The Anime Lad
Yato is a minor god without a shrine, followers, or reliable employment. He accepts odd jobs for five yen while trying to build a reputation. High-schooler Hiyori crosses into his orbit and begins slipping unpredictably between the human world and the spirit realm. She hires him to fix the problem. His customer-service infrastructure is limited.
Gigguku
Yato writes his phone number on public walls and charges one coin for divine intervention. I love this disaster god. Noragami makes modern Japan and its spirit realm overlap at the edges, so a school commute can suddenly tilt into bright, airborne action. Hiyori's impatience keeps the supernatural cast grounded, while Yato's need to be remembered gives every cheap joke a lonely shadow.
Father's Basement
Noragami switches from slapstick to menace with little warning, and the tonal snap will not work for everyone. Yato holds it together. His bargain-bin god routine is funny because worship has practical stakes for him, not because divinity is random. Hiyori's demand for a concrete solution also prevents the spirit lore from becoming an excuse for vague mysticism.