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100
10
Finished
Dec 25, 2020 to Mar 14, 2025
8.0/10
Average Review Score
100%
Recommend It
1
Reviews Worldwide
One of the few anthologies that have it where the stories told are tied to the personalities of the characters and not just that but a thematic follow through for the narrative and weaving more elements from the narrators life into the narrative and you notice this if you're paying attention while reading the story. The stories also have dramatic irony if you notice these thread lines and seeing how the narrative is going to play out if you're piecing things together. The main character is quite morally grey, not a very black and white character you're rooting for and once you understand his motivations you can'thelp but sympathize for him. Even though I saw where this was going for the story besides the ending honestly was a curve ball; don't worry it's not some kind of twist is all I'll say. The art style fits and thematically speaking is quite on point for the story, I don't know if I can tell the themes without spoiling the story is the problem. Regardless the art style fits the themes and narrative. The true scares don't come from the story themselves but what they tell the reader about the narrator is the best I can say without spoiling it.
Forever haunted, a boy sits in a room. Alone. Telling tales of horror. One by one. Night by night. The shadows breed terror. Shall we begin? One day, an elementary school child named Yuuma tries to jump out of his classroom window. His classmate Hina stops him and, in a bid to stall for time, asks him, "Do you know the round of a hundred ghost stories?" Hina tells Yuuma about a ritual where, if you tell a hundred ghost stories, you'll see ghosts afterward. Learning this gives Yuuma a new lease on life. Chapter by chapter, he shares ghost stories with the reader, slowly but surely inching his way toward one hundred... (Source: Seven Seas Entertainment)