Chapters after 30 are still being serialized (as of the latest release in the official Japanese magazine). If you have a subscription, keep an eye out for the next instalment; the teaser suggests the “new figure” could be Mika —the girl whose memory Toru lost—now returning with her own agenda.
Chapter 22 drives home the series’ central conceit: . Toru’s accidental “Echo Burst” is a literal manifestation of this idea—his personal recollection becomes a tactical advantage. Meanwhile, Astra’s “Aegis” project threatens to weaponise memory on a planetary scale, turning the metaphor into an existential threat. -read toru ni taranai chapter 22-
Through the juxtaposition of the tag and the image, the chapter asks: What determines whether something is worth taking? Is it market value, emotional attachment, or collective recognition? The narrative suggests that worth is , not an inherent quality. When Keita later discovers an old diary hidden inside the bicycle’s frame, the diary’s “worth” instantly transforms—it becomes a repository of lived experience, a bridge to the past, and ultimately a catalyst for Keita’s own decision to act. Chapters after 30 are still being serialized (as
"We are on the verge of an eviction notice," Sudo reminded her. Is it market value, emotional attachment, or collective