The Guild Member Next Door -chapters 1-75- -

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For those following the manhwa, season 2 continues into these deeper plot points, while the completed novel spans 153 chapters for the full story. or a comparison between the novel and manhwa The Guild Member Next Door - Reviews - The StoryGraph

The character of Shinku is particularly interesting, as his laid-back and eccentric personality serves as a foil to the protagonist's more serious and driven nature. The Guild Member Next Door -Chapters 1-75-

She doesn’t move for another month. They spend it running old dungeons, two monitors side by side, the thin walls of Maple House finally quiet—filled instead with the sound of two people who stopped being strangers the moment one of them decided to stop standing in the fire.

The Guild Member Next Door: Chapters 1–75 – The Ultimate Catch-Up Guide Could you tell me , orI'd love to

Hana, who ran from her old guild after a failure she still blames herself for, realizes she’s been doing the same thing: avoiding connection to avoid loss.

Jiho, now knowing Hana is Lumi, softens his real-world demeanor. He begins engineering excuses to interact with her—sharing home-cooked meals, helping with groceries, and fixing her Wi-Fi. She doesn’t move for another month

The first external conflict arises. A rival guild, the Crimson Talons, attempts to poach Iris. To keep her, the Silver Crescent Guild forces Kaito onto her "guard detail" for a high-level dungeon crawl. This introduces the main action dynamic: Kaito is the tank’s assistant, physically incapable of keeping up with S-rank monsters, but Iris prioritizes keeping him alive over the main tank. The rest of the party notices. Rumors spread.

As the physical neighbors help each other with real-world problems (like sickness or grocery mishaps), their real-life relationship begins to sweeten, rivaling their deep in-game trust. Chapters 51–75: The Threshold of Truth

As the chapters progress toward the mid-70s, the "digital-only" relationship begins to bleed into reality, often facilitated by humorous misunderstandings and forced proximity. 4. Critical Reception