Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Welcome to the NHK #2

Welcome to the NHK: 02

Rate this book
Follows the bizarre journey of Sato Tatsuhiro, a drug-addled shut-in who believes a sinister organization, the N.H.K., is the cause of all of his troubles and his relationship with Misaki, a girl he thinks is trying to kill him, but who becomes the love of his home-bound life.

200 pages, Paperback

First published November 26, 2004

16 people are currently reading
136 people want to read

About the author

Tatsuhiko Takimoto

44 books91 followers
Tatsuhiko Takimoto (Japanese: 滝本 竜彦) is a Japanese author best known for his novel Welcome to the N.H.K.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
181 (33%)
4 stars
192 (35%)
3 stars
119 (22%)
2 stars
34 (6%)
1 star
10 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews
Profile Image for Stewart Tame.
2,483 reviews120 followers
October 13, 2017
I've heard good things about this series, so when I had a chance to pick up volumes 2-4 for dirt cheap, I went for it. I haven't read volume 1, but found this to be an engaging series nevertheless.

Satou is a hikikomori, basically a slacker with poor social skils and no job who rarely leaves his apartment, preferring to spend time online playing games. Misaki is a girl who's trying to get him out of his shell and more engaged with the world. I'm not sure why, actually, but that was probably covered in volume 1. There definitely seems to be some potential for romance, but not for many volumes as both are pretty clueless. As this volume opens, Satou and his friend, Yamazaki, are trying to write an erotic computer game--neither seems to have much experience with real women, but that's traditionally never stopped anyone from writing such games. Misaki shows up to play the role of girlfriend on a lunch date with Satou's mother (he's sort of given her the impression that he has a job and a girlfriend.) It's a pretty familiar sitcom plot, but it plays well. Hijinks ensue, and volume 2 is off and running.

This is definitely a fun series. It reminds me a bit of Genshiken in some ways. Satou would definitely fit in with Madarame and the rest of the Genshiken crowd. I like the characters and the themes, and will definitely try and track down a copy of volume 1. Good stuff!
Profile Image for Minty-chan~.
107 reviews5 followers
February 21, 2013
this book was again, weird...i mean seriously what was with that offline suiccide group who didnt even commit suicide in the end? seriously i think the author's goal is to mess with my head....that seems quite realistic when you think about it...ANYWAY on to the next volume!! yay! what am i doing with my life......(insert creepy laugh of your preference)
Profile Image for Jon Ureña.
Author 3 books121 followers
July 3, 2018
Three and a half stars.

This volume contains the most memorable arc from the anime: the one in which the protagonist, Satou, travels with his high school senpai Hitomi to a private island for what he believes to be a short vacation, and the story becomes a brilliant black comedy. But the anime diverted significantly from the source material in a way that changed the tone of the story.

The scumbaggery of all the characters is turned up to eleven. Satou's pal Yamazaki pressures him to write the script for a scene of the erotic videogame they are making, which apparently involves, of all things, raping an underage girl. I'm in awe that this was even published. Satou's mind resists heroically; his "therapist", Misaki, has become his muse, and he can't bear to imagine that scene. However, scumbag Yamazaki reminds him that women are worthless. When he was a child the girl he fell in love with lied to him in order to date someone else, and he'll hold on to that bitterness forever. He coaches Satou until he can write the draft of that rape scene, but before he finishes it, Yamazaki receives a call: the girl he currently has a crush on actually wants to go out with him that night, so he forgets about women's worthlessness for a while. He's pretty much the archetypal "nice guy": he'll be all smiley with the girl he wants to fuck, but if she rejects him, he'll believe that the girl owed him a relationship, and he'll make her regret it by indulging in rape fantasies.

Meanwhile, Satou's senpai is having a hard time. Her older boyfriend, a company executive, doesn't have enough time for her. The girl's schizotypal nature makes her unable to fit in anywhere, and overdosing on anxiolytics and narcotics isn't cutting it anymore. She visits Satou in the middle of the night and they spend it drinking. The next day, Satou, wanting to put a smile on her face, offers her to take a trip somewhere. The girl is overjoyed; she believes he's read the printout she was carrying about an offline meeting she was going to attend, and now she'll get to go with her old friend.

From here on out come the biggest changes from the anime. .

The manga handles it very differently. .

.

This arc was more fittingly anticlimactic than in the anime, but I don't know if I prefer it. Still, the manga honors the tone of "hitting rock bottom as a Japanese twenty something that doesn't have a future" better.
Profile Image for Marcelo Flores.
81 reviews
June 3, 2024
Esta vez la historia se manda de lleno en la temática de la depresión y suicido, aunque el autor hace un buen uso del humor negro y la ironía para hacerlo más digerible y dar el mensaje de que una buena red de soporte emocional ayuda a salir de esos sitios más oscuros.
Profile Image for Rahul.
285 reviews21 followers
January 14, 2020
How many times I watch read or think about this story, it at the same time hurts me but also give me with hope that things will get good, just hold on to life.
Profile Image for David Doel.
2,489 reviews6 followers
December 10, 2023
I still haven't made up my mind about this manga but it's interesting enough to keep me going.
Profile Image for Jun.
179 reviews1 follower
October 20, 2025
What did i

This was recommended but I don't never know what I was reading. Like huh. What is with this story. Like huh
139 reviews
January 9, 2026
I really like this series so far it’s can be quite sad but it’s also very funny and all the characters are awesome. 8.5/10
Profile Image for Daken Howlett.
489 reviews14 followers
October 15, 2015
Il secondo volume di Welcome to the NHK è decisamente un passo avanti rispetto(al comunque buono)primo,scopriamo ulteriori dettagli sulla vita e sul carattere dei personaggi principali,viene introdotto un nuovo personaggio importante per levoluzione della serie e abbiamo un primo spiraglio nelle reali intenzioni di Misaki.
Anche se la saga di "welcome to paradise" rimane una delle mie preferite nella serie,credo che il modo in cui sia gestita nell'anime sia migliore,con l'introduzione di più personaggi e un climax più teso,però l'intera vicenda assume toni più realistici nel manga(dove non c'è il provvidenziale salvataggio all'ultimo seondo)
Profile Image for Armando Hernández.
271 reviews2 followers
May 6, 2016
Satou's mother is the best and Misaki is a really weird person but I think that she wants to date Satou. The sempai was a very crazy woman, really all the pills she takes and the way she talks, but anyways Satou loves her.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Noah Soudrette.
538 reviews43 followers
January 4, 2008
A definite improvement on the first volume. Dispenses with some of the wacky inanities and gets more into character.
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.