Lenni Reviews: “Battle Royale: Enforcers” Vol. 4, by Koushun Takami & Yukai Asada

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*This book was given to me in exchange for an honest review and is for mature readers only.

As our various teams strategize, we learn more about the implanted chips tracking our unfortunate participants.

Yeah, this was a LOT of talking. While it is interesting to learn more about our characters, this volume was short on action. Not that I’m actively rooting for child slaughter, but it’s like going into a Die Hard or Transformers movie, then having the characters sit and chat in a coffee shop for 20 minutes. It’s like walking into a pizza shop, but they have nothing but tacos. It’s not what I came in for, whether I like it or not. It even had the nerve to end on a cliffhanger. 2.5 out of 5.

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Lenni Reviews: “Battle Royale: Enforcers” Vol. 3, by Koushun Takami & Yukai Asada

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*This book was given to me in exchange for an honest review and is for mature readers.

The various squads of children deal with their deadly predicament in different ways, either embracing the chance to kill, abhorring the violence, or coming to terms with the hopelessness of their situation.

This volume cycles through each group who, as stated, are all handling things differently. I think the group that’s painting their faces and acting super edgy (very The Jokerz) were a bit silly. Even when they’re threatening violence, I couldn’t quite take them seriously. As such, there’s not much battling going on. It’s mostly talking and strategizing with the resident loony character committing the only violence in the book. It’s not bad but if you’re looking for a bloody mess, this isn’t it. 3.9 out of 5.

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Lenni Reviews: “Battle Royale: Enforcers” Vol. 2, by Koushun Takami & Yukai Asada

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*This book was given to me in exchange for an honest review.

In this volume, more characters are revealed as are more rules to the game as the battle for survival creeps into it’s first night.

When I saw the fanservice naked woman, I had immediate concerns that this series was going to devolve into the uncomfortable sex scenes that were present in the first manga series. I’m no prude; you can tell by the absolute genre madness of my reviews but being unwillingly ridden so hard you bleed out from a bullet would was just gross. Spoilers for that, I guess. This volume is 90% talking and getting to know some of the character’s back stories before being thrown into this game. It felt odd reading this and wondering when the carnage will start for my entertainment but usually, you get this level of ‘development’ spread out over time; usually before a character dies. A recent example would be Alice in Borderland. This one, however, felt like it was one big chunk. 3 out of 5.

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Lenni Reviews: “Alice in Borderland” Vol. 9, by Haro Aso

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*This book was given to me in exchange for an honest review.

For Arisu and Chishiya there is only one face card left after their final confrontation with Niragi.

Niragi is one of those characters that makes me go “Why are you still here?” The entire time of the last appearance, I was just metaphorically tapping my foot for the Queen if Hearts part. I did wonder if the source material would have the same ending as the show and (spoilers, I guess???) it’s pretty much the same and I do like the way it’s handled. It’s creative and I think it’s more interesting than some huge ass battle or another game with math that gives me a headache. These omnibus editions were really satisfying and I had a lot of fun reading them. If you like these survival game stories, this is a good series. 4 out of 5.

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