Description
Self-proclaimed ordinary high school girl Kyoko Arisugawa slipped and died in the bathroom, after which she met a god called the Creator God and was reincarnated into another world.
Reborn into a world she knows nothing about, she begins her new life as Alice.
A new world and a new life.
Various encounters, adventures, and dramas she has yet to see await her.
Yes, this is just another one of those run-of-the-mill otherworld reincarnation stories.
Except that the protagonist knows absolutely nothing about the templates, tropes, flags, clichés, cheats, common sense, and so on, typical of these kinds of stories.
A forest that explodes and blows up if you scream.
Her reincarnated race is a True Ancestor Vampire, a species that went extinct 30,000 years ago.
The first being she met was a dragon called the Black Death Dragon of Ruin.
Stats so numerous they'd astound even a god.
“Elves? Humans? I don't really get it, are they like Peking Man or something? Whatever.”
“Huh? I'm a vampire?”
“Immortal...? Wait, what about the part where I get a body everyone envies?”
“My magic power is 80 billion... I guess that might be a lot. Well, you can never have too much.”
This is the story of Alice, a perfectly ordinary girl who knows nothing about such otherworld stories.
Basically, this will be a story about the protagonist leisurely traveling the world with her companions, living a gag-filled daily life.
Since the protagonist knows nothing about otherworld stories, she holds nothing back.
She tries to explain everything away with, “This other world is amazing!” and “As expected of a magic world!”
She even kills people without batting an eye.
“Lately, I've been tired of reading only heavy stories...”
“I wish I could read a heartwarming story about silly, cute girls.”
“After all, I need a story where the protagonist is the strongest and slays all the villains, something I can read without stress.”
“Instead of rising from nothing... wouldn't it be better if they were strongest from the start?”
“Stories about heroes, demon lords, nobles, or slaves are good too, but I really want to read human dramas set in the daily lives of perfectly ordinary people. Is there anything like that out there?”
This is recommended for such readers.