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  1. SPOILER. The beautiful tragedy of Happy Sugar Life. Discussion. It’s been almost 5 years since I watched HSL and I still think about this 12 episode show from time to time. How we follow Satou Matsuzaka, who is basically the “villain” of the story.

  2. I guess that's tragedy for you. Nobody is in a good place except for arguably Satou who escapes her crimes through death. Even if she and Shio did fly away, her crimes would still catch up to her in the end.

  3. The ending of Happy Sugar Life is a culmination of the dark and twisted journey that Satou has been on throughout the series. In the final episodes, Satou’s true nature is revealed as she goes to extreme lengths to protect her relationship with Shio.

  4. Oct 26, 2023 · Happy Sugar Life is very well aware of the implications and often just piles them on to see its characters crack because that makes good drama and horror. At times, it does border on tragedy porn...

  5. Happy Sugar Life is a tragedy. I mean this in both literary and quality terms. Despite how interestingly and enticingly crafted this tragic tale is, and how effectively some of its presentation is, this show has one fatal flaw: overemphasis. One wouldn’t think that this is so catastrophic, but Happy Sugar Life proves why “show, don’t tell” is a thing. There are two forms of this ...

  6. I just finished Happy Sugar Life, and here's how I wanted it to end. Everything is the same except for the final parallel chapter. Instead of her Hallucinating Satou, I would have her baking the sweet's for a shrine she made at the destroyed building.

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  8. A boy who is searching for the whereabouts of Shio. He is later revealed to be Shio's older brother; it is hinted that he had romantic feelings for Shōko after she had stolen his first kiss, and then becomes traumatized and devastated when he finds Shōko's corpse in the fire.

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