No Matter What You Say, Furi-San Is Scary! Vol. 2

No Matter What You Say, Furi-San Is Scary! Vol. 2

  • Downloads:2601
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2022-03-13 09:51:55
  • Update Date:2025-09-07
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Seiichi Kinoue
  • ISBN:1648276695
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

An ordinary high school boy is terrified of his scary-looking (but secretly sweet!) yankii girl classmate in a romantic comedy of crushes and misunderstandings。

Furi Youko definitely looks like a delinquent: she's got a tough-girl image that wouldn't be out of place in a gang。 When Taira Namito finds himself sitting next to her in his high school class, he's immediately afraid of her。 But as it turns out, Furi's rough-and-tumble exterior hides a wholesome, totally cute person underneath--and she's got the hots for Taira。 (Although that part goes right over his head。) One misunderstanding leads to another in this romantic comedy about a clueless dude and the adorable, slightly terrifying affections of the tough girl by his side!

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Reviews

Anna Cann

The second volume is just as good as the first and Furi san shows she's not just a scary face 🙂 The second volume is just as good as the first and Furi san shows she's not just a scary face 🙂 。。。more

Mark

Furi and Taira are no closer together, but with the looming summer season approaching, surely one of them might throw out enough signals that the other will get a clue? Yeah, about that…Despite the ‘if we talked the series is over’ trope being somewhat annoying, it’s a staple that you kind of have to live with reading many books。 And, as this volume proves, it doesn’t mean it can’t be a hoot。The trick, as it turns out, is to do some good comedy and be as wholesome as all get out。 While Taira and Furi and Taira are no closer together, but with the looming summer season approaching, surely one of them might throw out enough signals that the other will get a clue? Yeah, about that…Despite the ‘if we talked the series is over’ trope being somewhat annoying, it’s a staple that you kind of have to live with reading many books。 And, as this volume proves, it doesn’t mean it can’t be a hoot。The trick, as it turns out, is to do some good comedy and be as wholesome as all get out。 While Taira and Furi fumble all over one another, there is a slowly building cadre of, basically, every single side character who are all scheming in tandem to get these two to hook up。Watching literally everybody grow close as they work in service to the series’ OTP is absolutely adorable, even as our couple are as blind to their mutual attraction as ever。 Mix in some great jokes and you have a great combination。And the core couple remain delightful - Furi and Taira make a cute pair and Furi’s easily manipulated nature over anything to do with Taira is a great running gag。 I mean, she’s basically talked into her own fan service, which, yep, that sounds about right。That bikini causes a ridiculous amount of trouble all around, including with the newest addition to the cast, the pint-sized Momo, who looks to Furi as some sort of delinquent god, despite being more of a delinquent than Furi could ever hope to be。Momo is kind of one note, but she does have her moments, including the silliest excuse for a smoking gag I’ve seen yet。 Furi can’t necessarily escape all her labels just yet, it seems。 I do like that they give Momo more than just one joke, despite what I said, so there is a little nuance to her character。There are so many strong gags that there’s not enough room to recount them, which is a good sign in my books。 Furi manages to avoid the yukata trope and then learns that that might not have been the best idea。 Furi and Taira both experience jealousy, and in Taira’s case it’s over two unexpected allies trying to dress him up (the one panel of this is so simple but works so well)。By far the best section involves the training camp, which is for the manga club of all things, and involves numerous schemes for romance that all backfire but work out despite that。 It’s so silly that it works - the rigged card game has two punchlines and both work perfectly。Another unsung praise of this story is how non-judgmental it is, particularly about appearances。 The manga club president looks like the most obvious overweight otaku stereotype and talks overly haughty, but he’s so dang supportive and nice (even as he accidentally enables a ridiculous showdown between Furi and a maid)Likewise, Furi’s classmate/bestie is allegedly overweight (ie, manga overweight, ie, not really) and is neither mocked, nor told to go on a diet NOR complains about it。 It’s nice to see people exist happily in their own skin。 She does get one crack at her expense from a stranger and you had best believe Furi doesn’t let that go。 Wholesome as all get out indeed。4 stars - I think I overused the word heartwarming describing this series, but there’s really no better way to label it。 This manga is the literary equivalent of a steaming mug of hot chocolate on a cold day and all the better for it。 。。。more