Maybe Hitomi-chan is shy with strangers, a.k.a. "shark girl and smol senpai"Has any series ever had so many entirely seperate wingmen? Both sets of parents, her friends, the landlady. None of them know each other properly but all are just entirely set on making these two idiots marry
This ain't My Dress-Up Darling! 😆I don't like this
Where are my overused tropes? Forced drama?
She wants them to make sure that they're serious and he won't regret what he's doing. She's doing that by forcing them to commit to a big step forward instead of pussyfooting around.That's surprisingly open-minded of his mom and really shows that she trusts both of them.
...Or she wants that grandkid sooner than later.
A 16 or 17 year old can marry with the consent of their parent. It used to be even younger (especially for the girl) before changes a couple of years ago. I'm not sure what the absolute minimum age is though. I believe that it is the same with cohabitation.Are they both 18 yet? Because that's probably the only obstacle left.
He did not see that coming but he will be coming soon. (Works better verbally so that the different spelling doesn't matter.)He's not a tool, but it is his tool that will produce grandchildren
That changed a couple years ago. It's 18 for both now, and i believe neither party needs approval anymore.A 16 or 17 year old can marry with the consent of their parent. It used to be even younger (especially for the girl) before changes a couple of years ago. I'm not sure what the absolute minimum age is though. I believe that it is the same with cohabitation.
fun fact: I can relate to it.Kota and Riko have very pure motives for working: it's for love!
Of course, for Kota, he has to confess to his mom why he wants to stay at the apartment. And mom approved of the reason! Just make sure he and Akutsu get married as soon as possible though!
really?, although I don't want to bring up stereotypes, Asians tend to describe their parents as strict and put a very high pressure on school, career and family. Sure, you could say that the mother wants grandkids, but a "real" parent would ask something along the lines of "do you have a plan?", "how do you expect to provide without a professional job that requires higher education?", "have you considered a long distance relationship while you secure your future together??". The kid is 17-18 and clearly very dumb and innocent. So this is why it is just so odd the mother just tells him "just go full send bro, no halfsies". I understand the mom is liberal and in terms on writing we dont want 5 episodes of a very real conversation between a parent and child. But C'mon, not even a little pushback from the mother is what's so bonkers to me.I heard that it is very common in Japan, from my retiring japanese colleague.