You don’t have to think too hard or constantly worry that someone is going to die. We like this series because it is sheer wish fulfilment. The harem doesn’t stop there and grows throughout the series including the daughter of the king. A cute kimono-wearing samurai joins him as well as Sushie, the daughter of a duke whom Touya rescues. The Silhouseka sisters, Linze a shy mage and Elze an adventurer who likes to fight with her fists, quickly join up with him and set out for the capital of the kingdom. Touya almost immediately begins collecting his harem and starts off with twins to boot. The moral of the story seems to be life is good when God owes you one. He finds there isn’t a challenge he can’t face with some of the other strengths that God gave him for his new life like magical powers and extreme memory. Touya’s life seems pretty set from the get-go. Touya makes the wise decision to play it off as a magical artifact to anyone who sees the anachronistic device. You think “wow, that’s going to be useless in a medieval fantasy world,” but God makes sure it can connect and has access to all the knowledge there is in this new world. Touya, the millennial he is, chooses to keep his smart phone. God (not specified if it was a god or the God) apologizes, allows him to be reborn in a fantasy world and will grant him any one wish.
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