@Haiz, good points about how husbunny seems set up to do something interesting in the plot and then the other shoe just... never drops.
Some other headscratchers of my own where the characters' reaction to things seemed like it would turn out to be meaningful upon being re-examined, but it just never went anywhere:
- when Lavender's mom tells her that bad people get "reeducated" which is lovely and good, but then bursts into tears when Lavender tanks her score - so the reeducation was a lie, and not naivety! However no lessons are learned beyond "how it directly affects me and my family", and the hipocrisy is never addressed
- when homemaker bunny leaves her Bible to her low-score friend who borrowed it - is that meant to be read as a kind gesture, or as her first panic moment at the realisation that the book she likes is Dangerous? Again, never explained, never brought up again, even though it seems like it should be an important emotional bit in the story. But no, turns out that part is only there so homemaker can have the map.
- when husbunny is like "I noticed your score tanked, so I decided we should be in this together" to his wife, by which he meant he deliberately did something he knew would lower his score, thus complicating their shared situation further, I burst out laughing. I still am not sure what Minna meant by this. Is this her impression of romantic love? Of solidarity?? On my first read I decided he was just meant to be the least socially aware person ever and it would be relevant later on ... but no, this is again never addressed.
- influencer bunny's realisation that "maybe it wasn't okay to cut my friends out of my life" is triggered by literally nothing - in real life, I suppose it does happen that sometimes you just think things through and change your mind, but it does not make for convincing storytelling. She just did it because the plot needed to move on.
- how hollow and mostly fake most of the relationships depicted in the comic seem - not only that the three characters do nothing as "friends" except eat together, they also take jabs at each other and demonstrate not understanding each other's experience. Especially influencer bunny who complains that the mom is late due to picking up her children, and also her not being aware how her comments about spending affect her less affluent friends. What *exactly* does their friendship rely on?
- the married bunnies' marriage is basically a 50s movie stereotype, where they're just going through the motions with little awareness of each other's reality and zero chemistry between them whatsoever, with Minna apparently not realising how unsettling and anachronistic this comes off to a contemporary reader. I genuinely still am not sure how she thought it reads?? Is it meant to be funny? Relatable? "Christian"? What is it because I can't tell???
To me, maybe even more unsettling than the "repent or burn" message of the comic is the impression that it was made by someone who has no idea whatsoever of how human connections work, whether they're genuine or manipulative, online or offline, etc. Which.... you know, SSSS is not stellar at that either, but at least it has some good moments. LP however is full of cardboard cutouts instead of characters, and almost literally everything they do is jarring from an emotional perspective.