-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-
Manga Maou wa Yuusha no Kawaii Yome Party... Chapter 5 is a masterclass in emotional inversion. It denies you the satisfaction of violence and instead gives you something worse for the betrayers: existential humiliation. For the betrayed, it gives something rare in modern isekai: genuine, quiet healing.
If you have endured the painful first four chapters, Chapter 5 is your reward. Just remember the subtitle: Ma ingaouhou kanaa – The cause and effect always catches up. And in this world, it is as merciless as a hero’s sword.
Rating: 9.5/10 – One point deducted only because we still want to see the Hero smile more.
You can find the raw scans or official translations of Chapter 5 through weekly manga aggregators or the author's Pixiv/Fantia page. Look for the arc titled: "The World’s Court." Manga Maou wa Yuusha no Kawaii Yome Party
The subtitle of the series ends with "ma ingaouhou kanaa" (roughly: "Perhaps this is the law of cause and effect"). Chapter 5 delivers on this Buddhist concept of karma with ruthless efficiency.
The karmic ledger is balanced, but interestingly, the series does not frame this as "justice." The Demon Lord, observing via a scrying mirror, comments: "This isn't righteousness. The world is just as cruel as they were. They're only being punished because the evidence leaked, not because the world cares about truth."
While the four heroines face global humiliation, the parallel timeline in Chapter 5 shows the Hero and the Demon Lord. There is no revenge plot. There is no rage. You can find the raw scans or official
Instead, the Hero is gardening. The Demon Lord, once the scourge of humanity, is learning to bake bread. They sleep in the same bed, not out of lust, but out of shared trauma. The Hero says a single line that defines the philosophy of Chapter 5:
"I don't need the world to know I was right. I just need to wake up and not be afraid of the people next to me."
This is the core inversion. The "punishment" for the four heroines is not physical torture (though imprisonment is implied) but social extinction. Meanwhile, the "reward" for the Hero and Demon Lord is not wealth or power, but obscurity. The subtitle of the series ends with "
Back in the capital, the king has thrown the four girls under the carriage to save his own skin. He publicly brands them "Yuusha Goroshi no Dai Zainin" (Great Criminals of Hero-Murder).
The chapter ends with a cliffhanger. Lila tracks Allen to the cottage. She kneels in the mud, holding a knife—not to kill him, but to offer him the king’s head. "I was paid to betray you. Now I’ll pay you back."
The final panel: Allen looks at Velgrath. Velgrath nods slightly. Allen picks up the knife.