It's even made invisible with magic, so that passing boats and planes can't see it. Deserted Island: Hakaze is trapped on one of these by Samon.It turns out to be more complicated than that, however. Dead All Along: Samon reveals that the Hakaze they're talking to is actually two years in the past, and he presents her skeleton as proof that she's already dead.And then he wanted to keep Mahiro in one until they found Aika's killer. First, he theorizes that Samon used one to trick Hakaze into thinking she was stuck two years in the past, but then that turns out to be true. Convenient Coma: Yoshino seems to like the " Put on a Bus" variety of this trope.Hanemura gets increasingly disturbed by how no one can figure out what seems obvious to him. It's already ridiculous to start with, but the theories Samon and Junichirou come up with just keep straying further and further from the truth. Comically Missing the Point: Episode 17 has Samon, Junichirou, Mahiro and Hanemura hold a meeting to try and figure out the identity of Yoshino's girlfriend.Character Tics: Samon and his Sword planting.She's feeling down about the partial awakening of the Tree of Beginnings, and after she grabs his sleeve, he comforts her. Caught the Heart on His Sleeve: A (mostly) non-romantic example: Hakaze to Yoshino.Cain and Abel: Played with through Samon and Hakaze as both siblings are Well Intentioned Extremists that only want to save the world with as little loss of life as possible, and don't show signs of bearing legitimate animosity towards one another.Instead, they want Mahiro to help them gain leverage over Yoshino, eliminating the risk he poses. By "No", I Mean "Yes": "Can you kill Yoshino Takigawa?" Shortly thereafter, they admit that this would introduce even more chaos into the situation.Butterfly of Death and Rebirth: Unseasonal butterflies are the heralds of the Black Iron syndrome, since the latent magic causes their cocoons to grow in seconds.In his defense, he knew they were Not Blood Siblings. Brother–Sister Incest: Mahiro was in love with Aika, though he doesn't admit it to himself before or after she dies.The former controls the logic of the world Blue-and-Orange Morality: The Tree of Genesis and, likely, the Tree of Exodus too.Blood from the Mouth: Played for Laughs, based on the sound-effects, when Yoshino says he thinks Hanemura broke something important when he hit him.Bland-Name Product: Mahiro mentions he's hungry, and Yoshino offers him a "Znickers" bar.The trail of blood is always depicted as a disturbingly beautiful pattern of twists and curls that could be mistaken for a carpet or a pathway, were it not for the fact that it always leads up her dress and to her throat. Black Blood: Played with whenever Aika, right after her murder, is shown.There is not a single named male character that does not qualify for this trope - and a significant amount of unnamed male characters also count. BFS: The true mage of Exodus can summon a flaming sword three times her size.Barrier Warrior: Force fields are one of the main powers of Kusaribe mages.Bare Your Midriff: Hakaze's outfit after her dress suffers from her being stranded on an island.The anime gives them a tendency to pick normal fistfights they don't seem that bad off after losing a fight to 15 opponents.They seem to have been normal high school students before Mahiro's family died, but with the help of Hakaze's talismans they can kick serious amounts of ass. Then Evangeline married Samon at the end. ![]() Junichirou has a one-sided crush on Evangeline. Hakaze has unrequited feelings for Yoshino, who is still in love with Aika. Mahiro had unrequited feelings for Aika that he wasn't aware of until some time after her death. Hanemura's girlfriend broke up with him before we meet him. All Love Is Unrequited: The only unambiguous canon couple is Yoshino/Aika, and the latter is dead.Considering the series' frequent quoting of the Trope Namer, this is most likely not a coincidence. Alas, Poor Yorick: Junichirou picks up and cradles Hakaze's skull after being informed of her death and shown the corpse in chapter 5.An anime adaptation began airing in October 2012. It began serialization in 2009 in Square Enix's Shonen GanGan magazine. Zetsuen no Tempest: The Civilization Blaster is a fantasy mystery manga series written by Arihide Sano and Kyou Shirodaira, and drawn by Ren Saizaki.
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