Wakabaryou de, Kimi to
Very cute, but definitely shounen ai. Three love stories, all set in an all-boys school. The first is about a boy who is unlucky in love until he finds that his stoical roommate, who has consistently been there for him when he gets dumped, is infatuated with him. The second is about an older, deadbeat student whose blissful life without a roommate is rudely interrupted by the introduction of a transfer student, a hapless rich kid with a lot of school smarts but little knowledge of dorm life. The final story is about their RA, a graduate student who is semi-blackmailed into a sexual relationship by a younger student determined to make him forget his former highschool love
Koi da Ai da wa Sateoite
On the way home from work, Okazaki Taichi finds a man named Fuji, sleeping on a bench one day. Okazaki ends up bringing Fuji to his house, and somehow, he ends up on top of him, and they become friends with benefits.
Blue! Blue! Blue!
When Takiya Kippei, the brother of two older sisters, realises that he desperately needs money to buy a birthday present for his lover, he decides to live and work onsite at a ryokan (a traditional japanese inn). There, he meets the well-educated Honjou Masumi, a man who is neither too strict nor too lenient, and who has a charm which embodies the word mature. This is the first time I've met someone like Honjou - as Takiya continues working at the ryokan, he starts to become interested in Honjou
Ano Kado Wo Magatta Tokoro
Yuuya, a high school student, unexpectedly bumps into Kiriya-san while walking down the street and ends up saving the older man's life. The two are neither "friends nor lovers," but form a companionship in order to listen to each other's troubles.
Cafe Latte Rhapsody