![]() ![]() Supposedly, more than one of the girls is attracted to the unpardonably prosaic character of Junnichi Asakura, yet - aside from a handful of trivial scuffles between the two primary love interests - none of them seem to care enough to do something about it. ![]() It just feels like one ceaseless bombardment of fake smiles, like an eternity spent in Starbucks. There is no adverse force to challenge the characters there is no conflict between the characters themselves there's not even a personality clash worthy of note. Going back to my first paragraph, this series fails principally because it is entirely free of any kind of friction. Unhappily, Da Capo doesn't seem to have read that far into the instructions booklet and dismisses every one of these suggestions, instead including. As a rule, the next step is to introduce a novel setting, to plot an interesting story or perhaps to thread the characters into a comedic tapestry. In this school, a generic male lead is pursued by a series of improbably acquiescent girls, who differ from one anime to the next solely by virtue of having their hairstyles and personality hooks randomly reassigned. Truly, this would be a wonderful place to live - but watching it for 26 episodes? My, does it ever drag.ĭa Capo crawls unapologetically from the "If it ain't broke, don't fix it" school of harem anime. ![]() StoryImagine, if you will, an end to conflict, a world of peace, a universe where seldom a cross word is exchanged, much less an utterance of aggression. ![]()
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