Yep, 'Juubi no Shinju' wrapped up its run two years ago. The ending polarized fans—some loved its audacity, others wanted more closure for the romance subplot. The Juubi’s final form is nightmare fuel, blending body horror with cosmic themes. What stuck with me was the protagonist’s sacrifice; it’s ambiguous whether they truly won or just delayed the cycle. The author’s afterword hints at possible spin-offs, but the core story is definitively done. Worth reading if you enjoy flawed heroes and existential stakes.
I can confirm it’s finished. The story’s strength lies in its unpredictability—no cookie-cutter happy ending here. The Juubi’s influence spirals into a full-blown apocalypse before the final showdown, and the author isn’t afraid to kill off fan favorites. The last volume introduces a wild twist: the tree’s sapience, which reframes earlier conflicts brilliantly. Side novels expand on the lore, but the main plot stands complete at 22 volumes. Solid closure for a series this dark.
Completed and packed with action. 'Juubi no Shinju' ends with the Juubi’s defeat, but the cost is staggering—entire villages wiped out, allies turned to stone. The final battle spans three chapters, mixing taijutsu with surreal genjutsu sequences. Loose threads about the tree’s creators are left open, maybe for sequels. The last page implies the cycle might repeat, a fitting nod to the series’ themes of karma.
I’ve been following 'Juubi no Shinju' for a while, and it’s one of those stories that hooks you with its dark, intricate lore. The novel is indeed completed, wrapping up its epic tale of cursed power and shinobi wars. The final arcs delve deep into the Juubi’s origins, tying together threads from earlier volumes with a mix of brutal battles and philosophical twists. The author didn’t shy away from bleak endings for some characters, which fits the gritty tone.
What stands out is how the climax balances spectacle with emotional weight—the protagonist’s struggle against the Juubi’s corruption feels visceral. Side characters get meaningful resolutions too, especially the rogue ninja whose redemption arc ends tragically. The pacing tightens in the last third, avoiding the drag some long series face. If you like morally gray worlds where power comes at a cost, this finale delivers.
2025-06-11 19:31:29
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HUNJI: A Broken Wolf & the last witch of Andora - Book 4
Jwgstout
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***Completed*** can be read as a standalone book. please note posted chapters are currently unedited.Knight of the queen or not, I am the expendable one, the one that shouldn’t be here, and the one that shouldn’t be alive. By all accounts, I should have died 13 years ago. A question I always ask myself, every time my eyes open: why am I still alive? Why did the gods let that old priestess find me so many moons ago and bring me back from the dead? Why did they allow me to live?I still wonder what my role is in this story and believe me there is more to this story than any of us know. I can feel it, see it unfolding, almost taste it. The last three years have just been a prelude to something bigger, something yet unseen and unknown. Lamia and Mathias may be the main characters, but we all had a role, an important part to play. Unfortunately, the script of our lives had been hidden away or maybe it just hasn’t been written yet.****Sent on a quest by his beloved Queen Lamia; Hunji finds himself back at the beginning. The place where his old life ended, and where the goddess granted him a second chance. On the hunt for a witch, Hunji must face his past - A past that left him broken. When the goddess breathed new life into him, he took an oath to serve her. Now that promise is being tested.He has survived his past but it's the future that threatens to turn his world upside down. That and the little witch who he was sent to find, protect and bring home; is hellbent on throwing a curve ball at every plan he had.
To cure my half-sister's illness, my brother took my beast bone—all because I was a half-beast and had a strong self-healing ability.
Later, to make me suffer in her place, the tiger beast servant I had cared for joined forces with my brother and sent me straight into the Beast Den.
The tiger said I didn't deserve to be his master, and the one he wanted to protect was my sister.
In the end, I was tortured and died a terrible death.
When I opened my eyes again, I was back on the very day I had to choose my beast servant.
Devlin, while on the run from his grandfather's control, accidentally obtained a necklace without him knowing that in it was a captive fox. After returning, his girlfriend Anthea had a life-threatening accident, he wore that necklace for Anthea, also from that moment, the spirit of the nine-chasing fox entered Anthea's body. That fox's name is Renata, she wakes up with a new identity and lives in a completely different society from five hundred years ago.
After the accident Renata came back to life under the name Anthea, she didn't know anything about this girl so when she woke up everyone thought Renata was Anthea and thought Anthea lost her memory due to the accident.
Devlin discovers that his girlfriend has betrayed him so he decides to keep Anthea by his side to avenge her, but after a while, he discovers that Anthea has turned into a different person after waking up, all habits and events Her understanding changes but it's strange that he tolerates all these changes even to fall in love with this strange girl in this familiar appearance. He became suspicious and discovered that Anthea was not human, he had accidentally seen Renata's nine fox tails on a full moon night, but he did not panic and threw Renata away. This was the first time Renata had seen someone who saw her true form without seeing her as a monster.
The two of them gradually fell in love with each other, but the difference between humans and foxes caused them to go through a lot of hardship and suffering. Renata had never hoped to become a human like this. Where will their love go? Will Renata's sincere prayer move the angels to let her become human and live a normal human life?
A story between a nine-tailed fox and a human who met with a tragic fate led by their descendants. From the very beginning of their story, they're already bound to meet and fulfill Kagome's curse at the right time. Amaya and Hiroshima are the victim.
Kagome is the reason the entire fox tribe has been cursed to turn into a horrible beast every midnight and wild every full moon. But Amaya is the chosen one to break the curse since her body is where Kagome's spirit has been sleeping for a long time.
Will they be able to escape their world and learn to love each other despite the fact that they are not the same creature?
Awakening to a bewildering and astonishing reality, Seraphina found herself in an extraordinary situation: she had transmigrated into her own novel, stepping into the shoes of a character she had meticulously crafted.
The male lead in her story was notoriously elusive, challenging to approach, and the master of a harem. Seraphina, now Zephyrine Everlynn, unexpectedly found herself among the women in his harem.
It was utterly absurd! Promptly leaving the harem, Seraphina used her knowledge to help others win the male lead's heart, all for the right price.
But why did the male lead continuously find his way back to her?
For twenty years, Lyra Solis was the perfect daughter, the perfect socialite, and the perfect fiancée. But the moment the Solis family’s biological daughter, Seraphina, returned from the Outer Rim, Lyra’s life became an expired contract.
The betrayal was total: her parents turned their backs, and her fiancé—the man she was supposed to spend her life with—spent his sacred Alpha rut in the arms of her sister.
To seal Lyra’s fate, Seraphina committed the ultimate crime: she hacked Lyra’s terminal to submit a Genetic Pairing Application. Under Alpha Prime Interstellar Law, the match is permanent. The bond is unbreakable. And the recipient is random.
Lyra didn't cry. She didn't beg. She simply walked away from the only home she ever knew to meet the stranger the system had chained her to.
She expected a commoner. She expected a life of obscurity.
Instead, she found Valerius Thorne.
He is a vision of lethal beauty: ink-black hair, violet eyes, and nine shimmering silver tails that speak of a lineage long thought extinct. Trapped in a violent, drug-induced rut and hunted by assassins, the Nine-Tailed Prince of the Empire is at his most vulnerable. When he clings to Lyra, whispering, "My star, did you come to take me home?" Lyra says yes.
What Lyra doesn't know is that she is a Null-Frequency, the only genotype in the galaxy capable of taming the most powerful Alpha in existence.
The Solis family thinks they threw her to the wolves. They have no idea she’s coming back at the side of a God.
as of my last check, it's still ongoing. The author updates regularly, usually every week or two, which keeps the story fresh and exciting. The plot has reached some major arcs, but there are still unresolved threads and character developments hinted at in recent chapters. The fanbase is pretty active, discussing theories and predictions on forums. If you're looking for a completed read, this might test your patience, but the consistent updates make it worth sticking around. For similar completed works, 'The Empty Box and Zeroth Maria' offers a satisfying full story with deep psychological twists.
Man, 'Inu x Boku SS' takes me back! The original manga by Cocoa Fujiwara wrapped up in 2014 after 11 volumes, and yeah, it's fully completed. The story starts off as this quirky supernatural rom-com about Ririchiyo Shirakiin, a tsundere girl moving into a mansion with secret service agents—who happen to be ayakashi (spirits). But halfway through, it pulls a wild tonal shift into darker, more emotional territory, especially with the whole reincarnation arc. The anime adaptation covers the first half pretty faithfully but leaves out the later plot twists.
What I love is how Fujiwara blended humor and heartbreak—like, one minute you’re laughing at the chaotic dynamics between the characters, and the next, you’re gutted by Nobara’s backstory. The ending ties up most loose threads, though some fans debate whether the romance resolution felt rushed. Still, it’s a satisfying ride if you enjoy series that aren’t afraid to mix fluff with existential angst.