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Chances are you've heard this premise before: A male high school student with no friends meets a girl through a chance encounter. She's popular at school; still, she works hard to take care of her family, and she
doesn't have time to socialize: The pair bond over their secretive lives. Despite his edgy appearance, the girl does not judge the boy. She encourages him to come out of his
shell and find friends. In return, he does everything within his capability to make her happy. While it is a bog-standard plot, Horimiya was my kind of show. It had a simplistic trajectory: Make progress on Hori and Miyamura’s first love, tackle sexual awakenings, develop the side characters, and develop the themes of self-acceptance. That’s not quite how it went. Instead, they rushed through the story at a breakneck pace while repeating identical jokes and throwing in endless cliches. Fake dating scenarios, love triangles, perpetually pissed off heroines, and a tidal wave of misunderstandings.
Even though the premise was simple, I liked seeing Hori and Miyamura together.
Monthly Bookscan November List". Anime
News Network. Archived from the original on
December 9, 2021. Retrieved January 10, 2022. December 2021: Mateo, Alex (January 10, 2022). "Chainsaw Man Ranks #1 on U.
Ippo defeating Take. In the fifth round, Ippo figured out a way to
counter Take's close positioning that was disabling his left and right fists by ducking lower than him and throwing the same
uppercut as Take, sending him back. Ippo then used the same strategy of ducking lower than Take to deliver multiple powerful punches from below. After a clinch, Ippo and Take entered a exchange match at close range until the fifth round ended. While at the corner, he began to realise that Take is unconscious despite fighting. In the sixth round, Ippo easily knocked down Take with a one-two, however, much to his shock, Take stood back up.