The ending of 'I Blue: Reincarnated as a Cursed Crit-Based Swordwoman' wraps up with a brutal but poetic final battle. Blue, the protagonist, confronts the god who cursed her in a dimension-bending fight where every strike carries the weight of her journey. Her crit-based abilities peak at 100% efficiency, allowing her to land one perfect hit that shatters the god’s core. The curse lifts, but not without cost—her body begins to fade as the system that bound her collapses. In her last moments, she smiles, knowing her sacrifice freed countless others from the same fate. The epilogue shows her legacy: a new generation of warriors inspired by her reckless brilliance, wielding swords with her signature crimson glow.
Fans of bittersweet endings will adore how 'I Blue' concludes. Blue doesn’t get a fairy-tale resolution; she earns something messier and more human. After beheading the Demon King, her curse triggers one last time—instead of dying, she’s reborn as an ordinary girl in modern Tokyo. All her skills remain, but without the system’s interface, she’s just a weirdly talented kendo student.
The twist? Fragments of her past life bleed through. School rivals inexplicably fight like dungeon monsters, and her wooden practice sword occasionally crits hard enough to splinter concrete. The final scene shows her staring at her reflection, recognizing the scars beneath her uniform. She grins—not the cursed weapon’s manic battle-smile, but a genuine expression of joy. The message is clear: she’s free to redefine herself beyond the game-like rules that once controlled her.
What lingers is the implication that the ‘curse’ was never purely negative. Her brutal journey forged resilience that transcends worlds. When a classmate asks why she trains so obsessively, Blue simply says, ‘Old habits.’ The ending leaves her future open, but that ambivalence feels earned after 200 chapters of forced determinism.
I’ve analyzed 'I Blue' like a puzzle, and its ending is a masterpiece of subverted expectations. Blue’s entire arc revolves around breaking free from her curse’s RNG mechanics, but the finale flips this. Instead of removing the crit system, she weaponizes its instability. During the climactic duel against the Void Serpent, she deliberately chains low-probability crits, creating a feedback loop that destabilizes reality itself.
Her final act isn’t a traditional victory. She merges with the system, becoming a sentient algorithm that judges battles across dimensions. The last chapter reveals glimpses of her influence—a gladiator in another world suddenly landing improbable critical hits, a nameless swordswoman hearing whispers of ‘Blue’ during death’s door. It’s less about closure and more about evolution, turning a personal curse into a universal combat mechanic.
The author leaves subtle clues about cyclical rebirth. Blue’s sword reappears in a museum exhibit centuries later, its edge still glowing faintly. A child with eerily similar scars visits it daily, suggesting the curse—or perhaps Blue’s consciousness—isn’t truly gone. This meta-narrative about perpetual recurrence elevates what could’ve been a standard power fantasy into something philosophically charged.
2025-06-13 09:42:01
8
Lihat Semua Jawaban
Pindai kode untuk mengunduh Aplikasi
Buku Terkait
I Was Reborn As The Most Powerful Princess In History?!
heienzeya
9.7
18.6K
A witch who has lived for thousands of years has grown bored with her own life and decided to leave it. Since she is an immortal, her soul cannot leave the world.
However, what she can do is transfer her soul to another body.
By a stroke of luck, she happens to enter the body of a princess.
She was considered a miracle because when the Empress gave birth to her, the princess instantly died, along with the Empress.
What the witch didn't know was that she has entered such a predicament.
She has to endure the love of the cruel Emperor and possessiveness of the crazy twin princes!
What will her life be at the hands of such a loving family?
In addition, it seems that this body contains mana that was lost in the royal family centuries ago!
A Luna was reincarnated in two separate bodies, and her fate was divided as a result of the curse that she carries from the past. One of the bodies will usher in an era of tranquility for the human race, while the second will usher in an era of calamity for her kind!
However, to make the soul whole again, One of the two bodies needs to give up her life to save the other; otherwise, both of them would perish. So, who would die for who, and why?
My husband was a Gold dragon. So was I. Yet I gave birth to a small Ice Blue dragon.
Then came the news: my younger half-sister had borne a Gold dragon for his younger brother. Her fame spread like wildfire.
Drakon Vexis, the Crown Prince, flew into a fury. He slaughtered my child. He threw me into the frozen dungeons, where I was tortured and starved until I breathed my last.
When I opened my eyes again, I had returned to the day of my coming-of-age ceremony—the day the dragon court chose its brides.
Without hesitation, Drakon chose my sister.
I knew then. He had been reborn too.
Evy was a simple-minded girl. If there's work she's there.
Evy is a known workaholic. She works day and night, dedicating each of her waking hours to her jobs and making sure that she reaches the deadline.
On the day of her birthday, her body gave up and she died alone from exhaustion.
Upon receiving the chance of a new life, she was reincarnated as the daughter of the Duke of Polvaros and acquired the prose of living a comfortable life ahead of her.
Only she doesn't want that. She wants to work.
Even if it's being a maid, a hired killer, or an adventurer. She will do it.
The only thing wrong with Evy is that she has no concept of reincarnation or being isekaid. In her head, she was kidnapped to a faraway land… stranded in a place far away from Japan. So she has to learn things as she goes with as little knowledge as anyone else.
Having no sense of ever knowing that she was living in fantasy nor knowing the destruction that lies ahead in the future. Evy will do her best to live the life she wanted and surprise a couple of people on the way. Unbeknownst to her, all her actions will make a ripple. Whether they be for the better or worse.... Evy has no clue.
After failing to win the hearts of the first three targets, I decide to get engaged to Natalia Stone, the paralyzed heiress of the Stone family.
Soon, I use all of my points just to swap for Natalia's ability to stand up once again.
But the first thing Natalie does after recovering from her paralysis is to cancel the engagement with me. After that, she gives Irving Schmidt the grandest and most eye-catching wedding that will take place on the cruise.
At the wedding venue, all four of my targets stare at Irving with love and adoration in their eyes.
Suddenly, I feel like going home, so I jump into the sea without hesitation.
But when my body plunges into the sea, four silhouettes can be seen rushing toward me. Regret and fear are written on their faces.
I'm the fake heiress of a wealthy family. The system has given me three conquest targets to choose.
As long as the affection score belonging to any of them becomes full, I can change my predestined death at the age of 23.
But I've completely failed in my mission. The conquest targets have fallen for the true heiress, Evelyn Swanson, who has reunited with the family at the age of 18. As long as Evelyn says something, they can easily aim their malice and hatred at me.
That's why I choose to take my own life in advance.
Strangely enough, everyone is filled with remorse after I die.
In 'I Blue: Reincarnated as a Cursed Crit-Based Swordwoman', the MC's curse is a double-edged sword—literally. It grants her insane critical hit rates, making her attacks unpredictable and devastating, but it comes at a brutal cost. Her body deteriorates with each crit, bones cracking and muscles tearing from the sheer force. The more she relies on it, the closer she gets to becoming a shattered husk. What’s worse? The curse feeds on her emotions. Anger fuels its power but accelerates the damage. She’s trapped in a cycle: fight to survive, but survival means self-destruction. The curse also isolates her—others fear her uncontrollable bursts of power, leaving her lonelier with each battle.
I just finished 'The Swordswoman's Revenge Story After Rebirth' last night, and that ending hit hard. The protagonist finally corners the emperor who betrayed her in their past life, but instead of just killing him, she exposes all his crimes to the entire court. The way she uses his own political schemes against him is pure genius - she turns his noble allies into witnesses against him. In the final duel, she doesn't even use her sword at first; she defeats him with the martial arts style he taught her in their previous life, which is such poetic justice. When she does strike the killing blow, it's not with rage but cold precision. The last scene shows her founding a new martial arts school, training orphans to break the cycle of revenge that consumed her.