Skip to main content

I Need To See More Innovative Uses of Magic in Season 2 of ‘The Wrong Way To Use Healing Magic’

Usato pushing up with a block on his back from The Wrong Way To Use Healing Magic
Recommended Videos

We’ve learned a lot from The Wrong Way to Use Healing Magic’s first season. There’s never a wrong way to apply magic, even if healing magic is used like steroids to get stronger.

Although healing magic is considered weaker in that universe, Ken Usato improvised, adapted, and overcame his challenges to become an appallingly strong hero that even Bear Grylls would be proud of. If Usato can do it, then everybody else who can use healing magic just doesn’t have his skill set. 

Unfortunately, there’s no news of The Wrong Way to Use Healing Magic getting renewed for a second season yet. A thirteenth episode dropped today, but it’s still part of the first season. The anime only covers the first two volumes of the manga, and there’s plenty more story to be explored when and if the next seasons arrive. 

It’s also one of the very few Isekai anime wherein the main characters aren’t too thrilled to be transported into another world by random strangers. It’s even more surprising when one of the main characters from an Isekai actually cares about their families back on their home world. Characters tend to forget what they left behind, with everything their new world has to explore.

To be honest, orced heroism sounds a lot like unpaid and involuntary labor. Do these heroes even get insurance? At least Usato was forced into another world with friends he made from school.

(featured image: Crunchyroll)

Have a tip we should know? tips@themarysue.com

Author
Vanessa Esguerra
Vanessa Esguerra (She/They) has been a Contributing Writer for The Mary Sue since 2023. After graduating with a Bachelor of Arts in Political Economy, she (happily) rejected law school in 2021 and has been a full-time content writer since. Vanessa is currently taking her Master's degree in Japanese Studies in hopes of deepening her understanding of the country's media culture in relation to pop culture, women, and queer people like herself. She speaks three languages but still manages to get lost in the subways of Tokyo with her clunky Japanese. Fueled by iced coffee brewed from local cafés in Metro Manila, she also regularly covers anime and video games while queuing for her next match in League of Legends.

Filed Under:

Follow The Mary Sue:

Exit mobile version