HIGURASHI NO NAKU KORO NI KAI: TSUMIHOROBOSHI-HEN
STATUS
COMPLETE
VOLUMES
4
RELEASE
April 22, 2008
CHAPTERS
16
DESCRIPTION
After moving into the quiet town of Hinamizawa, Maebara Keiichi spends his days blissfully in school often playing games with his local friends. However, appearances can be deceiving. One fateful day, Keiichi stumbles upon news of a murder that had occurred in Hinamizawa. From this point on, horrific events unfold in front of Keiichi, as he soon learns his close friends may not be all that they seem. Based on the amateur mystery game by 7th Expansion, the story is told in a series of different scenarios.
Tsumihoroboshi is the sixth in a series of manga following the different scenarios of the Higurashi games and the second that tries to answer questions raised in the previous scenarios. It focuses on Ryuuguu Rena's sudden distrust of her friends and answers some questions about the mystery surrounding Furude Rika.
CAST
Rena Ryuuguu
Keiichi Maebara
Rika Furude
Shion Sonozaki
Mion Sonozaki
Satoko Houjou
Miyo Takano
Kuraudo Ooishi
Satoshi Houjou
Mamoru Akasaka
Kyousuke Irie
Jirou Tomitake
Rumiko Chie
Tatsuyoshi Kasai
Teppei Houjou
Rina Mamiya
Tetsuro Okonogi
Reiko Ryuuguu
Yasunori Ryuuguu
Daiki Tomita
Aiko Maebara
Ichirou Maebara
CHAPTERS
RELATED TO HIGURASHI NO NAKU KORO NI KAI: TSUMIHOROBOSHI-HEN
REVIEWS
Magenta
66/100Another piece of the Higurashi puzzle that shows how paranoia effects us, but it isn't without sacrificesContinue on AniListA mystery story like Higurashi is naturally always going to pass the hurdle of providing answers to its mysteries. Higurashi's Atonement arc takes this needed step in a mystery story, and puts a more meta spin on it. Tsumihoroboshi-hen's main theme revolves around how paranoia can dilute reality, which is a very interesting meta narrative to explore in a story like this. However, while the execution of this implementation for the most part works in the arc's favor, it can also at times ruin the integrity of its own story as well as previous arcs.
There is always a type of mysterious aura surrounding Higurashi in its many twists and turns. Part of why it thrives so much as a mystery series is with this type of teasing of its readers the true nature of its world truly is. Breaking that mystery by providing answers is a tricky thing to do, and can end in disappointment if handled improperly. The arc preceding Atonement, Eye Opening, handled the unveiling of its mysteries beautifully, with possibly the best content the series has to offer. Tsumihoroboshi-hen takes on this concept in an extremely different manner, falling in line with this series's willing to innovate on nearly all fronts. The Atonement arc presents a scenario that fits very well in the context of uncovering answers in a foggy mystery. Rena, sharing the protagonist role along with Keiichi this time, gets caught up in a conspiracy of the ongoing mysteries that us the readers are trying to solve as well. She falls down in a rabbit hole of questioning that eventually leads her to commit horrible actions. The descent into madness commonly presented in the best parts of Higurashi is at it full force here, and it perfectly compliments the theming of this arc in particular. In direct contrast to Rena, Keiichi is the one who stands his ground, advocating for the direct opposite. He is the voice of reason in this arc, arguing that things are more so exactly as they seem and that we should listen to the direct words of the ones closest to us. This clash of ideals is consistently present throughout the arc, and permeates from beginning to end. While this type of brilliant weaving of themes is completely perfect for this arc, it can come at major costs.
While Rena gets to the spot she needs to be in the story with a lot of grace, Keiichi's arc towards the place that he needs to be near the end of the arc can feel a bit messy at times. I It can feel like a lot of convenient things happen around Keiichi that can feel very off putting in the moment. Examples of this include Keiichi suddenly gets memories of the previous arcs and his backstory before Hinamizawa being brought up for the first time in the whole series. However, these may be considered nitpicks all things considered. However, when it transcends into a major problem is with the recontextualization of Onikakushi-hen or the Abducted by Demons arc. With the new light that is shed on the events of this arc, a lot of the pure horror and intrigue involving its mysteries are stripped away in order to serve the themes of paranoia ever present in Tsumihoroboshi-hen. At a point, the seemed as if the story was undermining its own mystery, which definitely isn't the type of thing that really needs to happen in a story like this. With the contorting of the story to get to the point where it was, I would say that the faults in this aspect of story make it the weakest arc in the series thus far.
Despite the problems that I have with the Atonement arc, it was still generally a very solid arc that felt like a natural progression of the series needed to do at this moment. This series manages to be consistently ambitious in the execution of nearly every aspect of its story, and while its priorities may not be exactly in line most of the time, it still manages to impress with new developments on nearly every front. Even if I felt disappointed with many aspects of the arc, it was still a very solid Higurashi experience that checked all the right boxes to become great.
SIMILAR MANGAS YOU MAY LIKE
MANGA DramaTakopii no Genzai
MANGA ActionMouryou no Yurikago
SCORE
- (4/5)
MORE INFO
Ended inApril 22, 2008
Favorited by 138 Users