Other vtuber fans: "Pls don't find a boyfriend or husband because we're highly parasocial and will game end ourselved if you do 😢🥺" Phase connect fans: "Jesus christ find someone already and stop being menhera"
sadly every person I could vibe with like in Horimiya, either are taken or are too popular on internet to be even considered as existence, in other words, I don't exist for them to be noticed 😿😿😿
@@pebbelch sadly my prime days are over and I have stage 4 cancer with up to 6 years to live, so that dream will remain a dream till my life goes Rebooting System, thank you thou for warm words, they will remain in my heart even in next life
if we lure batch after batch of singles into big Convention centers, lock the doors and set the mood... how high would be the percentage of new Couples within a Day?^^ Please.... i need hope XD
being in a relationship with someone who doesn't treat you right is more lonely than being single, in my experience. Having high expectations is a good thing for everyone
still think that was the worst "the horny" I have ever read, very inconsequential and it never shows up again. 0 impact on the characters and the story acts like it never happen.
A lot of those “for girls” type romance plots go that way. I’ve seen a few anime and read a few manga that it happened like that. It’s too much of a “it’s so romantic” instead of a “we were just so horny” situation. Especially since any lust in those stories is completely hidden by romantic atmosphere. As if girls never get horny. The guys never lust for their girlfriends either, it’s always like they can control themselves completely and never get carried away by the mood. It’s always the stoic guys too, the not so friendly kind or talkative kind. One thing I noticed too is that in these romance girl manga is that the sex almost always _just happens._ Like there’s no buildup, no progression of it during their relationship. It just happens all of a sudden and then there’s zero sexual tension afterwards. Kissing though? If it happens once, they want it to happen every other chapter, or the girl is thinking of it and the guy happens to say he wants to. B Gata H Kei is a stark contrast even as it’s written by a woman. There’s another from the late 90’s or early 2000’s about a girl that’s popular and secretly puts effort in to remain that way and top of the class but is a slob at home and nerdy. Then there’s a boy that’s nerdy and a loner at school but at home he’s the opposite, a real looker. They become “secret having” friends, even date, and eventually they do have sex. Difference is that the writer made it more realistic in that the girl and boy begin dropping in grades because they can barely contain themselves after the first time. They end up having sex frequently, more so because the girl can’t get her man out of her head. Even as they try to restrain themselves it fails. The author of this one disowned the anime, mostly due to the it becoming too goofy near the end of its 26 episodes, taking the more serious tone down.
@@fiscarton92 Horimiya is a seinen manga. It's marketed to young men. Though, it _was_ written by a woman... and it _was_ originally a light novel series.
@@seg162 That’s not what I was referring to at all. Horimiya took a noticeable plot line from the anime I was talking about. After looking it up I found out in English it’s called “His and Her Circumstances”.
@@fiscarton92 I was actually thinking of Karekano for the one you didn't originally name, but the name came up at random and I had no reason to think that you were talking about it. I should consider reading it. That said, you started your comment, which was in response to a comment talking about Horimiya, with "A lot of those 'for girls' type romance plots go that way", so it was reasonable for me to think you were lumping in the aforementioned Horimiya in that category. Still, as I said, while it's a seinen manga, said manga was adapted from a light novel series (LNs don't have the demographic categories manga do) that was written by a woman, so your observation is roundaboutly applicable (kind of, the author could have been writing for men, but it is the case that female writers often have different focuses and preferences regardless of their audience).