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Juiz says she has formed the Union each time in order to put an end to the cycle by killing God. She believes that Billy must have betrayed them because he found out about the cycle. The team assembles around a new roundtable to discuss how to complete the four quests and stop Billy and Under. To help with this, Juiz orders Andy and Fuuko to find a
book said to show both the past and future. 19"Undead + Unluck"
Transliteration: "Andeddo + Anrakku" (Japanese: あんでっど+あんらっく)Jirō FujimotoSei TsugutaJirō FujimotoFebruary 17, 2024 (2024-02-17) Juiz reveals that the book is actually Fuuko's favorite manga series, To You, From Me, and demonstrates how certain story arcs detail past events, like the alien invasion and fight with Spoil. Juiz believes that the raw manuscript was actually made via use of an Artifact that the author,
Anno Un, used. Andy decides the best plan is to infiltrate the manga's production office with a copy of their own manga. Together with other Union members, Fuuko creates her own manga about the first time she and Andy met titled Undead + Unluck. Fuuko heads into the office and convinces her tour guide, Tahioka, to allow her to see the raw manuscript, confirming its creation via an Artifact. She also learns that there are other story arcs that were not published that talks about Billy's betrayal, the four active quests, and Andy's past. Tahioka then calls Anno Un and allows Fuuko to talk to them to set up a meeting in Canada.
Archived from the original on
February 22, 2018. Retrieved February 21, 2018. ^ "Sailor Moon Crystal Dice Challenge". Dyskami Publishing Company. Archived from the original on February 22, 2018. Retrieved February 21, 2018. ^ "Sailor Moon Crystal Gets 2 Board Games This Year". Anime News Network.
April 27, 2017. Archived from the original on February 22, 2018. Retrieved February 21, 2018.
Yet in all that time focusing on him, most of the ensemble gets left out in the lurch. The “Greek chorus,” or the series of women who serve under Cid in Shadow Garden, are the prime example. They are caricatures rather than characters, a harem in principle and occasional sexual connotation, though not with Cid himself. No chance is given to develop many of them into substantial beings—they don’t even get names beyond Greek letter designations, hence why I referred to them as “Greek chorus” before—because the show’s structure deemphasizes
their own relevance. Throughout most of the story, they appear for brief moments and then vanish for long
stretches of time, and their contributions to Cid’s shadowy operations do little more than deliver messages or background information. There’s a bizarre fixation on several of them being either competitive, protective, or envious of other members’ breasts.