: Digital artists analyze the untranslated line work, screentone applications, and cross-hatching methods of Japanese illustrators. Digital Scannability Summary
To find the best versions of these series while supporting creators, use these official Japanese digital platforms:
Interestingly, Mob Psycho 100 plays with the opposite: Shigeo “Mob” Kageyama is the protagonist, but he acts like a mob character emotionally. When he loses control (100%), he destroys the plot consciously —reversing the unawareness. : Digital artists analyze the untranslated line work,
As is the case for any visually-driven medium, Kyou Senshina Mob 's reputation hinges on the quality of its presentation. The keyword "raw extra quality" in Japanese fandom circles specifically refers to versions of manga chapters that preserve every detail of the artist's original work.
Why the "Plot-Destroying Mob" Trope is Exploding in Popularity Subversion of the Isekai Power Fantasy As is the case for any visually-driven medium,
Historically, fantasy stories focused on the designated "Hero." However, audiences grew weary of traditional power fantasies, leading to the rise of anti-heroes and villainess tropes. The "Mob" subgenre takes this one step further by celebrating the absolute outsider.
They do not tear methodically. No, the destruction is visceral, primal. Sparks fly as fists shatter the wood, and books spill like confetti, their pages scattered by the wind. The mob howls as they kick tomes into the dirt, dousing every surviving page in ash. This is no act of conquest but catharsis—a rebellion against the very idea of knowledge. In their chaos, they scream at the absurdity of order, the futility of reason in the face of war. The bookshelf, once a bastion of logic, is reduced to splinters, its contents devoured by flame or trampled into silence. The "Mob" subgenre takes this one step further
The kyou senshina mob mujikaku represents the made manifest. Every reader has imagined: “What if I, a background extra, just punched the villain on page 5?”
Purchasing the "Tankobon" (collected volumes) provides the most consistent art quality and often includes bonus "extra" chapters not found in the initial magazine run.
Albert, the youngest son of the remote noble Falconer family, lives a normal life in a magical world until a startling revelation strikes him at age fourteen: he's a reincarnated soul from modern-day Japan, and the world he's living in is the setting for a video game he played once in his past life.
Motivated by a vague desire to understand his place in the world, Albert enrolls at the Radford Royal Academy of Magic—the exact stage where the game's main plot is supposed to kick off. Due to his absurd frontier-bred battle prowess and a complete lack of awareness regarding the "intended" plot, Albert accidentally bulldozes through established game flags, utterly destroying the canon story before the protagonist can even begin. Why Fans Demand "Extra Quality" Raw Files
@article{wang2021mlfw,
title={MLFW: A Database for Face Recognition on Masked Faces},
author={Wang, Chengrui and Fang, Han and Zhong, Yaoyao and Deng, Weihong},
journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2109.05804},
year={2021}
}
This database is publicly available. We provide: 1) the original images(250x250), 2) the aligned images(112x112) and 3) the pair list. Baidu Netdisk(code:328y) , Google Drive
Now, we provide a list to indicate the masked faces. Google Drive