Yeah, stitches and inflation isn't guro. And if a knife in the back of the head was guro, we'd lose half our images of Meiling.
As for what it is, it looks like a reference to Heart-Throbbing Adventure, specifically the part where Ran planted a bomb in Chen's stomach and detonated her. It's just that this is going back to the "classic fanon" interpretation where Ran is a Chensexual.
Yeah, stitches and inflation isn't guro. And if a knife in the back of the head was guro, we'd lose half our images of Meiling.
As for what it is, it looks like a reference to Heart-Throbbing Adventure, specifically the part where Ran planted a bomb in Chen's stomach and detonated her. It's just that this is going back to the "classic fanon" interpretation where Ran is a Chensexual.
The real Red Hood story ends up with the wolf getting stones on his stomach courtesy of the Hunter
The real Red Hood story ends up with the wolf getting stones on his stomach courtesy of the Hunter
Well, "the real Red Hood" is a little hard to prove. For starters, most of the earlier versions of the story have the wolf either live (Riding Hood merely escapes) or outright "win" by eating Riding Hood. (And Wikipedia says that it's derived from an Asian tale involving a tiger, not a wolf...) It's a story with so many different variations that it's hard to measure what qualifies any one story to be "real".