

Sieg Lieben - Main Story, Sequel, Royal Wedding Special Stories - A Secret Halloween for Two, Falling in Love. Of the Dreamy Days routes, I’d give Takeshi a try instead. dreamy days in west tokyo ryuzo walkthrough. Why would you completely ignore his interests when trying to create a romantic lead? Mother who neglected to mention to her daughter and husband that she had been writing Johji for years and years sends MC back to live with him again after he declares his feelings.Īlso, the complete absence of history trivia and bartending information that flavor Johji’s interactions in the other routes baffles me. How can you have no relationship development yet still replace plot with relationship angst? I couldn’t believe either of them.Įven though the reader doesn’t see a current-day relationship develop, the MC spends ALL her time focused on Johji.

But she's got some secrets of her own and falling in love makes it harder for her to keep them from him. Cam is introduced to her childhood friends and ends up joining their group. It feels like the MC like Johji because he was nice to her when she was six, and he likes her because…frankly, I don’t know. Misaki moves back to West Tokyo with her best friend Cam. The reader never gets to see the MC and Johji develop a friendship/relationship of equals in the present. The MC spends the second half of the story worrying about Johji marrying Character A, her being in the way, yadda yadda. Johji flat-out tells the MC before the story’s half-way mark that he’s not interested in Character A and proceeds to display this lack of interest. A six-year-old has more self-preservation than this chick. The MC immediately gets in the car with someone she’s never seen or met before. She can even ask if he’s her dad and then doesn’t bother to get an answer. What I can’t buy is that neither Johji nor her family told her about their previous connection and she doesn’t think to ask ’til she’s been living with him for quite a while. Johji Chakura ( Chakura Jji) is a small business owner and potential romance option in Dreamy Days in West Tokyo. Okay, I can buy that – relative, close family friend, whatever. Seventeen-year-old girl is sent to live with thirty-something year old guy. I can’t even get irritated by all the contradictions and the trampling of the reader’s suspension of disbelief. Ryuzo: “Er, I don’t know what’s really going on, but hang in there.” Basic Premise: The seventeen-year-old main character moves back to the town and friends she left ten years ago.
