this post was submitted on 11 Apr 2024
34 points (100.0% liked)
Dungeon Meshi
626 readers
187 users here now
A Community for Dungeon Meshi a.k.a. Delicious in Dungeon.
The first season of the anime adaptation can be found on Netflix. Season 2 is confirmed and presumably currently in production.
DO NOT SPOIL THE ANIME WATCHERS
- Do not discuss events or characters from manga chapters past #52, without clearly marking as spoilers
- Offending posts and comments will be immediately removed without warning
This is so that the anime watchers can sub to the community without worry of seeing posts that would spoil later parts of the story. This includes manga pages and panels, mentioning characters, fanart, etc.
Parent instance rules also apply, of course.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I really enjoyed this episode. Some great humor and some great monsters this episode. I think I connected a lot with the monsters this episode because I once ran a D&D campaign in which a dryad and a flock of cockatrice played significant roles for part of the journey. So, seeing them both in one episode was fun. Also, I feel like I inadvertently posted my basilisk clip at just the right time as a preview for the cockatrice segment. I swear I haven't read the source!
Two jokes really got me this episode. The first was grandpa Senshi sitting Chilchuck down to give him the talk (and really grandpa Senshi in general feeling like he is surrounded by kids). Second was Marcy turning into stone while doing a tsukkomi. If you aren't familiar with it, a tsukkomi gesture is something you see a lot in Japanese humor and comes from a specific type of standup comedy called manzai. In this situation, Laios was filling the boke role by preparing her to turn into stone.
I am curious what the rules around magic are in this world. Is there a reason that Laios is able to learn magic, but Chilchuck/Senshi can't? Is it ideological differences? racial differences? too busy thinking about food to care? It was interesting that Laios was able to see the ghosts of the city while he was on his magic trip with the pretty colors. I feel like if Laios was a bit more observant he might be able to piece more of the story together between the paintings, the interaction with the magician, and now the ghosts. Alas...he is too busy doing...Laios things I guess.
Finally, I just want to say that homemade sauerkraut is delicious, but it takes absolutely forever to get that way. When my family made it, we would let it go for at least a month before diving in.
Anyone can learn magic.
Dwarves and Halflings have tiny mana-pools though, meaning they won't ever be able to do a ton with it.
Humans are pretty good, but elves outclass all other races in that respect, though gnomes aren't far behind.
Thanks! So, there are definite racial differences when it comes to magic. Do the same rules apply when dealing with the forbidden magic that pulls energy from an alternate dimension? That concept reminds me of Fullmetal Alchemist (not Brotherhood).
Yes, in the sense that opening the connection still has to be done using a person's own mana.
But technically, anyone could be a dungeon master if they do as Marcille explains, and set up permanent connections that constantly replenish the mana around.
You might have noticed that the master used the flesh of the dragon to cast his spells, he is using the mana that's just "around" to do his thing.