The Anime Lad
Yuuta begins high school hoping nobody remembers the grand fantasy identity he performed in middle school. This plan lasts until he meets Rikka, a classmate who still speaks openly about secret powers and the Wicked Eye. Her apartment connection makes avoidance impractical. Yuuta recognizes every gesture because he has attempted most of them himself. Kyoto Animation treats their imaginary battles with more production care than the participants’ social recovery plans.
Super Eyepatch Fox
Yuuta chose a distant high school to escape memories of calling himself the Dark Flame Master. Then Rikka enters his life wearing an eyepatch and treating fantasy combat as daily business. He wants a normal adolescence. She recognizes someone fluent in her private mythology. Their school comedy runs on the gap between elaborate inner battles and the awkward physical reality visible to everyone nearby.
Gigguku
Yuuta is trying SO hard to delete his old fantasy persona, and then Rikka drops into his life with an eyepatch and total commitment to the bit. The show understands the agony of recognizing your former self in someone who has no intention of stopping. Better still, Kyoto Animation stages their imaginary combat with outrageous craft before snapping back to cardboard props. The embarrassment is fierce, but so is the tenderness underneath their shared language.
Father's Basement
Rikka’s affected speech and constant fantasy framing can be exhausting by design, especially if public embarrassment is your natural predator. Yuuta makes the premise work because he is neither an outsider nor a willing participant. He spent middle school performing his own dark persona and changed schools to escape the evidence. Now he understands Rikka too well to dismiss her cleanly. The lavish imaginary battles sharpen the joke, while their awkward connection keeps it from becoming simple ridicule.