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Parallel world Manga Artist-Chapter 238: The Right Decision Advertisement
Throughout January, the Demon Slayer anime had been quietly accumulating market skepticism.
It was not that the work itself was bad. The problem was more subtle and in some ways more dangerous than that. After Hunter x Hunter, the standard the market had set for Rei was extraordinarily high. Almost unreasonably so. And Demon Slayer, in these early weeks, was not clearing that standard with the kind of authority people had come to expect from him.
The questions were obvious and nobody was shy about asking them.
Did a work that barely cleared the passing line genuinely need over five hundred million in production funding? And beyond the budget, the scope of the project was enormous. A full TV anime run, a theatrical film planned for July, another film targeting the Spring Festival slot the following year, and a confirmed broadcast schedule covering an entire twelve months.
The expectations had been driven to extraordinary heights before a single episode had aired. And then, when the finished product arrived, the animation quality was genuinely maxed out and beyond criticism, but the plot had landed as merely satisfactory.
All of this was being reflected, with uncomfortable clarity, in the viewership ratings.
Given Rei's current level of popularity, the Demon Slayer anime was never going to collapse entirely. His fanbase alone provided a floor that most anime could only dream of. But when the ratings data for the fourth episode came in at 5.92%, something shifted in the discourse. The premiere had broken six percent. And now, four weeks into its broadcast, the numbers had been declining steadily, week after week.
The decline was not dramatic. But it did not need to be dramatic to say something. And the media, along with every competitor in the industry who had been waiting for exactly this kind of opening, finally decided they had waited long enough.
The headlines arrived in waves.
"Genius creator Shirogane's new work receives mediocre reviews. Demon Slayer becomes the most controversial work of his career."
"Demon Slayer viewership ratings fall for four consecutive weeks. Can even Shirogane not escape the fate of a creator running dry?"
"Why should a demon-themed work, a genre that has failed to capture mainstream popularity for decades, suddenly become a hit now? Demon Slayer's current ratings exist entirely because of Shirogane's existing fanbase. Strip his name from this production and a rating above four percent would be a luxury."
"For anime, theme is everything. In a market where hot-blooded action anime dominates, a work with the melancholic and emotionally heavy tone of Demon Slayer cannot escape the gravity of failure."
"Renowned anime critic Tanaka Shuji has publicly declared: no flower stays red for a hundred days, and no creator stays at the peak forever. Shirogane will gradually fall from his pedestal with Demon Slayer as the beginning of that descent."
"Dream Comic sales reach a new high, but the completion date for Hunter x Hunter has now been confirmed. Once Hunter concludes its run, will Dream Comic be overtaken in monthly sales by Monogatari Comic?"
"It is worth remembering that Hunter x Hunter itself only began generating serious attention after more than ten chapters had been serialized. Given the slow-burn nature of Shirogane-sensei's body of work, it may be premature to render any verdict on Demon Slayer before several more months have passed."
That last voice was a minority opinion. But it existed, and it was not entirely wrong.
As the calendar moved deeper into January and toward February, every conversation in the anime world, whether from people who loved Rei or despised him, revolved around Demon Slayer. Articles unrelated to his works generated almost no meaningful traffic. Other anime were still airing, still finding their audiences, but the gap in discussion volume between everything else and Rei's two currently active properties had grown into something almost absurd.
In the first week of February, Rei submitted the final manuscript of Hunter x Hunter to Misaki and exhaled for what felt like the first time in months.
Misaki, for her part, did not move from her chair for a long time after she began reading it.
The plot of the final chapter was simple. Deliberately, carefully simple.
Gon, finally recovered from the devastating injuries he had sustained, stood at the summit of the World Tree and met his father, Ging, for the first time.
And then, after everything, he parted ways with Killua.
The story of Hunter x Hunter had begun with a young boy setting out from Whale Island with one goal in his heart: to find the father who had left him behind. That boy had crossed the Hunter Exam, survived the underground auction, descended into Greed Island, endured the Chimera Ant arc, and emerged on the other side changed in ways that could not be easily articulated. And now, at the top of the highest point in the world, he had finally looked his father in the eye.
The goal was achieved. The journey was complete.
Kite, whose fate had haunted Gon since the beginning of the Chimera Ant arc, had been reborn through the biological miracle of the Chimera Ant Queen, coming back into the world in a new form. He had not truly died. And so, in the deepest sense, Gon's wish had been fulfilled on both fronts.
And yet.
Misaki, who was not by nature a particularly emotional person, felt the pressure building behind her eyes as she reached the final pages.
It was the panel of Gon and Killua saying goodbye. Standing apart from each other, turned slightly away, each raising a hand in farewell. Two boys who had found each other at the beginning of everything and had carried each other through things that would have destroyed most people standing alone.
After this parting, when would they meet again?
More quietly, she found herself thinking: after this parting, when would the readers of Japan see them again?
"Amazing," she exhaled softly.
She set the manuscript down on her lap and thought carefully about what she had just read. Her professional instincts were already working through the implications. This final chapter was not simply a satisfying ending. It was architecturally brilliant in its restraint.
The narrative loop was closed, the emotional arcs were resolved, and yet the world of Hunter x Hunter was left fully intact and breathing. Nothing had been destroyed or made permanent in a way that foreclosed the future.
Killua had resolved the confusion that had shadowed him since his early childhood. He had found friendship, and through that friendship had discovered something like a direction for his life going forward.
Gon had met his father and could now return to Whale Island, to Aunt Mito, to the small and ordinary and warm life that had always been waiting for him. For a shonen battle manga protagonist, that was not a diminished ending. It was, in its own quiet way, a genuinely happy one.
Did a protagonist have to become the strongest person in the world and eliminate every last shadow of evil from existence before a manga was permitted to end? The best argument against that idea was sitting in the pages she had just read.
"In all the years this medium has existed, among manga that have been serialized to the length of Hunter x Hunter without the story collapsing under its own weight, fewer than one in a hundred genuinely exist," Misaki said, her voice thoughtful rather than flattering.
"Most manga at this length have already had their narratives fracture, and their authors end up cursed by the very fans who once loved them. What you have produced here is a masterpiece. Choosing to go on hiatus at this point is not a retreat. It is the right decision."
"Thank you, Misaki-san. You are too generous," Rei replied, though his tone carried genuine warmth beneath the modesty.
She was not wrong, and he knew it.
The Hunter x Hunter manga, up to this point, was a masterpiece by any reasonable standard. It was the same principle as Attack on Titan.
If that story had concluded at the moment the characters first stood at the shore and saw the sea beyond the walls, it would have been an undisputed classic with no room for criticism. The timing of an ending mattered as much as anything that came before it.
"In that case, the hiatus timeline for Hunter x Hunter is now set," Misaki said, carefully gathering the manuscript pages and sliding them into an archive folder with the kind of deliberate care you gave to something irreplaceable.
"I expect Hoshimori Group will want to organize a significant promotional campaign around the hiatus announcement. Events, commemorative releases, that kind of thing. The scale of the fanbase warrants it."
What neither of them said aloud, though both understood it perfectly, was that the word hiatus was doing a great deal of work in that sentence.
Rei had originally used the word completion when he had submitted his request to the editorial division. He had stated, formally and in writing, that he did not believe he could produce a chapter superior to what the Chimera Ant arc had already achieved, and that he wished to bring the serialization to a close. The editorial team and the group's leadership had spent considerable effort softening that language before it reached the public.
Even though Rei had ultimately been persuaded by the people around him at Hoshimori to soften the language from "completion" to "hiatus," the reality of the situation was transparent to everyone involved.
The brilliance of the Chimera Ant arc was self-evident. Nobody could honestly predict how many years it would take before Rei produced another chapter of that caliber, or whether he ever would. Hoshimori understood this perfectly well, and they were not about to let a single opportunity to capitalize on the wave of attention surrounding the conclusion pass them by.
"I understand. I will cooperate with whatever Hoshimori Group has planned," Rei said, nodding.







