Portable | Fuufu Ijou, Koibito Miman 80
The anime adaptation (by Studio Mother) is vibrant. Akari’s expressive faces, the cozy apartment setting, and the soft lighting during romantic beats sell the mood. The ecchi elements are present but rarely feel gratuitous — they usually serve character or comedic timing.
It explores the gap between “what love looks like on paper” vs. genuine emotional intimacy. Jirō’s idealized view of Shiori slowly cracks as he learns real compatibility involves conflict, vulnerability, and effort — not just quiet admiration. What Falls Short 1. Shiori and Minami are underdeveloped The “other love interests” are more plot devices than people. Shiori is sweet but painfully passive; Minami is cool but barely present. You never really root for them to “win” because they lack the screen time and chemistry Jirō and Akari share. fuufu ijou, koibito miman 80
Jirō Yakuin, a shy, gamer-obsessed boy, is paired with the gyaru-style Akari Watanabe — the exact opposite of his shy, bookish crush, Shiori. Akari, meanwhile, is stuck with Jirō instead of her cool, popular crush, Minami. Their only way to get with their true loves? Pretend to be the perfect married couple… but of course, real feelings start to blur the lines. 1. Great initial hook The “fake marriage as a school assignment” concept is fresh and immediately engaging. The points system and partner-swap goal create clear stakes beyond typical romantic misunderstandings. The anime adaptation (by Studio Mother) is vibrant