Scum's Wish

Two students enter a substitute relationship while longing for other people, giving this romance an unusually candid focus on loneliness and self-deception.

Synopsis
The Anime Lad

Hanabi and Mugi look like a school couple, which is technically accurate and emotionally misleading. Each is in love with someone unavailable, so they agree to serve as substitutes for what neither can have. The arrangement includes rules. Feelings are known for respecting those. The series studies their choices with cool framing and remarkably little interest in making anyone comfortable.

Super Eyepatch Fox

Hanabi and Mugi share the same problem: each wants someone beyond reach. They form a relationship built on substitution, with clear terms meant to contain the hurt. School hallways and quiet apartments become spaces for negotiated intimacy. The direction uses split frames and close details to show how carefully both manage appearances.

Gigguku

This romance starts with a terrible agreement that makes complete emotional sense to the two people signing it. Hanabi and Mugi know they are substitutes, yet every pause exposes how badly they want the imitation to feel real. The split-screen compositions are doing SO much, trapping people beside the ones they cannot reach. It is messy because loneliness is messy, and the show refuses to clean the edges.

Father's Basement

The setup can feel like adolescent misery wearing expensive perfume. Hanabi and Mugi present themselves as a couple while privately using the relationship to cope with separate, unavailable loves. Yet the series does not flatter their arrangement. Its controlled compositions and uncomfortable silences expose every rationalization, making the emotional bargain legible even when the characters are being cruel or evasive.

False Lovers

E1–12 · 6.9

Two heartbroken students fake a romance while longing for other people.

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