How Does The Villain Of Destiny Raw End?

2026-04-05 00:57:02 310
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4 Answers

Flynn
Flynn
2026-04-06 16:54:03
Man, the ending of 'The Villain of Destiny' raw hit me like a ton of bricks—I stayed up way too late binge-reading the final chapters. The protagonist, who'd been playing this intricate game of manipulation, finally gets cornered by his own schemes. There's this brutal confrontation where all his lies unravel, and the people he betrayed turn on him. But here's the kicker: instead of a redemption arc, the author doubles down on his villainy. He goes out in a blaze of chaos, taking down half the cast with him in a final 'if I can't win, nobody can' move. The last panel is just silence and smoke, with one survivor staring at the wreckage. It's bleak, but weirdly satisfying for a story that never pretended to be about good guys.

What stuck with me was how the raw version didn't soften anything for international audiences. The cultural nuances in the dialogue—especially how the villain quotes classical poetry while burning bridges—got diluted in official translations. I actually compared fan scans to the licensed version, and the raw's ending hits harder because the insults are more visceral. That untranslatable wordplay when he curses his former ally? Chef's kiss.
Titus
Titus
2026-04-10 22:07:34
That ending lives rent-free in my head. The villain's last monologue breaks the fourth wall slightly—he snarls something like 'You readers cheered for this, didn't you?' before detonating the hidden bombs. The raw version's typography goes wild here, with jagged text boxes cutting through speech bubbles. No clean resolutions, no moral lessons. Just boom. Credits.
Nora
Nora
2026-04-11 12:03:50
The raw ending devastated me emotionally—not because it was sad, but because it felt inevitable. From chapter one, the protagonist was planting seeds of his own destruction, and the finale reaps that harvest. There's a particularly chilling moment where he laughs while choking on his own blood, realizing too late that his 'destiny' was always self-inflicted. The untranslated sound effects add so much texture; you can practically hear the bones cracking in that final fight. I loaned my raws to a friend who doesn't read Mandarin, and even she could feel the raw emotion in those last panels. Makes me wish more publishers would include cultural notes instead of sanitizing endings.
Maxwell
Maxwell
2026-04-11 17:51:28
As a longtime reader of dark fantasy, I appreciated how 'The Villain of Destiny' raw ending subverted tropes. The final volume has this slow-motion train wreck quality—you see every mistake the MC made coming back to haunt him, but he's too proud to course-correct. The art style shifts drastically in the last chapter too; the usually crisp lines become chaotic scribbles during the explosion scene, like the artist wanted readers to feel the disintegration. What's fascinating is the epilogue hinting that his legacy inspires worse villains down the line, implying the cycle never ends. Makes you wonder if the title was ironic all along.
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