Kill the Hero does something almost no other revenge regression story attempts. It makes you genuinely uncertain whether the protagonist is justified even though you intellectually understand his motivation. That discomfort is a feature not a flaw.
Sign up to see more
SignupAlready a member?
LoginBy continuing, you agree to Sociomix's Terms of Service, Privacy Policy

Kill the Hero does something almost no other revenge regression story attempts. It makes you genuinely uncertain whether the protagonist is justified even though you intellectually understand his motivation. That discomfort is a feature not a flaw.
As a counterpoint to all the hype, the series does lean heavily on Lloyd being the smartest person in every room. That can get a little exhausting over 180 plus chapters.
It is still too early in the run to call this the darkest release of 2026 with any confidence. Check back when it is finished. But as an early contender, absolutely.
The system genre being described as wish fulfillment without requiring extensive world-building is exactly why it took off so fast. You can pick up any series and understand the stakes within three chapters.
My only concern with an anime adaptation is pacing. A lot of the humor lives in facial expression panels and the slow build of a comedic beat. Bad pacing would absolutely kill what makes Lloyd so funny.
Someone please tell me there is a season 4 or continuation because finishing season 3 felt like hitting a wall.
Anyone else notice that Windsurf's own proprietary SWE models consume zero credits while third-party models like Claude burn through your quota fast? The flat pricing claim gets complicated once you start using the powerful models.
Hard disagree that this fixes the designer-developer relationship. Tools do not fix relationships. Communication, mutual respect, and shared goals fix relationships. v0 is a productivity accelerator, not a culture intervention.
The nine months story is compelling but what I actually want to know is how retention looks. Acquiring revenue fast is one thing. Keeping users who encounter the inevitable rough edges of autonomous AI development is the harder problem.
The difference this time is the AI layer. Previous no-code tools required you to think like a developer but without writing code. Bolt lets you describe outcomes and handles the implementation thinking. That is a qualitatively different kind of tool.
The year 2026 marks a pivotal moment in the evolution of manhwa as a medium. What started as a trickle of Korean comics receiving anime adaptations has become a flood, with at least fifteen confirmed projects bringing beloved manhwa to animated life. This explosive growth wasn't accidental but the inevitable result of Solo Leveling's massive success proving that manhwa adaptations can compete with traditional manga anime in quality, popularity, and profitability. Studios across Japan and Korea are investing heavily in manhwa properties, recognizing that Korean storytelling brings fresh perspectives, innovative premises, and built-in fanbases eager to see their favorite series animated. The diversity of genres receiving adaptations demonstrates that manhwa appeal extends far beyond action and fantasy into romance, psychological thriller, sports, and slice-of-life territories.
Flat rate solved the wrong problem. The anxiety was never really about money for experienced developers. It was about whether the AI understands the codebase well enough to be trusted with the change.
Genuine question, how does encrypting DMs actually work differently from, say, Signal versus what TikTok is doing now with transit encryption? Like what is the actual practical difference for the average user?
Exactly the point I wanted to raise. Meta's own blog acknowledged that evaluation awareness may affect model behavior on a small subset of alignment evaluations. They said it was not a blocking concern for release, which is one way to characterize it. Warranting further research while simultaneously shipping to billions of users is another way.
I'm worried about the bell sleeves getting in the way at work anyone have experience with this?
Has anyone tried styling this dress with combat boots? I feel like it could work for a more casual take