be kidnapped and Argus would wage a war. After many more hurdles, they reach Delphi only to get a shocking revelation. What was that prophecy? What would happen next?
He was a warrior. He was meant to protect the King and the Kingdom. His name brought the fear for life in warriors across the world. What he never thought he would become was the High King of two Emperors. Their Warrior, Their Saviour, Their Partner, Their Husband. He became all of it.
Uxie and Bane were two immortals that fell in love, it was strictly forbidden because one was a Goddess and the other an Anti-God. Their union created a child which was seen as a threat by the other Gods and was sentenced to death, but before the deed was done the baby's soul was sent away and it reincarnated in the body of a mortal. Follow his story as he unlocks his powers and faces the very one's that wants him dead.
The anticipation surrounding 'Bab 300' is wild! I dove into it expecting a straightforward narrative, but around the halfway mark, the story takes this sharp left turn that completely recontextualizes everything. The protagonist's mentor, who seemed like a benevolent guide, suddenly gets revealed as the architect of the entire conflict. It's not just a cheap shock—the groundwork was subtly laid through earlier dialogues and symbolic imagery. What blew my mind was how the twist forced me to reread earlier chapters, spotting clues I'd glossed over. The author plays with perspective so deftly; you realize you've been trusting an unreliable narrator all along.
Honestly, it reminded me of 'Attack on Titan's' later reveals—where the 'enemy' shifts definitions entirely. If you enjoy stories that reward careful reading with layered payoffs, this twist will hit hard. Just don't let anyone spoil it for you; the community's been buzzing nonstop about it since release.
The question about whether 'Bab 300' is the final chapter really depends on the context—there are so many stories out there with that numbering! If we're talking about a specific manga or novel series, I'd need to double-check the latest updates from the creators or publishing house. Some series wrap up neatly at round numbers, while others might stretch far beyond what readers expect.
I remember following 'Tower of God' for years, and its chapter count blew past 500 without slowing down. On the flip side, 'Attack on Titan' ended at chapter 139, which felt abrupt to some fans. It’s always a mix of the author’s vision and editorial decisions. Maybe 'Bab 300' is a finale, or maybe it’s just another milestone. Either way, I’d recommend looking up recent interviews or official announcements—they usually drop hints before the big goodbye!