If this is any other manga where you don't have to worry about the author or you dying of old age before finishing it might be okay. For HXH, it's pretty much inexcusable. The funny thing is that it's not bad. It's actually really good, and pretty clever. Togashi must have found the most irrelevent characters and wasted an entire week talking about what happened to them. Again, that's not a bad thing if you didn't have to worry about this series is going to get axed because Shonen Jump got tired of Togashi as a human being (HXH probably won't ever get axed due to popularity). Where is Gon? Killua? Meryem? Komugi? What about even the quasi important characters like Knuckles, Palm, or the octopus? What the heck happened to the contamination? Is there something deeper than that or did Togashi made a rare mistake of confusing nuclear radiation poisoning with poisoning even though the two really have nothing to do with each other? Is Komugi going to have a child? Did Meryem finally beat her in a game of gungi? Is Gon finally going to learn that he isn't always going to have a backup arm after getting another one of his arm blown up? Is Killua ever going to realize that he's actually the good guy in the story of HXH? Sure, wait for next week you can say, except knowing how HXH goes there is a very good chance you won't hear anything about any of the major characters for a couple of years (real life time). That's not acceptable from the fan's point of view. There is no question HXH is far superior to anything of comparable popularity, but right now the Emperor has no cloths and fans should not put up with this kind of service. Look, I don't even like most of the main characters and if they died in a fire that'd be a perfectly good ending for them, but they are still the main characters and after your epic battle for the survival of human race, you don't even know what happened to any of the participants?
And let's say next week something sensible actually happens, namely the major character's aftermath is resolved. Then what's the point of the switch? Shouldn't we want to know what happened to the major characters first? It'd be like you have a battle between Sasuke and Naruto and next week all you see is the ramen noodle shop owner reminiscing about what happened to the villager who used to buy his noodles.
By the way, I think the whole part about Reina is totally ridiculous. It's kind of touching that she somehow didn't die, but then what the heck is the purpose of her brother swearing on his dead sister's name that he won't fail again? You got this guy who is clearly trying to atone for his failure to protect his sister and then 5 years later (in real life time), it turned out that his sister never died and he was just watching the wrong place all this time. Since he's not returning to NGL he probably won't ever see his sister again anyway, even though she miraculously survived. At this rate we're going, probably 5 years later someone will tell Reina that her brother never died and he's just protecting a random piece of land in the middle of nowhere with the same dilgence as he would have protected her with, and Reina would get there just on time to see Gyro drive a tank over her brother. It's almost like the point of the story is that no good deed goes unpunished.
Overall, the conclusion reads a lot like a page out of Blizzard's book where apparently everyone turned out to be a good guy and was just misunderstood, and that the human Hunters who risked their life to fight Meryem were the bad guys, even though they were just er, fighting for the survival of the human race. I mean sure Meryem was always meant to be a good guy, but it's not like you can expect to negotiate with a nearly omnipotent leader who heads a race of beings that view humans as food. Never mind that 2 out of the 3 Royal Guards are utterly bloodthirsty and would stop at nothing short of the annihilation of the human race. Sure, you can say Meryem and his race can't be faulted because that's just their way of life, but there was never any possiblity of peace between human and Meryem's race.
I do like Werefin emerging as "The Man who defeated the King." I see a great career ahead for him, similar to Mr. Satan in Dragonball.
How hard would it be to end part 315 with Meryem saying, to Komugi, "My name is Meryem"? Everyone is expecting him to say that, and just because everyone is expecting it, doesn't mean it's somehow bad.
And let's say next week something sensible actually happens, namely the major character's aftermath is resolved. Then what's the point of the switch? Shouldn't we want to know what happened to the major characters first? It'd be like you have a battle between Sasuke and Naruto and next week all you see is the ramen noodle shop owner reminiscing about what happened to the villager who used to buy his noodles.
By the way, I think the whole part about Reina is totally ridiculous. It's kind of touching that she somehow didn't die, but then what the heck is the purpose of her brother swearing on his dead sister's name that he won't fail again? You got this guy who is clearly trying to atone for his failure to protect his sister and then 5 years later (in real life time), it turned out that his sister never died and he was just watching the wrong place all this time. Since he's not returning to NGL he probably won't ever see his sister again anyway, even though she miraculously survived. At this rate we're going, probably 5 years later someone will tell Reina that her brother never died and he's just protecting a random piece of land in the middle of nowhere with the same dilgence as he would have protected her with, and Reina would get there just on time to see Gyro drive a tank over her brother. It's almost like the point of the story is that no good deed goes unpunished.
Overall, the conclusion reads a lot like a page out of Blizzard's book where apparently everyone turned out to be a good guy and was just misunderstood, and that the human Hunters who risked their life to fight Meryem were the bad guys, even though they were just er, fighting for the survival of the human race. I mean sure Meryem was always meant to be a good guy, but it's not like you can expect to negotiate with a nearly omnipotent leader who heads a race of beings that view humans as food. Never mind that 2 out of the 3 Royal Guards are utterly bloodthirsty and would stop at nothing short of the annihilation of the human race. Sure, you can say Meryem and his race can't be faulted because that's just their way of life, but there was never any possiblity of peace between human and Meryem's race.
I do like Werefin emerging as "The Man who defeated the King." I see a great career ahead for him, similar to Mr. Satan in Dragonball.
How hard would it be to end part 315 with Meryem saying, to Komugi, "My name is Meryem"? Everyone is expecting him to say that, and just because everyone is expecting it, doesn't mean it's somehow bad.