Ah yes picture of food, the perfect gift During a gaming stream on mildom where they played "Tick Tock" Seiyuu : Hanae Natsuki(red), Ono Kensho(purple) and Eguchi Takuya(mentioned)
You know how close they are when they started a discussion on his birthday present but can't be bothered by it and decided to just send him a picture of a food he likes so he can look at it whenever he likes because he's rich, leaving it at that and proceeded in calculating the gaps betwen their age. Sugoi.
Why does Hanae not know his own age XD Eguchi likes curry, so we'll send him a picture of curry that I ate today! Brilliant! Thanks for the subs, Juju!
Funny enough despite hanae being the youngest out of the three he is the first person to get married and then kensho with hanazawa and i think eguchi is still single idk why maybe he’s not ready yet but he is the oldest out of the three
It's nice to know that lowkey not being sure how old you are isn't just a me thing. I wasn't expecting to be validated by Hanae Natsuki in a RU-vid video about Eguchi Takuya's birthday.
I drew egu a portrait for his birthday *-* it doent look like him :') but Its kinda fun once in a while draw something other than anime chara fanart/ocs
This friendship between the 3 of them is the most precious thing. It shows on Hanae-san's youtube channel, but it shows even more here. I'm a little confused though. Kensho-san calls Eguchi-san "Takuya-kun" here, but he's younger. Anyone with better understanding of suffixes care to explain? I know they are all really close friends, but still. This is also the first time I've heard Hanae-san call him "Takuya-san" instead of "Eguchi-san". Sorry, just really interested in Japanese social rules
Generally “-san” is a formal way of addressing a person while “-kun” is generally considered to be more “cute”, mostly among men. It’s not as restrictive as “-chan” (which is primarily used for children), therefore the probable reasoning behind why Kensho said “Takuya-kun” is because A) they’re friends obviously and B) he thinks of Eguchi as cute. Take it as you will. (Omg I sound so formal jeez)
That is very interesting! I was under the impression "-kun" was strictly used for younger people. I've heard it used in a joking manner sometimes but never for an older person in normal conversation