Her boyfriend, , is handsome, popular, and kind. On paper, he’s perfect. But there’s a catch: Kei doesn't love her.
At first glance, the title sounds like a sweet, standard shoujo romance. But this manga (by @0x0_7 on Twitter/X, serialized in Shonen Jump+ ) is one of the most quietly subversive works about modern dating. The protagonist, Rinka , is a flashy gyaru —loud fashion, bleached hair, confident. But internally, she is a hyper-rational, almost coldly analytical person. She doesn't date for "fated love." She dates for convenience, companionship, and stability .
Soredemo Ashita mo Kareshi ga Ii is not a romance. It’s a horror manga dressed in shoujo clothes —the horror of settling, of low self-worth disguised as pragmatism, of knowing you deserve more but being too exhausted to go get it.
Her boyfriend, , is handsome, popular, and kind. On paper, he’s perfect. But there’s a catch: Kei doesn't love her.
At first glance, the title sounds like a sweet, standard shoujo romance. But this manga (by @0x0_7 on Twitter/X, serialized in Shonen Jump+ ) is one of the most quietly subversive works about modern dating. The protagonist, Rinka , is a flashy gyaru —loud fashion, bleached hair, confident. But internally, she is a hyper-rational, almost coldly analytical person. She doesn't date for "fated love." She dates for convenience, companionship, and stability .
Soredemo Ashita mo Kareshi ga Ii is not a romance. It’s a horror manga dressed in shoujo clothes —the horror of settling, of low self-worth disguised as pragmatism, of knowing you deserve more but being too exhausted to go get it.