Sunday, January 10, 2021

Net-juu no Susume

 

Moriko has finally reached the limit with her job and decides to become a NEET. She comes back to a mostly empty home with a very clean carpet and a bobble head cat. She remembers playing some MMO games and enjoying it very much. You can be alone and still chat and have fun with other people. It's the perfect solution for the socially inept Moriko and after a quick search she starts playing Fruits de Mer, a high fantasy world with a medieval setting, because nobody ever gets tired of those, ever. She soon finds a partner, a healer nicknamed Lily and her party.

From that point on, an amazing sequence of coincidences have the players of Moriko's party finding each other in real life, including the player behind Lily, Sakurai, a very nice and extremely wholesome individual who falls in love with Moriko but can't bring himself to tell anyone about it. This is not, however, a case of romance that has to overcome a series or silly misunderstandings, though the premise might look perfect for that sort of thing.

This is where the beauty of this show happens. You're actually watching a reincarnation romance for modern audiences. You know the story, a love so strong that the two people involved keep falling in love through consecutive lives until they can finally be together. It's the whole Red Thread of Fate thing mixed in with Hindu rebirth mythology stories. Here however, instead of having actual rebirths, Moriko and Sakurai keep finding each other through several online MMO characters but for some reason or another the romance never happens. That's the real twist of Net-juu no Susume for me and what makes it interesting. 

Of course the characters are solid too, and I think there could easily be another season where we get to explore the lives of the other members of this MMO party. Unfortunately this series was cut short due to the author's illness, though I could not find anything about it outside Wikipedia. She never mentions any illness on her twitter account, so I don't know, but that besides the scope of this short review.

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