Souma fixes the broken bridge between worlds so no one else has to suffer like he did. He stays with his companions, and things are finally peaceful. It ends on a hopeful note, looking toward a future he built.
I read the web novel a while back and my memory's a bit fuzzy on the finer points, but the ending hinges on Souma's ultimate choice after he's basically become a god-like figure. He's gathered these insane powers across the demon realms, right? The big climax involves him using that accumulated strength not to dominate or destroy, but to fundamentally rewrite the rules connecting the worlds. He sets up a permanent, stable gateway system that allows for controlled travel and exchange, turning the previous chaotic invasions into a managed dialogue.
He doesn't take a throne or become a supreme ruler, which I found refreshing. Instead, he kind of steps back into a guardian role, ensuring balance. His relationships with the various heroines from the different realms get settled, but it's more of a 'life goes on together' vibe than a formal harem resolution. The final pages have this quiet, hopeful tone, with him watching people—humans and demons—finally interacting without immediate war, which felt like a fitting payoff to his whole journey from overpowered returnee to a true bridge between cultures.
Honestly, the ending left me a bit cold. It felt rushed, like the author just wanted to wrap things up. Souma becomes way too powerful way too fast in the last arc, and the final confrontation lacks the tension of the earlier survival struggles. All those unique dungeon mechanics and political maneuvering in the demon worlds just get bulldozed by his sheer stats. The 'rewriting the world's rules' solution came off as a deus ex machina to neatly tie up all conflicts. I was more invested in his dynamic with the fire demon princess early on, but her character just blends into the background by the finale. It's a functional conclusion, I guess, but the magic of the initial premise—this clever underdog using wits in a deadly environment—is totally gone by the end.
The way I interpreted the finale, it's less about a big battle and more about Souma rejecting the cyclical violence of the summoning system. He realizes that just being the strongest isn't enough; the real problem is the flawed connection between the worlds that forces conflict. His masterstroke is using his accumulated knowledge and power to dismantle that system from the inside and build something new. There's a poignant moment where he reflects on all the other 'Returnees' who came before him and failed or became tyrants, and he chooses a different path. The last scene with him simply walking through a newly peaceful border town, unrecognized by the people going about their day, hit me hard. It’s a quiet, earned retirement for someone who carried the weight of two worlds.
2026-07-11 13:37:34
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