I love this. The developing of the characters, the reality of the internal pain they endure in a society that shuns anyone that isn't within their rules for "normal." It's got cute moments, some tense moments, and right now, for me, a super-cliff-hanger moment where all I can do is silently scream, "Please, please let everything turn out good for everyone, because I love each one of them!!"
Sometimes I get a touch irritated by minor details in a manga, like Goth-kun tied up Buff-kun's legs, but he didn't tie up his arms or hands, so Buff-kun could have seriously beat the crap out of him right from the point where Goth-kun yanked his drawers down. Even if he drew a crap card, no one was there to see.
Yeah that bothered me way more than it should. I concluded that Gainz-kun didn't resist because he took a deep dive into the "s-ssenpai please don't touch that but really just touch it NOW" trope. Maybe MagicEmo-kun read his mind and realized Gainz-kun wanted the d? But, he could have *tried* to at least pin his legs down, right?!
Uke goes from originally being a bad-ass boxer/fighter, and finds himself in this new beautiful, but not quite as strong little body. Since he knows how many enemies this new body of his had in the past, he should be strength training like it's going out of style and spending as much of his spare time as possible at the boxing gym, like his old self used to. That way we can watch with glee and anticipation as he kicks ALL the scumbag asses.
Very vague stories, quick plots that just skim the surface. There are some things that aren't explained, you just kind of have to guess by the situation and the character's conversations, and even then they don't talk about much of anything. As usual her art is easy on the eyes, and I'm glad that I could at least tell the characters apart.











When I see the tongues start hanging out and eyes crossing, it's time to stop.
It's no no time!