100 Angels by Ryu Kurokagerar is not a comfortable read. It is a philosophical endurance test disguised as dark fantasy. By forcing the protagonist to systematically dismantle his own identity to survive, the author critiques modern society’s obsession with productivity and release—how we are encouraged to “let go” of memories, to “move on” from trauma, without ever asking what is lost in the transaction. In the end, the hundred angels are not divine beings. They are the fragile, mortal pieces of a single self. And the Keeper’s greatest sin is not killing them, but succeeding.
: The line between "angelic" and "demonic" is frequently blurred. The characters often face "trolley problem" style dilemmas where there is no clear right answer. Human Resilience 100 angels by ryu kurokagerar full