What Chapter Does His Regret Begin When?

2026-06-17 13:06:19 220
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4 Answers

Una
Una
2026-06-18 18:40:19
Ugh, regret arcs destroy me in the best way. In 'Omniscient Reader’s Viewpoint,' Dokja’s regret creeps in around chapter 50, but it explodes by chapter 110. It’s not just about one mistake—it’s the cumulative weight of every time he prioritized the 'story' over people. The webtoon’s color palettes shift during these scenes; everything gets colder, like his emotions are draining out. And the irony? He’s literally reading his own life as a narrative, yet still misses the emotional cues. I bawled when he finally breaks down alone, realizing he’s become the kind of protagonist he used to pity. That meta layer kills me.
Frank
Frank
2026-06-20 05:38:18
Regret’s a tricky thing to pin down—it’s rarely one chapter or episode. Take 'Tokyo Revengers': Takemichi’s whole arc is basically regret incarnate. But if I had to pick a turning point? Episode 12 of the anime (roughly chapter 30-ish in the manga). That’s when his 'save everyone' mentality cracks, and he admits his own failures caused collateral damage. The voice acting sells it; you hear this raw frustration like he’s screaming into a void. What I love is how the story doesn’t let him off easy—his regret fuels the next arcs, but it also blinds him sometimes. Feels more human that way.
Xavier
Xavier
2026-06-21 07:26:57
Regret’s timing depends so much on the character’s awareness. In 'Solo Leveling,' Jinwoo’s regret hits late—chapter 120 or so—because he’s too busy surviving to reflect early on. When it comes, it’s quiet: a panel of him staring at his hands after realizing his power cost others their lives. No dramatic monologue, just shadows and silence. The manhwa’s pacing makes it hit harder; after all that action, the stillness feels like a sucker punch.
Weston
Weston
2026-06-22 03:52:43
The moment his regret truly kicks in is such a gut punch. I was rereading 'The Beginning After the End' recently, and it's around chapter 85 where things start unraveling for the protagonist. The buildup is subtle—small choices snowballing until he’s standing there, realizing he’s lost something irreplaceable. The author does this brilliant thing where the regret isn’t just a single scene; it’s woven into his actions afterward, like every decision is haunted by that one moment.

What gets me is how visceral it feels. You see him replaying conversations, imagining alternate outcomes—classic 'what if' spirals. It’s not just 'Oh, I messed up,' but this slow dawning that he can’t fix it. The way the art (if we’re talking manga adaptation) lingers on his expressions… chills. Makes you wonder about regrets in your own life, y’know?
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