Continuing from last time, Aika invites Wataru to her house. At that time, Wataru meets Aika's little sister, Airi. How will she react to him? Continuing, Sasaki has a big role this time around. Because he likes Aika, he becomes Wataru's love rival. What kind of effect will it have on Aika and Wataru's relationship? As you see, there's a lot of developments that collide with each other. As the protagonist, Wataru will show his interesting methods no matter the situation.
From the beginning to the ending, Wataru is very interesting. Even though he is the protagonist, he always advances in the opposite direction that you expect. He isn't a cliche character but a new archetype entirely. No matter what the occasion is, Wataru only shows fun things for the readers. By all means, please read it!
"Even if you suddenly tell me to be more confident, I don’t know how to go about doing that. I didn’t even lose my confidence, I just shred myself of the excessive confidence that ended up hurting me."
The Dreaming Boy Is a Realist Vol. 2 By Okemaru.
Okay, I liked this volume better than the first volume. While some parts of the book are okay at best, the story is actually interesting. Some monologues do make you laugh, and the main character is too realistic in an unrealistic way.
The main takeaway of this volume would be the plot of the Sajou siblings. It was kinda okay, nothing too special. Another one would be visiting Aika's little sister. As I said in the previous review, the anime cut so many plot points, the adaption was so poor, kinda glad I'm reading this.
I'm glad I carried on reading this. I did like volume 2 more than the first. There are more positive interactions with the main couple and it makes you want to root for them at the same time hit them both over the heads so they can get their acts together.
I finally got used to the names of the main protagonists, class, and their families but then all these new players with hard-to-remember names keep showing up. It's borderline turning into a harem genre but the main character's obtuse devotion somehow saves it from crossing over that lane.