


Moriko Morioka is a 30-year-old single NEET woman. After dropping out from reality, she has taken off in search for a fulfilling life and ended up in a net game or "netoge." In the netoge world, she began her new life as a refreshing and handsome character named Hayashi. While starting out as a beginner, a pretty character named Lily reached out to help her. Meanwhile, in the real world, awaits a shocking encounter with a good-looking elite company employee, a mysterious blue-eyed blonde.
Avis de la communauté (4)
I could find myself so much in this anime. THANK YOU GODS OF ANIME.
It was really a heartwarming otaku love story. Based on the plot character design was perfect and story was simple to understand. There were no useless Fan Service which makes the story a lot more realistic. Only con is that the episodes are a bit less. I could have enjoyed it a lot more without getting bored. I'll definitely recommend to watch this anime!
just glad to be watching a romance anime where the protagonists aren't in high school and are grown adults lol
It's a cute anime that's entertaining to watch, but it relies way too much on coincidence and it kind of rushes the ending. The title of the anime is very misleading. Nothing matters here except for the romance plot. There is no "recovery". There is no exploration of the shortcomings of her lifestyle. (As a gamer, I would have liked a more critical portrayal of the game's microtransaction and loot box mechanics in particular.) There is no exploration of the circumstances that caused her to become a NEET and/or MMO Junkie. All we get is [spoiler]passing comments to the effect that her job was a little stressful, apparently? I thought we were going to find out that she'd been sexually harassed? Or more detail about how demanding her employers were (perhaps a critical look at Japanese work culture?) Never happens! Even in the end of the series, it seems she's still both a NEET and an MMO Junkie.[/spoiler] The romantic plot is the only aspect to receive any kind of resolution, and even then it's only kind of half-assed. The only conclusion is [spoiler]they start holding hands.[/spoiler] This is a moment that could have emotional weight but not in the way it's portrayed. [spoiler]They don't even acknowledge themselves as dating at the end.[/spoiler] There's no real struggle. Just a series of increasingly unlikely coincidences that lead to the romantic outcome. Overall, it's not a bad time, but there's a lot of wasted potential and in the end it feels a bit like a hollow piece of marketing.























