Logo Binge Senpai
Chat with Senpai Browse Explore Calendar
EN
Log In Sign Up
Sign Up
Logo
Chat with Senpai
Browse Calendar
Language English
SFW Mode
Log in Sign up
© 2026 Binge Senpai

Girls' Last Tour · review

★
Top reader Aug 20, 2024 · 2 min read
↑ Recommended
9 /10

Spoiler warning

This review may discuss plot details.

I feel like this manga needs a certain mindset in order to read. I read through the first 20-30 chapters of this manga on complete autopilot, because that's what I thought the manga wanted me to do. I was supremely bored. It wasn't until I started treating it differently to other SoL manga that I really became invested. Instead of passively reading and expecting it to entertain me, I started paying attention to the scenery and masterful art, and I started appreciating the manga more for what it actually was - A Journey. One thing that really stood out to me above everything else was the juxtaposition betweenthe genre’s. I can’t imagine anyone expected moe, epsisodic SoL to work well in a post-apocalyptic setting, but the writer and artist absolutely harness these elements so well that it emphasises both: The harsh, unforgiving setting highlights how young, inexperienced and innocent our main characters, and on the flips side, our cutsey, moe characters emphasise the dreadful nature of the post-apocalyptic world, despite how much they try to conceal it.

This manga has probably one of my favourite endings I’ve ever seen, it’s absolutely perfect and an incredible bitter-sweet ending to the manga, suiting the aforementioned clashing genre’s. It also serves as a perfect conclusion to the manga’s more philosophical commentary on the meaning of life, summarizing their conclusion of it all perfectly.
I’ll just leave you with a quote that actually made me bawl my eyes out for the only time so far reading a manga:

“Living was the best, wasn’t it?”

<3

12 reactions
Mark
© 2026 Binge Senpai
  • News
  • About
  • Privacy
  • Terms