Rebecca
3,824 reviews71 followers
This volume is definitely an odd duck. The sudden return of Yoh's neighbor (and purported childhood friend) Haruma is rife with red flags - even without the possibility that his family all committed suicide, he's extra creepy in the way he just showed up out of the blue and seems intent on starting a relationship with her. But some of the creepy does appear to be a red herring, so it's hard to tell what's really going on. I'm not entirely certain that the series isn't fully aware of what it's doing at all times and that it isn't being off-putting on purpose. In any event, I'll be giving it a second volume to see if I can figure it out.
- manga romance
Kagama-the Literaturevixen
814 reviews135 followers
Yoh is making a fresh start by breaking up with her cheating boyfriend and to start college but she is surprised to learn that she wont be living alone in her new home when the handsome Haruma meets her at the door. Apperantly her mother offered to let him stay there and furthermore they used to be neighbours and childhood friends. Yoh cant recall him though... Haruma is pretty much the perfect guy and but Yoh cant surpress her suspicions when she cant get hold of her mother to verify his story. Her fears are reinforced when she learns a shocking thing about Harumas family and someone starts stalking her. Yoh is not the generic sweet female heroine. She has issues and is far from perfect but she tries hard. Since her mother is a workaholic she learnt to fend for her self from a very young age. She longs to be noticed and cared for by her mother but pushes down her need as to not be seen as bothersome. Despite this she has a very straightforward personality wich is in sharp contrast with Hiruma. Haruma is very two-faced and manipulative below his beautiful outside and he expertly pulls the strings behind the scenes to...well as for now his motive is unknown. He seems to have some strong attachment or obsession with Yoh . Perhaps it has something to with his dark past. It may even have something to with how Yoh lost her memory of him. I liked how some characters was lampshading when Yoh is telling them that her childhood friend showed up to live with her, her friends response is "The pretty boy you ran into yesterday was a childhood friend of yours?! ...so whats the name of the dating game you are playing?" and ( a common trope in manga/anime) ( When it comes to the the art its pretty good and clean. Its not very flashy but it fits the story. The only thing I didnt like was that often there were so many speech bubbles it bogged down the page and made it quite hard to read sometimes. The panels I liked the best where the artist showed restraint. Ive been wanting to read this manga ever since I learnt of it last year so when it arrived in my Kindle I read it through in one sitting. I like works of fiction with a psychological edge to them and I am especially happy when I can find a manga with it :D Cant wait to find out how the story progresses in the next volume. Recs :Something's Wrong With Us, Vol. 1
"It happens all the time in manga and stuff. The guy is all "I came back to find to find the childhood friend Ive always loved"
- manga
Lissa Hawley
1,249 reviews26 followers
4.5 stars
The suspense is a bit painful.
Mark
2,351 reviews208 followers
Yoh’s cheating boyfriend is no sooner kicked to the curb than she meets up with a childhood friend, Haruma, who quickly inserts himself into her life. With his good looks and helpful saves, Haruma seems too good to be true, even as he moves in and weird coincidences start to pile up. Just how much of this is psycho-thriller and how much is one incredibly sneaky rom-com? I honestly believe that this story is the latter, otherwise I think I would have really disliked it. No, by the time we find out the mysterious backstory of Haruma’s house, which was next door to Yoh’s, I was truly at the point where I felt the author knew exactly what genre they were aping and was playing everything up for laughs. You might think that this is a weird way to make a comedy, and it is, but there’s entirely too much coincidental nonsense that appears incredibly horrifying but can also be hand waved as bad luck or things we just don’t get proper explanation for. If this is a straight thriller, it is played way too broadly to possibly take seriously and the general goofing around in the background has me choosing to think this is a very intentional bit of authorial intent. If that’s not the case, Haruma throws up more red flags than the graduation ceremony at a bullfighting academy. Anyway, I like almost all the characters in this. Yoh might get herself in over her head, but she’s self-possessed and very willing to stand up for things. She reminds me a LOT of Hori from Horimiya, minus the kinks. Having a female lead that isn’t quite a helpless waif does help make this a better read. Haruma is obviously a bit more sinister and Yoh’s mom tossing him into Yoh’s house without so much as a by-your-leave is kind of crazy, but Haruma is a LOT less oppressive than he could be. His personal space violations are quite tame (though still big no-no’s) compared to some nonsense I’ve read. It has its moments of cute rom-com, and the constant framing of Haruma as this malevolent psychopath who then turns out to be nothing of the sort is a great way to spoof these particular sorts of bad boy/stalker stories. As much as I didn’t mind Not Your Idol, that series has been both over-the-top AND incredibly serious. This is, so far, a much more lighthearted take on that notion of the pursuing stalker (yes, I realize what I just wrote). 3.5 stars, a strong start with a strong cast that I’m expecting big things from. No rounding up because I admit that this might turn out to have been a serious story, which I will find woefully disappointing because as a send-up pointing out the excesses of the genre while layering in a fun romance it is, thus far, going in all the right directions. (No seriously, if it turns out this was intended to be a serious thriller from the start, well, this is so dumb that I wouldn’t give it more than two stars; for now it gets the benefit of the doubt.)
Heather
912 reviews57 followers
It took me a while to get into this manga, but I ended up loving it. The heroine, college student Yoh, receives a text message from someone accusing her of stealing her boyfriend. That leads Yoh to assume her boyfriend is two-timing her and she dumps him, publicly. In the middle of their explosive breakup, Yoh accidentally bumps into a guy who then comes to her rescue and helps her deal with her ex. When Yoh gets home, the stranger she bumped into is INSIDE HER HOUSE, and insists they have known each other since childhood and he's going to be her roommate from now on, because, he says, her mom - who is permanently away on business - said it's okay. Here's what upset me about all this: Yoh seems like a woman who knows her worth and has a level head on her shoulders; she's not going to accept any apologies or excuses from a cheating boyfriend. So why is she so gullible as to believe this complete stranger when he greets her at her own front door and says he's her roommate and her mom's okay with it, when her mother gave her no prior warning and she has no recollection of this guy? Also, she realizes when she gets home that her key is missing...but the guy she just bumped into moments before is suddenly in her house. It only makes sense that he pickpocketed her key and made up a seemingly crazy story just to get close to a pretty girl and gain entrance into her home, but she buys everything he says. However, as the manga progresses, Yoh does become suspicious. Her best friend is also wary of the stranger, and that helps Yoh gather the courage to confront the guy with all the facts that don't add up. But then a lot of pieces of the stranger's bizarre story begin to come together and start making sense. He's able to prove the things he says are true, and Yoh grows more trusting again when he rescues her from another dangerous situation. All the while, though, this guy keeps grinning like a villain and you can tell he's plotting something behind Yoh's back. I have to say, by the end of the manga I had really gotten hooked and I'm too curious not to continue and see where this bizarre story goes! UPDATE: I think I enjoyed my second read even more.
- 2021 action manga-manhwa
John
907 reviews
I can’t help but compare this to Not Your Idol—the whole shady coincidences with the perspective romantic interest—and it loses out in that comparison. There is no subtlety to the character of Haruma. He’s pretty full on creepy stalker. Yoh, too is very shallow and irritating. And, the mangaka throws out too many overt stunts to fool and distract the reader. The art is attractive if not a little plain, and some transitions can be obscured by both strange panel choices and excessive dialog bubbles (not too mention all of the tiny text asides that are typical of shōjo). With my shelves full to bursting, this is one that I likely won’t give my usual three to five volume trial. It’s destined for an early trip to a little free library near me.
- manga
Zian B.
2,092 reviews31 followers
As interesting as this manga seems, I cannot handle yandere stories for the life of me. So for anxiety reasons, I won’t continue reading this series. However, I like that Yoh-chan stands up for herself and I like how supportive her little friend group is.
- read-manga
Julia
721 reviews2 followers
Yo durchlebt eine schwierige Zeit. Sie lebt alleine, bis ein Kindheitsfreund vor ihr steht, an den sie sich nicht mehr erinnert und mit der Erlaubnis ihrer Mutter ab sofort bei ihr wohnen soll. Doch ein Geheimnis umgibt ihn. Ein spannender Auftakt, ich bin durchaus gespannt wie es weiter geht.
Courtney Rose
504 reviews11 followers
This is a weird one to describe. Yoh is a college freshman who has been basically abandoned by her mother and left to fend for herself. She’s got a lot going on but she’s managing, up until she needs Haruma. Haruma claims to be a childhood friend who lived next door growing up and steps in during a public fight Yoh is having with her boyfriend. Accusations are thrown around and Haruma ends up saying he ran into Yoh’s mother, and she told him he could stay at the house with Yoh since they grew up together. Yoh isn’t too sure about this, but her mother has a history of forgetting her and forgetting to tell her things, so she allows it, although one of her friends brings up the point that Haruma’s family died years ago by suicide, and this left him an orphan. This manga absolutely tries its best to be a horror/thriller style, with multiple creepy things going around. Someone is stalking Yoh, someone is watching her and her friends, and Haruma is a creep in general, full of red flags. Yoh isn’t nearly as passive as I expected her to be, but it’s obvious she yearns to be noticed and protected since her mother never gave a shit. Haruma on the other hand, even if he is a red herring and not a creep, REALLY comes off as being obsessed with Yoh and is possibly a sexual deviant because yikes, some of the things he says and does are fucked up. I feel like Haruma’s behavior is too obviously creepy for the story to be that transparent and a lot of this must be a swerve, but I’m not entirely sure. If it becomes a romcom I am going to stop reading because even if taken wrongly Haruma is still creepy as fuck. This is a weird one that I don’t know exactly how I feel about it. I think reading a second volume will make it clearer, but this is the kind of manga I’d have to be in the mood for in order to want to read.
- horror in-translation manga
Nazish Ahmed (Nazish Reads)
772 reviews38 followers
When I first heard of this series this year, I wasn't interested in it, although the covers did intrigue me. I love the creepy undertones and the art is beautiful. But last month I was watching a video by Colleen's Manga Rec's and she talked a little bit about this series and mentioned that the male lead is a yandere. I was instantly sold. I don't know if You know how much I love yandere characters, especially male characters (because I'm a straight woman). This series has short chapters, which I love because it makes me feel like I'm reading more than I think I am and after finishing a chapter, not just because of the cliffhanger, I also want to read the next chapter because I'm thinking, "there are only 12 pages". My last read had 3 chapters that were 60+ pages each and I felt like I wasn't getting very far. It also has to do with the story and characters but still, that's too long for one chapter. One chapter shouldn't be more than 35 pages long. So far the male lead, Haruma Hirose does seem slightly yandere but not much. He seems to be very good at hiding his emotions, which is probably closer to real life ones than some of the other fictional yandere. If he is one, then the acting and hiding emotions makes sense because real life sociopaths and especially psychopaths are really good at manipulating people into trusting them. Although, I don't know for sure if he is one since it's hard to tell what's true and what isn't right now and what's really going on with him. I love that, I love trying to figure what a character's true personality is and what's really going on and we don't even know how much of the strings he's pulling. I'm not sure how I feel about him yet but he is very intriguing. As for our female lead, Yoh, I really liked her. She's 18 years old and goes to university. So this is a shojo manga where the main characters are adults (they're adults according to some countries like Canada and America) but I think when this series was started, they were considered kids in the mangaka's home country because in Japan while the age of consent is 14, the age when they become adults was 20 for over 100 years. They changed to 18 this year. I also love her best friends: Touya (not sure if I spelled that properly) and Sawako. Touya is also suspicious about Haruma and protective of You, and Sawako is so funny. I liked when the author used her showing self awareness on the basic set up of this story when Yoh tells both of them that her childhood friend showed up out of nowhere to live with her, Sawako says something like, "The pretty boy you ran into yesterday was a childhood friend of yours?" "So what's the name of the dating game you're playing?" And then she says that this kind of stuff happens all the time in shojo manga. That's so true, especially with older titles (despite what it sounds like here, I actually love that), which I thought was funny. Overall, I enjoyed this volume. I loved the subtle creepy atmosphere, the fact that we can't tell what's true and what isn't, the question of who Haruma really is and Yoh's past, the characters and I'm interested to see where this is going. I mentioned in my last review that I love male characters who aren't afraid to admit their love (except for the yaoi lead, as long as the other guy isn't afraid to admit his love, I don't mind that he's a tsundere). I'm going to read a few more chapters before I decide if I want to buy this series, I'm 80% sure that I will want to, I just want to be sure. Blog: nazishreads.net/TravelandBookBlog
She's caring but isn't afraid to get into fights. She's tough and tries to do everything herself because she doesn't want to burden anyone. The reason for that is because when she was little, her parents got divorced and her mom started working a lot. Yoh said she could take care of herself to make her mom happy. You would think that she would see through that and say something like, "you don't need to do that, you're still very young," but she doesn't. I would understand if Yoh was 16 at the time but she was 7 or 8! I don't know how parents actually are in Japan, I hope they're not like her: neglecting her child (she doesn't even hire a babysitter), expecting and believing her child to cook food and other responsibilities that no 7 year old should have, etc. I don't care that she's a workaholic or if they needed money (I don't think they had money trouble since it's never mentioned in this volume), you don't do that unless you're a terrible parent. If all you want to do is focus on work and leave your 7 year old home alone and love your work more than your kid, then don't have children. Why is this so common in manga and anime? Someone with a family like that would be easy for an obsessive lover/stalker (still not sure if he's a stalker but he sure seems like it) to get close to and manipulate. Anyways, I really like Yoh and feel so bad for her that she got stuck with such neglectful parents, she doesn't deserve that. At least she has great friends who are looking out for her. She's also pretty smart. She understands English, which I thought was a nice detail because most manga leads don’t know English. She also suspected that something was off about Haruma but kept talking herself out of it which makes sense since we always think, "that won't happen to me, these kinds of things happen to other people." So for not suspecting him anymore after some things happen, doesn't make her dumb, it makes her realistic, that's how people usually think. We as spectators can easily see that something dangerous is going but she doesn't see what we are seeing. I also love that she is seen as pretty by other people. In so many shojo and Josie manga, the main girl is seen as plain looking or ugly even when in the art she looks good and the guy is always good looking in those series and very popular but to me Tsukasa from Boys Over Flowers was ugly and Tsukushi was better looking than him even though she was very plain looking. You’d be surprised how many series there are with plain or “ugly” female main and beautiful main guy. I’m so tired of that, so I’m glad that Yoh isn’t another one of those and that both her and Haruma are good looking (there’s nothing wrong with making both characters beautiful), it’s so refreshing😊
Twitter: Naz_readsanime
Instagram: nazishreads, nazcosplay, nradesigns, charmedanimegirl01
- books-i-read-in-2022 ebooks manga-myster
Jayme Mendez
151 reviews
After going to Barnes & Noble with a friend, we decided to pick out manga for one another. It was a cute thing we saw on TikTok and thought we should recreate since it seemed fun and neither of us own that much manga (although I used to have the complete Bleach series). Love and Heart (a romance manga?) plays off of the typical roommate turns out to be a cute boy trope in a new way where the reader is suspicious of his intentions. Even after finishing I want to believe that he’s good, but I’m not holding out on it. While you kind of want to bang your head against a wall while reading because you want the Main Character to have better deduction skills, this was a pretty ok first entry and I hope we learn more about the guys mysterious past.
Angela
980 reviews
It feels nice to finish a book you started but didn’t finish for awhile. That may be part of my rating here. Nothing really compelled me to keep reading this. The last half sped through quicker than the other chapters.
- graphic-novels-manga read-2021
MargReadsManga
417 reviews71 followers
Read
June 3, 2021I just couldn’t finish this one. It was kinda boring and wasn’t really connecting with any of the characters. I won’t be continuing this series. I just didn’t click with this one.
Emma
1,648 reviews9 followers
1.5 stars. Intriguing but very unsettling plot.
- manga
Beth
1,226 reviews179 followers
This manga's different than most of the stuff I read, got to give it that. It's a psychological suspense thing, I think, though I have so little familiarity with that genre you shouldn't take my word for it. Yoh is a college student whose divorced mother is working overseas. On the same day, nearly the same moment in fact, that she breaks up with her boyfriend, she literally bumps into an attractive young man. Later that day, that same young man, Hirose, is waiting for her at her home and opens the door for her just as she finds she's lost her house key. According to Hirose, he met Yoh's mother in Seattle (small world, eh?) and has her permission to do a house stay while he is, how very coincidentally, taking courses at the same school Yoh is attending. This story relies so heavily on coincidence it's pretty ridiculous. A home invasion robber just happens to be stalking Yoh's neighborhood, and Hirose is right there to save Yoh when he invades her home and threatens her with a knife. He's always there to steady Yoh when she makes the slightest stumble while she's walking. And he seems a little too perfectly situated to get all of the impediments standing between himself and Yoh out of his way: Yoh's ex-boyfriend, Yoh's ex's ex who is stalking her, etc. Yoh's best male bud Youta had better watch his back... Hirose also has quite a few panels where he's smirking behind Yoh's back while he's all but gaslighting her, and he doesn't seem even slightly sincere or broken up when he talks about his mother's suicide when he was seven years old. He's also declaring his longstanding love for Yoh like three days after they first meet. At the same time, every woman he comes across casually is falling all over him. Nope, I wouldn't trust this asshole for a second. Yoh herself vacillates between independent tough girl and the dimmest of dim bulbs. For example, she loses her key--which handily doesn't have a plastic cuff, or keychain, or other recognizable markers attached to it--an hour or two before Hirose lets her in from inside the house. She doesn't question that situation until well past the midway point of the volume, and then something comes up where she's groveling and apologizing for not trusting him. You'd assume some level of self-preservation from a girl who's been living by herself for the majority of the last ten years, but she throws herself in the path of the housebreaker, as one example, with no caution whatsoever. The art has its moments, but for the most part is just okay. Most of the story's interest comes from my not having a good idea of what to make of it. It can ride for a while on my groaning at Yoh's constant failures to add one and one together, and/or wondering when Hirose might tip his hand either as an evil mastermind or as a protector who keeps his lady love safe via extremely sketchy and suspicious means.
frau.meln
593 reviews10 followers
Aufmachung Der Zeichenstil ist sehr filigran und die Charaktere detailreich. Auf Hintergründe wurde dafür weniger Wert gelegt. Der Erzählstil hat eine tolle Dynamik und schafft es unterschwellig eine gefährliche Atmosphäre zu verdeutlichen, obwohl in diesen Momenten eher das Gegenteil geschieht. Protagonisten Yo ist Studentin und lebt allein. Damit kommt sie gut zurecht. Doch grundsätzlich hat sie im Frühling eine Pechsträhne, in der ihr einfach nichts gelingen will. Haruma macht ein Auslandsjahr in Japan und ist dank Yo's Mutter plötzlich ihr Mitbewohner. Ihn umgibt eine charmante, aber auch düstere Aura. Fazit Zeichen- sowie Erzählstil fand ich fantastisch. Alles hat den Anschein einer cuten Shojo Story, doch schwingt unterschwellig einiges anderes mit. Dieses Gefühl von Gefahr, welches stetig vorhanden ist, bringt irgendwie eine ungeahnte Spannung in die Geschichte. Am Ende von Band eins kann ich bisher weder die Absicht Harumas erkennen, noch Vermutung darüber anstellen, was wohl passieren wird. Außerdem ist Yo als Protagonistin toll, denn sie ist tough und hat wahnsinnig gute Instinkte. Bisher habe ich nichts gelesen, was ich damit vergleich könnte bzw. in eine Richtung wie diese zu verlaufen scheint. Daher freue ich mich schon sehr auf den zweiten Band und bin gespannt wohin die Reise geht.
Sades ♡
234 reviews9 followers
around 3.25-3.5 star ⭐️ ~ ❤️the vibe: suspenseful, psychological, dark romancey 🫶🏼 🖤this one was recommended to me & I enjoyed it 🖤Yoh (fmc) starts out with a messy breakup (which feels very high school in its execution instead of college but I think that parts over now) & bumps into someone who turns out to be her new roommate (her mom is letting him stay at the home & is always away on business & rarely talks to her daughter/didn’t give her a heads up either) 🖤turns out—Haruma (mmc) was also her neighbor & childhood friends when they were younger but Yoh doesn’t remember her childhood (traumatic past to be revealed …) so she doesn’t remember him or what tragedy happened with his family 🖤strange things start happening to Yoh & they all start happening since the breakup/when Haruma gets to town — losing her keys, being stalked, Haruma somehow always showing up at the ‘right time’ 🖤Haruma is giving toxic, walking red flag 🚩 but we all know I’m a dark romance reader so am I gonna be rooting for them??? Idk I gotta see where this turns out !!! 🖤ps I like her friends Touya & Sawako too 🥰 🖤I bumped the stars down a little because it felt a little jumpy around & also like some scenes ended abruptly but I’m sooo intrigued by this series I know I’ll enjoy as more go on ❤️excited to start the next!
- 2023-reads graphic-novels
Carissa
63 reviews
I picked this one up thinking it was going to be a cheesy romance book. I like reading cheesy romances.
This book is not that.
In fact I would say it just isn’t for me.
However, just because it’s not for me doesn’t mean it isn’t well written.
This book made me feel very uncomfortable almost the whole way through it. I had seen someone describe the story as a comedy and psychological horror duo and I would have to agree with that description.
I happen to be a very sensitive type of person so I really wish I could have gotten a warning about his book before reading it. Unfortunately, I binge read it right before bed. Whoops!
I kept expecting it to get better and more light hearted and it didn’t. By the end of the book I was left feeling even more uneasy then when I started it.
I do like the mystery in the story line, it’s what made me want to keep reading even though I was very uncomfortable.
If someone is the type of person that likes exploring psychological horror, then I would recommend this book to that person.
Kastie Pavlik
Author6 books42 followers
It's not what I expected and I don't really know how I feel about it, but I am curious enough to try the next volume. The whole "cheating" argument gets old fast. At times, I like Yoh and at others, I don't, and I think it's because of how often "cheating" gets brought up. In the first few pages of the book, she dumps the guy, so why it's even a thing after that is beyond me. It does tie into the book's subplot, but not really to the extent that it's brought up, and the fact that I'm reveiwing that aspect more than the more interesting parts of the book says a lot. It overrides the creep factor that I was looking forward to, and makes the characters read more like junior high or high school students. It's hard to buy them as college students. It has promise and I've read worse first volumes that go on to become decent series after the initial bumps, but I'm worried that this will become less "creepy" and more "romance."
- manga shojo-younger-traditional-romance suspense
Rebecca Ann
25 reviews
Though this read did start off rocky and uncertain for me it really took a turn for the better about a quarter into the first volume. It has all the elements you would want in a romantic thriller, things that seem clear and easy to read into at one point are later turned on their heads, and by the end of the first volume I felt just as uncertain about who to trust. Main character Yoh Yagisawa is the type of protagonist who keeps you on your toes opinion wise about her; some of her choices feel inherently naïve or obviously endangering, but her self awareness and constant inner dialogue make her a relatable and likable character.
reya
425 reviews25 followers
It started out very lighthearted and turned creepy in no time. Yoh-san's mum has apparently invited a young man to stay over at her daughter's place during his stay in Japan. The said man claims to be Yoh-san's childhood friend who had to leave for the US at a young age of seven. He's now back, but along he brings some series of disasters in Yoh-san's life. Left me comparing this to Netflix's You - sheesh.
- manga-webtoon
Mary
344 reviews31 followers
I don’t know how I feel about this series… Like should I hate Haruma-kun? I’m with Touya-kun though, he gives me some weird vibes. Ugh I hate this ( ̄^ ̄) there’s seven volumes so far, so I guess I’ll see.
Tabby Blockeel
54 reviews2 followers
The mystery and suspense of this volume was wonderful. I’m excited to see what happens next and to see where this series gets taken. I like both of the main characters and I really enjoy the random little mystery bits to Hirose. I cant wait to see what volume two has in store for its readers!
Hannah Williams
190 reviews1 follower
Bruh this girl smart af how you find out you’re being stalked AND who it is within one day with just one tiny clue and then get GASLIT OUT OF IT?! But he was working overtime on that lie fr made me colorblind suddenly I can’t see red flags… is it me? Am I the problem?
L
75 reviews
3.5 This is usually the type of messed up and mysterious books/manga I like, but I felt bored while I was reading it and like it was missing something. I'm not against reading another one to see where it goes.
Jurnee Wilson
164 reviews
3.5 rounded up! I really like the idea behind this, but felt like this whole first volume was the same as the synopsis. No new information, just a little more detail behind it. But I’m hoping to continue and get more into it in the following volumes because I do like the concept.
Kate
217 reviews
3.7 stars
Momo
481 reviews
Love the thriller/slight horror aspect of this manga. 4 stars, could do without all the mentions of assault though
Mary
1,856 reviews15 followers
3.5 stars
It has potential, but I don't really like creepy yandere characters. I'll read more of it, but may end up dropping the series.
- graphic-novels
Brittany Owens
5 reviews1 follower
Read
June 16, 2021Loved it! Cannot wait for more! Definitely has suspense!