Have you read YKK?

Have you read YKK?
Did you enjoy it?

Yes and very yes

Yes and very yes.

The last volume filled me with existential dread. It was like that feeling you get from finishing any series except amplified.

I agree, all of those goddamn timeskips made me feel so uneasy, and sad.

Melancholy for sure.

Should I live long enough to live out my twilight years visiting Alpha's cafe...

But who was her master in the end though?

I will someday.
I will someday.

you

>sells drugs for a living
>plays guitar
>has a pistol, shoots it sometimes just because
>is immortal
>has immortal girlfriend
>still helps kids grow up
>Alpha as fuck
Yes, I enjoyed YKK.

I personally found it to be one of the most depressing things ever. I think this must be what's it like to be on your deathbed and just wait for death to come agonizingly slow.

>I think this must be what's it like to be on your deathbed and just wait for death to come agonizingly slow.
The manga made a point of stressing that death doesn't have to be awful. A lot of it was really depressing, but I think that's a necessary conflict for a story like YKK. Alpha's constant solitude and isolation make an amazing contrast for when she's having fun just being around people. YKK is filled with vague melancholy that makes subtle points that you'd normally overlook stand out. It has a lot of uplifting themes it presents in a very slow and often indirect way, but they are there. It's just easier to pick up on the depressing stuff.

Yes and yes

It's S rank

Yes, and yes very much so

I plan to but it sounds extremely depressing.

I did, and I didn't like it. A lot of wasted potential with the background plot happening.

Yes
of course

I legit think it's one of the best manga ever made. It's both melancholy and uplifting, in a way I've rarely experienced before. Also looks great too.

This thread made me to start read it again, I tried once but got distracted. I don't have this much of experience with manga, but so far it's very good.

Yes, and absolutely.

Yes.
You kidding? This is the best Japan ever produced.

It sort of made me feel like shit the first time I finished it but I keep coming back to it like a battered housewife.

Hatsuseno-sensei ("Master") is implied to be a respected researcher investigating the strange growing organisms like the "water gods" and was, presumably, involved in the creation of robots along with Sensei.

Alpha and Director Alpha are both prototypes and the possession/children of Master and Sensei, respectively, leading one to assume they were produced at a similar time during the research and development of robots. Sensei's house/lab being located close to Cafe Alpha is less a coincidence in this scenario if we believe the two worked together.

Director Alpha's mission aboard the Taapon appears to be observation and recording the changes to the planet on a macro scale while Master is traveling to examine individual oddities. He's so well-known that nearly his name alone grants Ayase entry when we're introduced to the first water god.

The question I've always felt lingering, more than anything, was when did he activate Alpha? Based on Sensei's age at the start of the story and her age during the flashbacks to the research team, compared to how people are mostly not surprised by robots, it seems like there's a gap between the production of robots, launch of Taapon and the start of Alpha's "life". If there's a gap, why?

It's not something I can probably explain, but the feeling I get is that Master gives Alpha away to the world because he's realized that there's no turning things around anymore. He's a mysterious guy, though, so who knows?

Whoa

Yes and YES.
I dunno about you guys but this scene made me literally cry.

And this one too. ;_;

Honestly I tried reading his other works, and I just can't get into them like YKK

YKK is pretty much perfect

Yes.
Yes.