LilTV1155
Well-known member
- Joined
- May 8, 2021
- Messages
- 905
- Points
- 133
1. What is up with the Isekai genre putting rice as animal feed and no one else thinking to improve on other types of grains like rye, wheat, oat, and etc. before Isekaiee/ Reincarnate/Transmigrators' discovery?
.
2. Food is bread and stews and oily overspiced meats. But in that setting, no one, NO ONE tried to experiment with their own recipes to make tasty or even for medicines?!
.
3. You are telling me that in those Isekai/Rebirth/etc. stories that you can't eat or cook Monsters (Land Animals) or Seafoods? But hunted them just for skin, medicines, and useless trophies?
.
It feel lazy. Like people are so complacent with their lifestyle until a novelty product is brought in from the outside. That novelty product feel like it been cliche-exploited via taking advantages unconsciously and subconsciously overreliance on that novelty's original source.
.
Like people been ok with eating breads. Then someone brought cereal, then sugar, then tea, then cocoa. Those people relied n that person too much for almost everything to improve their own quality of living and lifestyle without doing anything about it themselves first? Do they really have to wait for an outsider or a foreigner to start the ideas first before they copy it over (without experimenting with it themselves)?
.
2. Food is bread and stews and oily overspiced meats. But in that setting, no one, NO ONE tried to experiment with their own recipes to make tasty or even for medicines?!
.
3. You are telling me that in those Isekai/Rebirth/etc. stories that you can't eat or cook Monsters (Land Animals) or Seafoods? But hunted them just for skin, medicines, and useless trophies?
.
It feel lazy. Like people are so complacent with their lifestyle until a novelty product is brought in from the outside. That novelty product feel like it been cliche-exploited via taking advantages unconsciously and subconsciously overreliance on that novelty's original source.
.
Like people been ok with eating breads. Then someone brought cereal, then sugar, then tea, then cocoa. Those people relied n that person too much for almost everything to improve their own quality of living and lifestyle without doing anything about it themselves first? Do they really have to wait for an outsider or a foreigner to start the ideas first before they copy it over (without experimenting with it themselves)?