I agree that she's kinda Yami's foil, but I see that more as Yuki probably having a healthier relationship with sex than Aya
It's not like the bar is set very high anyway, starting with the fact that Yuki probably didn't experience an attempted sexual assault.
Yuki seems to have a confidence in her sexuality - the way she talks about sex and is flirting with Yuu - that it's implied that she's experienced
Not necessarily. There are some hints that Yuki doesn't have the same level of experience as Yami, like when she asks Yami about kissing in chapter 5:
Hikari: "So, so then... what's good about kissing?"
Ayami: "Oh, maybe it's the way the tongues feel? I mean, since it's a touch between mucous membranes, it might feel pretty nice..."
Hikari: "Why do you always take it in that direction?!"
Yuki: "Huh? But come on, Aya-chan, when you lick around your mouth with your own tongue, you don't feel anything, no?"
Huh? But why is Yuki, who made fun of me for having no experience, trying it out too?
There's also the relatively modest swimsuit Yuki wears in chapter 15. It's Haru and Ayami who wear the most daring outfits, and we all know the... history of that bikini Ayami wore to have sex with Yuu.
And this is coming from someone who isn't keen on seeing the "girl pretends to be promiscuous but it turns out she's never had a partner or at least is still a virgin" trope repeated, but that's the most likely scenario we'll get with Yuki. This would reinforce the idea of her being Yami's foil, of Yuki being the Shikimori of this series. That said, Yuki undoubtedly has more experience and/or has seen things that Haru and Hikari have never experienced.
But no I don't think this is a harem where Yuki (or Kan) are endgame.
I didn't say this is necessarily a harem. But if Maruto intends to repeat the ending of Saekano, where the Third Heroine, the titular Boring Girlfriend, ended up with the male lead while the two original heroines (Eriri and Utaha) left the protagonist behind and explicitly renounced him, Yuki would be the most logical endgame.
There's also the option of Chiaki's Normal Ending in White Album 2 Closing Chapter. I'll leave it to you to google that.
With Haru and Yuki, I think it's just that she doesn't want them to blame Aya. Even Yuu doesn't really achieve this goal when telling them the story.
No, there's also the fact that Hikari doesn't want to depend on anyone, as Yuu said in his omake chapters and in his dialogues in Ayami and Haru's POVs.
I'm gonna agree to disagree on whether Yuu offered help b/c we've gone a few rounds on this.
If he hadn't offered help, Hikari wouldn't be trying so hard to avoid him.
Yuu knows that he can make up w/ Hikari by telling her the truth, so making her come to him feels like either cowardice or a screwed up power move. I lean towards cowardice.
Yes, it's an act of cowardice on his part, which is why I emphasized Hikari's physical aggression; that's what justifies Yuu would be coward again.
In any case, it's Hikari's ghosting and avoidance that I would call a "screwed-up power move". Hikari is playing hard to get and actively avoiding Yuu precisely because she wants him to humiliate himself before her, not realizing that he'll never do that unless she TALKS and ORDERS him directly, like Haru did in chapters 42-43.
If Hikari wanted to avoid Aya, she wouldn't have gone back to the last place she saw Aya, where Aya was.
Yes, as GennArc already told you, it was logical to expect that Ayami wasn't at the scene of the betrayal, at least. Anyway, I doubt Hikari intended to avoid Aya because she didn't even think about where she was running or fleeing during her hysterical outburst. Most likely, she ran to her classroom purely out of muscle memory, without thinking about where she was going, and bumped into Ayami again.
Or that Hikari hasn't really figured out what exactly to say b/c it's only been like 5 minutes since she left Yuu.
If she would had a plan to confront Yami when she yelled at Yuu—something we never saw from her POV, by the way—Hikari would undoubtedly have thought of something to say to Ayami. This makes it clear that Hikari never intended to seek her out, and chapter 44 confirms this.
This chapter was structured the same as Aya's confrontation with Yuu - start in the carefree playgirl persona, lose control and reveal resentments, end on the truth.
Yes, that's why I told you that Hikari was following the same strategy as Yuu a hour before, but in her own way—that way you praised, and which this chapter again proved to be more masochistic, dangerous, and disastrous than Yuu's caution. Both chapters, 40 and 41, demonstrate why Yuu and Hikari cannot handle Ayami separately. Only together do they have a chance.
When Hikari asked if Seki was his ex, he deflected rather than give the honest "no it was a senpai from your school"
Because she doesn't directly ask him if he had an ex-girlfriend, nor does he deny having one (by the way, he doesn't in chapter 38 either, and thank goodness, a "you were always the only one" would have been a complete and utter lie, especially with him knowing that Hikari already knows Ayami).
The only thing Hikari asks, and Yuu denies, is whether Seki was his ex. After that, Hikari insists that Seki could have been his ex, and he begs her to stop.
Here, Hikari undoubtedly drew the correct conclusions: he does have an ex around, but that ex GF isn't Seki.
Which yeah, I agree that Hikari and his parents probably understood that Yuu had a girlfriend b/c of all his terrible lying.
Yes, that's the point; his parents probably forced him to talk and tell them about Ayami at some point during those six months. They probably also "convinced" him to introduce them to Yami, or they arranged a chance encounter, so Ayami had to play the "good girl" for once.
As I said, we have plenty of evidence that Yuu talks very easily under the slightest pressure, and only a direct order from Yami and/or the fear of ending up in jail (again, having sex in love hotels while underage is a crime) could make him deliberately lie or hide the truth when asked directly.
She interfered by standing outside but going inside (and actually interfering) would be okay?
Considering that she heard Yami slapping Yuu, yes, she definitely should have intervened to save her supposed childhood best friend and love interest from the abuse of his toxic ex-girlfriend. Especially since she stood in the doorway like a gossipy spy instead of leaving immediately. There was at least a minute or two between the slap and the kiss, enough time for Yami to see Hikari at the door and do what she did, marking Yuu as hers.
In 17 she didn't have to do all that to get the truth out of Yuu. Which Hikari is expecting direct honesty from Yuu b/c of the nature of her relationship w/ Yuu
Yes, that's why I'm saying that he was honest with her despite everything. It's one thing for Yuu to be honest, and another for him to be obligated to tell Hikari every detail of his love life when they're still just childhood friends. And I want to think that without Yami's interference, if he had confessed at the cultural festival, he would have at least made it clear that he did have an ex-girlfriend.
That his confrontation with Yami affected him noticeably and made him act so strangely and oddly, even if Hikari hadn't seen anything. There was a reason Yuu was willing to abandon all his plans and go home as soon as he finally found Hikari at the window.
But even so, as I said, he only loses the right to keep that personal matter to himself when he discovers that "Yami-senpai" is "Aya-chan". Not before.
the long history of trust that also has Yuu thinking that Hikari will be alright. (Yes, they're both wrong here).
Hikari is fine. Chapter 44 makes that perfectly clear; Yuu is right about her. Hikari just needs time to... think. To think and finally realize that there are people willing to help her and that she should learn to ask for that help instead of going into Yami mode and expecting her friends to read her mind.
But Hikari thoughts in chapter 44 are so typical from her to imply she is fully stable, for moments she doesn´t seems even aware from the seriouness of the crisis.
Which even if Hikari hadn't seen the kiss, Yuu would still owe her an explanation for Aya b/c Aya is her best friend.
Yes, this is why Yuu says of himself that "today I was undoubtedly the worst" in chapter 38, acknowledging that he messed up precisely because of this. That he lost the right not to talk about Ayami when he found out that Ayami is now Hikari's best friend.
Aya was trying to win Yuu back w/ that kiss, only saying goodbye to save face when it didn't seem to work
Nothing in Ayami's POV indicates that she believed she was going to "win back" Yuu with that kiss. Nothing in her internal thoughts indicates such a thing. Thoughts,
@GennArc?
Which is also why Aya thinks she may have intentionally done it when Hikari was there as a "he's mine" move. Which Hikari understands that's what's going on.
Yes, I agree.