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弱キャラ友崎くん 2nd STAGE
13
TV
Finished Airing
Jan 3, 2024 to Mar 27, 2024
Fumiya Tomozaki is now cruising through the game of life—all thanks to the guidance of Aoi Hinami, his popular classmate and rival in the online game Attack Families, widely known as "Tackfam." As the summer holiday draws to a close and a new term commences, Tomozaki reunites with Aoi, who reminds him of his ultimate goals: to become well-liked among his peers and find himself a girlfriend. However, Tomozaki puts his ambitions on hold when his innocent friend, Hanabi Natsubayashi, starts being bullied. To make matters worse, Aoi is characteristically out of touch with the situation. But Tomozaki is not alone in resolving this issue—he now has a group of loyal friends who are all determined to help Hanabi and ensure they enjoy their youths together to the fullest. [Written by MAL Rewrite]
7.5/10
Average Review Score
80%
Recommend It
20
Reviews Worldwide
I watched this series because it exposed me to a completely different approach to characters and relationships than what I was used to, much more analytical, much more manipulative, focused on the psyche and how to penetrate it in order to fit in groups. This series has a toxic message mixed with a quite accurate one, one of which is a valid reason for those who do not want to see it. "You can't always be yourself if you want to be accepted by others" but at the same time "It's not right that everything you are is a lie." One of the positions is always driven byAoi with such toxic manipulation skills and perspectives, but the other is exposed by Tomozaki himself even from the first season. These 2 premises constantly fight, generating a balance in our protagonist that drives him to change and at the same time prevents him from going over the line. Tomozaki's evolution is quite satisfactory, from being a gloomy and losing boy, to being someone reliable and with enough balls to move things without the need to fall into lies or hurt others. It is observed how throughout the series how "changing" from each character implies something different and the motivations as well as the perspectives constantly put us in doubt if it is the right thing to do, reaching the point where both premises are summarized in. "How much is right to change." The truth is that I really liked this series because of the reflective content and the handling of characters that is so different that I have experienced compared to other works, I understand that many will not like its story but for me it was a quite refreshing series that I had been waiting for since its first season, the characters become more and more defined, slowly adding depth to those that are required and leaving the others as constants as long as they are useful in this way. I give it an 8/10. It lacks emotional charge in many parts and I admit that I had to stop the chapters on many occasions because I couldn't stand the Cringe on multiple occasions. If you are not very interested in the dynamics of status and the interactions between characters, you will find this series more boring than the first since not all the focus is on the development of the protagonist, but I must highlight that its entire narrative until the final chapter seemed to me. extremely sensible and organic.
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Jaku-Chara Tomozaki-kun season 2 had a huge falloff from season 1 because it was engaging enough since season 2 was just a loop for 13 episodes. In season 1 we really he tomozaki develop from being a bum to a regular person but in season 2 now that he starts off as a regular person it feels a bit odd that hes still doing tasks for someone whos a little bit higher on the social hierachy then him. the interactions he has in season 2 are almost completely normal and that made the plot really hard to drag on because he really cant grow orevolve out of how he ended from season 1. I think a cause of this is the lack of new ideas and characters in season 2 as they really don't have any new additions and just rub on the relationship between the already existing circle. Another problem I have is how they pace the episodes. The first half of the story was just 6 episodes of completing random tasks which actually wasnt too bad to watch but the last 7 episodes, tomozaki plans a school festival play in which this girl kikuchi writes the story and he assists her to create the story with the play. my personal opinion is that this is where it just goes downhill because the long ass dialogue between them about the story she was for me was all yap. I know some people love dialouge like this but me personally I actually couldn't care less. Yes it did build the relationship beteen the 2 characters but I really dont need a entire narrative spoken to me to understand that they have the same interest and are getting closer. listening to them talk was actually brainrot and i got bored almost instantly and it made me wanna drop this so bad but i persevered. Some ups were that the art and audio were kept up to standard like season 1 but i cant say much else overall, season 2 is pretty bland and half of season 2 is getting a fucking book read to me. I get the appeal but me personally this anime was just super boring to sit through but if you like these kinds of narratives and yap be my guest. TLDR: No new content, half of the season is just yap
For a novel reader, 2nd season is truly disappointing. The story feels rushed and lacks depth, failing to make logical connections to the first season. Important hints about Hinami's character and her motivation to help Tomozaki are nowhere to be found. This small details what made the story interesting, after the initial "life improvement" setup begin to fade away. What’s left is a somewhat strange and overly simplistic school romance. So, what did anime-only fans miss? While the theme of these volumes was romance, there was more to it. First of all, it was a logical continuation of the story. Tomozaki decided “to do what he wants.”But what exactly does that mean? How should he balance improving himself through tasks with staying true to himself? Hinami is still not a fan of Tomozaki’s approach and keeps pushing him. This ongoing struggle, doubts, endless conversations finally transform his baseless resolution from season one into a true lifestyle. This is why, by the end of the season, there are no tasks left in play—Tomozaki doesn’t need them anymore. Beautiful. Hinami pushing feels weird, and sidestory of Hanami first BF (how i wish it were animated), explains what feels wrong. She doesn’t wish for a happy romance for Tomozaki. Instead, she waits for him to become disappointed and disillusioned, just as she is. Hinami’s past starts to resurface, but the anime completely brushes it off. Kikuchi sees through Hinami's facade. Every line in the script hurts her. The “perfect” Hinami can’t help but ask what Tomozaki and Kikuchi learned during their interview with her classmates. While everyone else is focused on the romance, Hinami is forced to confront herself. This culminates in her losing it and almost threatening Kikuchi after the play, revealing her hollow, real side. (WHY WASN’T THIS ANIMATED?). Completely breaking her character first time in the story. The real Hinami also appears earlier in the Hanabi arc—cold and vengeful. There were more peaceful solutions, but Hinami chose to hurt Erica through her best friends, her love, her image, and her pride, all while ignoring everything she had taught Tomozaki before. At the end of the day, the second season made me want to reread the novel. I guess that’s good enough.
The second season of Jaku-Chara Tomozaki-kun targets the themes of fitting in and coming to terms with one's role in life presented in the first season, and applies it in a slightly different lens: with Tomozaki having "developed" in the first season, 2nd Stage works with how he applies what he's learned and whether he can truly process and apply his own perspective on these aspects of life and aid others. Viewers of the first season might take mixed stances on the direction of 2nd Stage, straying further away from the more methodological Hinami Aoi-led self-improvement plot of season 1 to focus more on howTomozaki responds to the world around him, but this direction grants an opportunity to explore Tomozaki's development of independence, confidence, and agency. With strong and confidently executed character interactions and character relationships, 2nd Stage is a well-rounded and recommended watch. 2nd Stage's forte is in developing and maintaining substantive character interactions and interpersonal relationships. The relationships between all characters, even minor ones, are treated with respect and consistency, breathing life into the characters themselves. Many of the characters remain fresh and distinct without devolving into single-purpose characters. Importantly, the show is able to work with Tomozaki processing the world around him and play his character out in new dilemmas despite him having "developed" in season 1. Particularly in the first five episodes, the show is highly adept at pulling off the school drama atmosphere, demonstrating how high school molehills are escalated into mountains in a decently realistic, high school way. Crucially, not everyone shows their cards, and the show allows each character to (at least sometimes) act accordingly to their own thoughts. That the season executes character relationships well is important to emphasizing the show's thematic strengths: through character relationships, the show has a lot to say about how to act in life, fit in, react to others, the utility and purpose of putting up a facade, and the contrasts and similarities between improving oneself versus putting on a facade to get by in life. These certainly aren't novel themes, but 2nd Stage does well in letting different views on these themes play out among the characters. Tomozaki himself articulates how he's processing these aspects of life often, but while the show can be a bit heavy-handed at times in answering these moral questions, it is fun and engaging to watch how Tomozaki is able to apply his thinking to address them. The first season deals with Tomozaki developing his character. This second season deals with Tomozaki applying it. Somewhat strangely, the interaction between Tomozaki and Hinami is one of the weaknesses of the second season. Despite the massive importance of their arrangement to Tomozaki's growth in the first season, 2nd Stage treats Hinami's instruction of Tomozaki somewhat as scaffolding to propel the plot: in a way, Hinami's goals are essentially the show telling the viewer what's next. There is a lot of potential depth that goes unaddressed, or is only explored at a surface level. Although Tomozaki can grasp the toxic implications of Hinami's worldview and her methods, the show shies away from letting him truly work with his thoughts independently and tackle this tension, and avoids letting the naturally developing unease simmer. Hinami remains a black box that manages to keep things running in the show, which is a little disappointing. 2nd Stage starts off with a habit of playing a bit fast and loose with the plot. Key events are skipped through and things seem a bit too "easy" for the protagonist to get what he wants. This rush to results does end up in a lot of tell-not-showing, and the show at times dumbs things down a bit too much in explaining situations as they are instead of letting things play out for the viewer to interpret. There are at times random feel-good, uplifting moments, which can be nice but does sometimes kneecap tension or opportunities for more thematic exploration. Thankfully, these weakness do lessen as the show continues. The latter 2/3rds of 2nd Stage takes on a more romantic framing, but does well in contextualizing this in the framework of Tomozaki growing and becoming more cognizant of the feelings of himself and of others. While this shift to romance does make the show much more predictable and leads to it tapping into fairly common romance genre tropes and cliches, the show is able to develop these romantic beats without constantly tripping into the pitfalls of making Tomozaki a one-dimensional character: he's able to experience a blend of desire, pessimism, and agency when it comes to life. While Tomozaki being a relatively mature character in 2nd Stage does mean the show loses the unique luster of his awkward season 1 self, it is nice that 2nd Stage's direction does not perpetually cast him as a fool.
Jaku-Chara Tomozaki-kun 2nd Stage was a pretty good continuation of the first season even if it didn't quite go where I wanted it to. The main focus was shifted from the first season and dealt more with other characters rather than Tomozaki, which was cool to see but I do think some of the parts dragged on a little especially the second half. I did still have a lot of fun every episode and the charm of season 1 was still here I just think it lacked a little bit of depth to the story and general direction. The first half was fun and I reallyliked how more characters kinda came together but I really think the second half let this season down a little, it all felt a bit slow and I got quite bored of the scenes with Kikuchi. Without spoiling I really was not a fan of the ending either, I guess I can see how it went that way but man from the perspective of how the season was set up I don't really understand why that happened. I really do enjoy the cast in this show I think everything's handled in a way that's quite refreshing from most other anime I've seen, characters like Mimimi that completely steal the show are always so fun to watch and she had some really standout moments and jokes this season she's a joy to watch, the rest of the supporting characters are great too I think they all had their moments this season for sure and none of it felt forced. Overall this is definitely worth watching if you've seen the first season, whilst I didn't really agree with everything that happened it was still certainly a fun watch!