Has, has... has she given us permission to call her Yamada? (la)Plus, I don't think she would've gone out of her way to help Executive remember she had any kind of friends.
@@invalleria naruhoda ne, arigatyoutogo-DANG-IT, I'm never going to be able to READ (let alone write) Japanese, I'm still going to keep trying though. Your name, my friend... is it "sword of the valley" or "blade of the valiant" (Romance/Latin languages work with me, what's up with you languages throwing confused participles all over the place in place of localised NOUNS!!!!!!?) ...? sorry, I was, arguing with modern localisations. You my friend have a new subscriber. Anyone who even KNOWS of Yuki Kajiura is (my apologies) a friend of mine. Happy New Year sir.
I can just imagine that kid doing their daily memory practice when they got matched against Lui-nee. Though that still wont make sense since this 7 year old was playing ONLINE, isn't there probably an offline version?
Lap sama did really well recruiting this bird to her organization. They do share the same smug aura but Lui is more discrete, only wiping the floor with her enemies when the situation is appropriate.
She's a secret society executive after all. She needs to act as a cartoon villain towards a small kid, so that a masked, transformed hero can swoop in, defeat her with the power of friendship and give a life advice to the kid. It's the part of the natural order.
Look, I'm not saying that I hate children or anything, but if I had to beat up a child for my survival like how Lui-nee did here, I would do it without hesitation.
Did nothing wrong. Always play for the win, and never pull your punches. Going easy on someone is a sign of disrespect. (Lets just say growing up my family was a bit competitive in games)