Manga Maou Wa Yuusha No Kawaii Yome Party No Bishoujo 4 Nin Kara Uragirareta Yusha Maou To Shiawase Ni Kurashimasu 4 Nin Ga Yuusha Goroshi No Dai Zainin Toshite Sekaijuu Kara Hihan Sareteru Ma Ingaouhou Kanaa Chapter 5 Hot «500+ FULL»
The chapter shows worldwide condemnation:
The four are shown crying, hiding, and blaming each other — it’s cathartic, but also tragic in a karmic way.
After being stabbed in the back by his own bride party (four beautiful warriors: the Priestess, the Swordswoman, the Mage, and the Thief), the Hero, Arata, is saved by the very Demon Lord he was meant to destroy — Lilith. The chapter shows worldwide condemnation:
The king had spread propaganda that Arata was a false hero. But in Chapter 5, evidence emerges (via leaked royal documents) that Arata truly was the chosen one. The four girls are now labeled "Dai Zainin" (Great Criminals) of "Yuusha Goroshi" (Hero Murder).
Yes. If you enjoy revenge tragedies with moral ambiguity, Chapter 5 delivers one of the most uncomfortable public shaming sequences in recent isekai manga. It successfully shifts the enemy from a monster to society itself. The “hot” spring confrontation is raw, ugly, and refuses to give easy catharsis. The four are shown crying, hiding, and blaming
Rating: 8.5/10
(Minus 1.5 for the overly long title that breaks search engines; plus extra points for the bold criticism of mob justice).
While Arata enjoys peaceful cottage life, the four beautiful girls who betrayed him (working under the corrupt human king) face an unexpected twist: the world doesn’t praise them — it condemns them. The four are shown crying
If you’ve been following this wild isekai/fantasy revenge-turned-healing story, you know Chapter 5 just dropped, and wow — the internet is on fire. Let’s break down why this chapter has everyone talking.
The art contrasts warm, soft tones in the Demon Lord’s castle (the hero’s new home) with cold, grey, angular crowd scenes. The double-page spread of the four heroines surrounded by pointing fingers is iconic. Pacing is deliberate: slow, melancholic panels of the hero watching the trial, then quick, chaotic cuts to the heroines’ panic.
The raw Japanese chapter label included “atsui” (hot), which scanlators kept as “Hot.” Three interpretations: