Twenty-first century high school student Moon Bin Kim lives a parallel life as the son of a warrior family in the thirteenth century, and struggles to learn who he is and why he exists across time and space.
This volume was alright. It was paced and written in a similarly confusing way as the first volume, so there was a challenging aspect to figuring out the panels and what was happening. There was also a big attempt to add some levity. Which I understand given the brutal nature of the last few volumes, but I don’t need it. I would like to stick with the story as the comedy doesn’t hit too well here for me. It’s not terrible, but it’s not that funny either.
This volume didn't make my stomach turn like the last one did, so it has that going for it; however, the story still feels pretty disjointed and we haven't really gotten any answers to questions from the first book, so it's a bit frustrating in that sense. At least the art is pretty.