Redo of Healer: Season 1 – Review/ Summary (with Spoilers)
Redo of Healer is your classic, starts off violent and shocking, but as you become adjusted to the sex and violence, you realize there isn’t much there.
Redo of Healer is your classic, starts off violent and shocking, but as you become adjusted to the sex and violence, you realize there isn’t much there.
In this post, you’ll find collected quotes from the month of March 2021.
In the season finale of Redo of Healer, we get another top-level fight scene, but also a slew of sex scenes that, if cut, would make this episode extremely short.
As Princess Norn prepares to wreak havoc in Branica, once again, Keyarga finds new names to put on his list for revenge.
While Keyaru believes he may finally have a face-to-face chance with Blade, between Norn and someone named Hawkeye, will he get his chance for revenge?
As Keyaru begins the job of protecting Eve, Princess Norn and one of Keyaru’s targets for revenge arrive in Branica.
As we learn the history of the integrated city known as Branica, Keyaru acquires a new member to his harem who is part of his larger plans to change the world.
In what can be seen as an uneventful episode, a lot of blood is spilled, sex had, and we learn Keyarga may no longer be on the timeline of his previous life.
In an attempt to prove Redo of Healer can still make you care, his maternal figure is tortured in a similar fashion to how Keyarga was. Alongside more troubling scenes.
While Redo of Healer provides us with Keyarga’s first formidable opponent, it increasingly shies away from being as explicit as it once was.
Redo of Healer gives us a reprieve by featuring run of the mill violence, and less violent sexual content than it has done since episode 1.
Once again, we find ourselves repeatedly asking, “What the F***?” as we see what Keyaru went through. But his actions as Keyarga still don’t imply he desires to be better than his torturers.
How in the world could so much be blacked out, yet you still feel like you watched one of the most f***ed up things ever? Redo of Healer gives an example.
Redo of Healer is a revenge story that may make you think of The Rising of the Shield Hero, but this is far more graphic, violent, and Keyaru’s revenge is active.
The overall goal of Wherever I Look is to fill in that space between the average fan and critic and advise you on what’s worth experiencing.
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