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jumpingoffacliff

- May 8, 2020
- Joined May 7, 2020
Poche well, you can argue that a lot of isekai protagonists ar abducted from their original world, being summoned to become heroes and so on.
YulongYuXianTaiyin I remember hearing many times that isekai roughly translates to "another world", all the other cliche elements side, being transported to another planet is the same as saying being transported to another world (they practically mean the same thing)
There isn't really a rule that says the setting has to be in middle ages Europe, it's just that it's overdone.
Funny thing is that the MC spent most of the first chapters debating whether he reiterated or got transported just to end up having this exact debate with himself.
So I've been reading this book titled "last man on earth when there is no earth ?"
It's a sci-fi were the MC finds himself on a different planet after a certain event.
Technically, since he is no longer on earth it means he got isekaied, right? Does that make star lord from guardians of the galaxy an isekai protagonist too?