I’ll be the one to finish the fight.
The narrative tension is not derived from whether the protagonist will lose, but how he will reclaim his agency. Unlike the passive victims common in the genre, this protagonist embodies the "phoenix" archetype. He loses his party, his achievements, and perhaps his romantic interests, yet he refuses to be discarded. This resilience resonates deeply with readers because it reflects a universal struggle: the fight to define one's own worth in the face of a system designed to suppress them. The "raw" emotional core of the story is not bitterness, but a fierce determination to survive. yuusha ni minna netoraretakedo akiramezu ni tatakao raw top
: A "glitch" in the world's system is revealed, leading to a timeline where the fake hero never existed, resulting in a NTR-free harem route where Arc marries all the heroines. AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more I’ll be the one to finish the fight
In classic fantasy, the "Hero" (Yuusha) is the paragon of virtue. However, in this niche, the Hero is reimagined as an antagonist—often a charismatic but morally bankrupt individual who uses his status, power, or "holy" aura to seduce or magically influence the female companions of the protagonist. He loses his party, his achievements, and perhaps