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目黒さんは初めてじゃない
89
11
Finished
Mar 19, 2018 to Jun 25, 2024
3.5/10
Average Review Score
0%
Recommend It
2
Reviews Worldwide
I read this without seeing any reviews beforehand, and it was the worst thing ever. The story may seem promising at first if you read less than 28 chapters, but recommending something like this as “good” should get you banned. It's a work that slowly goes to shit more and more, to the point where you say, "Does the boyfriend want to be cuckolded? Or why does he make such bad decisions? Also, the whole manga seems like the boyfriend is just a psychologist for this girl who was used by many guys and lacks emotions. I thought it would be more romantic, but theending was the worst for me. Definitely not recommended.
Interesting, no reviewer here has actually finished the manga (at least as of me writing this). As a small TLDR; it's a great idea for a manga to touch the mature side of a relationship built on a disparity, but the execution is boring, with a pretty, and weirdly stupid final arc. Read it if you still find the synopsis interesting. “Meguro-san wa Hajimete ja Nai” is one more in the many “manga about a normal guy and a girl with a twist”. You have the Komi-san, and her communication problem, Uzaki and her massive plots, Nagatoro and her bullying, and many others which I startedall those years ago. All of those ending, or close to ending at this point, but all of them understanding how to make a plot slightly more exciting than this one. Meguro-san, to be honest, is the definition of mediocre in the whole genre. The story itself sounds pretty great on paper. A girl who's got loads of experience meets a meek guy, and both have to understand how to deal with this kind of relationship. It felt adult, like a more interesting exploration on the wish fulfillment manga that are those I mentioned. I was excited to read about a good angle in that situation, but it was just… boring. The story explores the relationship, yes, and many others. Kinds of relationships, and how their dynamics may be too disfunctional to work, how some can be saved, or how many are utterly ruined by the difference in both sides. These outside problems ideologically test the relationship from our protagonists, but it repeats that throughout the manga. The main couple has little to no disruption that's too palpable, but the way they solve their problems makes the issues feel empty, meaningless. In that sense, it doesn't feel like a story worth telling, and that sounds like “I wanted more spice”. Not really. In fact, there are many manga with adult couples where there's not really ANY difficulty. How could it have been done well? It's the amount of testing the relationship gets here. They get tested so many times, and every time it felt like the author telling you how easy it is. Instead of focusing on the couple, we focus on their meaningless issues, which don't change the relationship. How about their chemistry? How about their dates? There's too little of that. It wouldn't be bad as a small guide in how to deal with strange relationships, but then it came the last arc. Out of nowhere, the author tries to throw a hammer in the relationship. Not from an outside force, but from the main guy himself. For no apparent reason, HE is the one testing the relationship in the most nonsensical way ever. No moment before set this up, he just decides: SPOILER “Hell yeah, let's make my girlfriend SPEND DAILY TIME WITH HER EX, WHICH IS A TEACHER I KNOW”. END OF SPOILER It didn't even lead to anything. They met again, and it just… ended. Empty, like an author not knowing how to end it. A series, not abandoned, but ended like that. I expected it to move on from that, but acknowledging the issues the main guy's got. Some sort of self reflection, or something to give us an idea as to the why. He explained himself with empty words, but I guess he was just, not romantically responsible, and maybe that's the point. The story itself isn't that interesting anyway. I didn't care about them. Their chemistry was slightly there, but never to an appealing degree. This is a middle of the road story, with middle of the road characters, and mediocre progression which I finished simply due to obligation. People won't like it because they might think “NTR”, but there's never an instance of that. Those problems are unfounded, but again, there's no outrage here, just a boring story, with side characters that have a much better arc than the main couple. 4.5/10. Not the “hate it and love it kind”, but the “Meh” kind.
Gathering every ounce of courage he has, Makoto Koga, an introverted third-year high school student, decides to confess to his crush Saki Meguro—a popular second-year student considered the most beautiful girl at their school. Surprisingly, Saki accepts his confession, marking the start of Makoto's first relationship. However, he also did not expect Saki to admit that she is not a virgin, having dated before Makoto. Despite the huge difference in their relationship experiences, Saki has had only a few romantic interactions. As a result of her previous boyfriends' conduct, she immediately anticipates Makoto to ask her for sexual favors. Nevertheless, Makoto's shy yet kind heart exposes Saki to new tender memories, ushering the couple into a genuine, heartwarming romance. [Written by MAL Rewrite]