“Blessed is she, who sails with heart and steel.”
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Getting reincarnated into another world as an unknown race isn't what someone would usually think would happen after surviving a very close call with death... and then dying anyway right after. While he had faint expectations of this possibility, they were fleeting fantasies and delusions from when he was young, never had he thought too much in depth about it.
Now, however, he'd wished he could have had more time to explore those fantasies.
Stranded in an entirely different world as a strange species and different body, armed with nothing but a head, two hands, feet— and a tail, she(?)... now needs to survive, adapt, and overcome, with almost 0 survival skills or knowledge of where, what, when, and how about everything. Questioning why are the monsters so damn big? Debating if this glowing mushroom is edible? Is this tree following me around? What is me and who is that? And narrating myself to keep my waning sanity alive...
"Isekai is too hard!"
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Discord: https://discord.gg/QqvGmayrd2
Author's Note: [edited as of 2024-09-16]
This is my first attempt at writing a story, so keep your expectations low and your hopes high.
I try to write during my free-time, therefore I'll be focusing more on quality than upload consistency.
While the title may be somewhat of a misnomer to the more avid anime fans out there, I assure you that this is as far from possible from the more light hearted depictions of the slice-of-life genre. The original intent of the story's name was to be the telling of what would be a day-to-day experience of a person who has been absconded from their home and thrown into a world of fantasy, with everything in between be it grim or light. If you're curious, try to at least give at try!
P.S: Also on Royal Road!
(changed my review)
This is honestly in the top 3 of my favorite writings out of everything for this website. I will be reading to the end and whenever I read this it always brightens my day. Thank you author for your writing.
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Genuinely interesting and the way it starts is fairly different from the standard tropes.
I am looking forward to how it develops.
The protag being a non-human with no real survival skills or world understanding makes for a refreshing feeling.
Them being physically stronger that what they understand and therefore underestimating their own capability provides a good growth curve at the start without having the protag be OP from the start.
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Of the many stories I've read on this site, Isekai no Nichijou stands out in how carefully and slowly it chooses to develop its characters and plot. It doesn't drown you in action or plot after plot like other stories, nor does it rush interactions between characters. Rather, it's a mere slice of life, but that's its greatest strength, for in not limiting itself to a single end goal, it's able to flesh out the complexities of each and every one of its characters and environments; it feels alive. It is also among the very few isekai novels I've read that really delves into the challenges and consequences of being suddenly ripped off your world and placed into a completely alien one.
In particular, the main character, Syuufarin, is both loveable and deeply troubled. Despite a difficult arrival and, in general, being an introspective anxiety-ridden bundle, the elven village she finds herself in ceaselessly showers her with love and affection, giving her the space to gently blossom and come out of her shell, which is beautiful. In fact, every character in this story is that loveable, for Jemdins manages to write them full of subtleties and nuances, of hidden stories and mysterious wisdoms, giving the entire world an astonishing depth that echoes our own.
Truly, I love the writing style and themes of this story. It's unique yet well-paced, carrying deep philosophical themes yet somehow oddly comforting and funny. At its heart, Isekai no Nichijou is a kind story, like a warm hearth or a mother's embrace. While it is not afraid to explore even the mundanities of life or Syuufarin's many thoughts, at the end of the day, Syuufarin and the reader alike always find themselves somewhere akin to home, in a place of compassion and understanding. If it isn't clear enough already, read this story! It's excellent.
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Daily Life in Another World or Isekai no Nichijou continues to be a story that sticks with me. It takes time to build up elements. By now it's very nicely contrasting the lead's everyday ups and downs with the culture she was first exposed to in this world, and her incisive yet fair mixed feelings about modern Earth. So truly nichijou as it shines in the contrasts of lifestyles across her lifetime (s).
Without spoilers I can say that the story is philosophical yet soothing. It's immersive in that sense so I suppose it's doing what the story pitches. Daily Life in Another World is not effortfully contemplative, it's not a puzzle game, nor does it feel pushy. Rather than preachy, the work simply feels like the changing influences and understandings that makes up a strikingly out-of-place woman's everyday. There is a great sense of major cultural threads that are worth thinking about, in my opinion. The plot isn't exactly an everyday travelogue philosophical story (see Spice and Wolf for fantasy style)... this work has the progression structure of a wanderer tale, but until at least one more arc has passed the daily life is a better descriptor for its focus than the chain of cultural contrasts.
As the core pathway of that style of story, the cast are diverse in their situations and outlooks on life. Many are spotlighted with empathy. Neither the protagonist nor who and what she encounters are presented flatly. The focus is too built upon curiosity and discovery for me to break it down further.
And that's enough to read the novel. I suggest going in otherwise blind. I'll still generally keep out spoilers in this recommendation, I won't even name the lead or where and what she does, but I recommend enjoying all the small surprises.
The method of immersion is either the protagonist being stuck as an alien compared to her surroundings, or depression. The out of place mentality is consistently impressive compared to other "fish out of water" storylines, as there's varying reasons to keep it focal by variation and not repetition. Despite personal growth, it's exceedingly rare the protagonist doesn't feel like and isn't seen as a glaringly blatant outsider. Depression overthinking and trauma are valuable to use for alienation, yet aren't staged in any uncommon nor triggering way. This is a very active protagonist; she must be for staying adventurous while near-perpetually an outsider.
While the protagonist is a tad glum, she's matured greatly and interestingly. It's charming to see a mindset built upon hope within discomfort and determination within befuddlement. Depending on your tastes and your mood that can be a comfort. She's adorable when she's in a happy mood, which albeit rarer offsets the drear. Worth noting, the story's first major arc involves trauma recovery
for being transported/isekai'd into a survival story
Daily Life in Another World has some powerful if not cheat-adjacent skill progression, to the point the story could need more tags, yet the far extent is as unimportant is it is to other mages and draconic-like characters in dramas. Due to setup the protagonist can be written with a flexible skillset where her approach to small things is more relevant than bombastic situations. Her little advantages genuinely feel worth hiding to fit in... not justified insecurities but rationalized or practical insecurity.
Caveats: The story has a lot of redundancy of topics which cannot or should not be edited out (at least not until much more is written). Repetition of cultural-philosophical through-lines may feel wasteful if you're not into those themes, and variety will take more time. The gentler depression and trauma may still not fit your mood, yet it takes up a lot of early plot without sufficient tags forewarning. There's some mild typographical errors (foregiveable) amidst otherwise well-considered vocabulary. Finally I recall one not high relevance plothole of basic observation skills that irks me greatly (
who realizes what about the protagonist's body origin
Easy 5/5 Recommendation: Imperfect, healthy comfort food. Daily Life in Another World owes more to thoughtful approaches than to junk food isekai.
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