This manhwa could have become one of the finest works about the Wild West, but the English-speaking fandom took offense... at a historical fact like ALWAYS..CRYING OVER A HISTORICAL FACT
Honestly, I doubt it. Jaxx themselves admitted they didn’t really do much research on the topic, so it’s hard to say it was ever going to be a great Wild West story in the first place... And it’s not just “the fandom being offended at history.” The issue is how that history is being used and framed in the story, not the fact that it exists.
He literally asked the slaves fo leave whenever they want ,and slavery existed ....The last part is an open ending, he couldn't mean it literally ...YOU FUCKIN POS , JAXX WORKED SO HARD FOR THIS AND WE HAVE BEEN ALL WAITING FOR IT ...NOW MENTIONING HISTORICAL FACTS HAS BECOME SENSITIVE...SO SICK OF THIS COMMUNITY
oh lord. The emancipation proclamation declared slaves were free so regardless of whether he told the slaves they were free or not, he’d have to let them go anyways. It doesn’t matter if this is fictional it’s based on actual historic racial trauma that is still harmful to this day. And we’re the “pieces of shit” for feeling offended when you’re out here defending and justifying racism is insane. No indigenous or black person would gladly refer to themselves and as a “humble slave.” You want a yaoi so bad that you’re willing to dismiss racism
R u serious right now? U also aren't exactly sure if the last part means he's also a slave or not. And purely based on what he says, it indicates that he's a slave. And it doesn't matter if Jaxx worked hard or not, she clearly didn't if she didn't research enough to know how much of a sensitive topic this is. It's not a "historical fact" if she is romanticizing and sexualizing slavery. It doesn't matter the top freed them. She didn't even have the decency to draw the faces of the black characters he "freed"
Thats completely missing my point?? I'm not saying every faceless character is a problem, im saying that in a story about slavery, the enslaved black characters are introduced as a group to be "freed" by the white protagonist (white saviour complex) and then largely remain in the background, while the narrative focuses on him. A random faceless maid isnt comparable because she isnt part of a historically oppressed group whose experiences are central to the subject matter







When will this get animated???