Ying Reads: Dan Shu's Diary | Honkai: Star Rail



Take your time and enjoy the story.

Ying Merch: https://ying.haidl.live

Ending Song:
(Thoma fansong) The Breeze of Home By Ying!
https://youtu.be/CK7thGEVq5Y

Ying Socials:
Main channel: @ying_verse
Full VODs: @YingVODs
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ying_verse
Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/ying
Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@ying_verse
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ying_verse/

Enjoy My Honkai Moments Like This? Check Out This Link Below!:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLI1-Trvp6RMzm3IhA-8_Hsgpre_ZfhS-l

#honkaistarrail #starrail #clips #mihoyo #hoyoverse #reaction #ying

source

8 thoughts on “Ying Reads: Dan Shu's Diary | Honkai: Star Rail”

  1. it's the ancestors fault to begin with, the xianzhou people need to reflect on that rather than just insta-turn yaoshi as an antagonist, things that too good to be true is always a bad thing, having long life without consequences? yeah, right

    Reply
  2. Dan Shu: Did you ever hear the tragedy of Sanctus Medicus the Merciful?
    Trailblazer: No
    Dan Shu: I thought not. This is not a story the followers of Reignbow Arbiter would tell you. It's an abundance legend. Sanctus Medicus was so powerful and so wise that they could use the power of The Abundance to create life. They had such a knowledge of The Abundance that they could keep the ones they cared about from dying. The Abundance is a pathway to many abilities some consider to be… unnatural.
    Trailblazer: Is it possible to learn that power?

    Dan Shu: Not from the Devilish Archer

    Reply
  3. But if I'm being serious – Dan Shu's questline made me question if I'm on the right side of this conflict. While I can't condone the methods used by the Disciples, I can see their reasoning.

    Not to mention that Dan Shu is such a well written tragic villain. At first you don't notice anything odd about her, until that part where she goes on an unhinge tirade in front of a little girl about how living as an Incomplete is pure neverending suffering. This was the first red flag. I wonder how many people didn't think too much of it at the time.

    Reply

Leave a Comment