Nisekoi

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Nisekoi
Nisekoi Volume 1.jpg
Cover of the first manga volume featuring Kosaki Onodera, Raku Ichijo and Chitoge Kirisaki
ニセコイ
GenreHarem[1]
Romantic comedy[2]
Manga
Written byNaoshi Komi
Published byShueisha
English publisher
ImprintJump Comics
MagazineWeekly Shōnen Jump
English magazine
DemographicShōnen
Original runNovember 7, 2011August 8, 2016
Volumes25 (List of volumes)
Novel series
Nisekoi: Urabana
Written byHajime Tanaka
Illustrated byNaoshi Komi
Published byShueisha
ImprintJump j-Books
DemographicMale
Original runJune 4, 2013December 28, 2013
Volumes2
Anime television series
Directed by
Produced by
  • Atsuhiro Iwakami (Aniplex)
  • Mitsutoshi Kubota (Shaft)
  • Hirō Maruyama (Mainichi Hōsō)
  • Hiroyuki Kiyōno (Sheisha)
Written by
Music by
  • Kakeru Ishihama (#1–6)
  • Naoki Chiba (#1–6)
  • Tomoki Kikuya (#7–20)
StudioShaft
Licensed by
Original networkMBS, Tokyo MX, GTV, GYT, tvk, CTC, TV Saitama, TV Aichi, TVQ, TVh, BS11
English network
Animax Asia[3]
Original run January 11, 2014 May 24, 2014
Episodes20 + 3 OVAs (List of episodes)
Game
Nisekoi: Yomeiri!?
DeveloperKonami
PublisherKonami
PlatformPlayStation Vita
Released
Anime television series
Nisekoi:
Directed by
Produced by
  • Kazumasa Sanjōba (Shueisha)
  • Ryū Hashimoto (Mainichi Hōsō)
  • Miku Ōshima (Shaft)
  • Akiko Yodo (Aniplex)
Written by
  • Akiyuki Shinbo
  • Shaft
Music byTomoki Kikuya
StudioShaft
Licensed by
Madman Entertainment
Aniplex of America
Kazé UK
Original networkMBS, Tokyo MX, BS11
English network
Animax Asia[3]
Animax
Original run April 10, 2015 June 26, 2015
Episodes12 + 1 OVA (List of episodes)
Live-action film
Wikipe-tan face.svg Anime and manga portal

Nisekoi,[Jp. 1] released in English as Nisekoi: False Love, is a Japanese romantic comedy manga series written and illustrated by Naoshi Komi. Nisekoi was first published as a one-shot manga in Shueisha's seasonal Jump NEXT! magazine before being serialized in Weekly Shōnen Jump in November 2011. Since November 26, 2012, Nisekoi has been published in English in Viz Media's digital magazine, Weekly Shonen Jump. As of October 2016, the series has been compiled in 25 tankōbon volumes in Japan, and is also being released in English in digital and print volumes by Viz Media. The manga has inspired a novel series, titled Nisekoi: Urabana, written by Hajime Tanaka and published by Shueisha. There have been two volumes published, on June 4 and December 28, 2013.

In May 2013, it was announced that an anime adaptation of Nisekoi had been greenlit.[5] The anime is directed by Akiyuki Shinbo at Shaft,[6] and aired from January 11[7] to May 24, 2014. Aniplex of America has licensed the series for streaming and home video distribution in North America.[8] Daisuki,[9] Crunchyroll,[7] and Hulu[10] have provided simulcast streams with English subtitles for audiences in the United States, Canada, South America and South Africa. A second season titled Nisekoi: aired from April to June 2015. A live-action film adaptation premiered in December 2018.[11]

Plot[]

Nisekoi follows high school students Raku Ichijo, the son of a leader in the Yakuza faction Shuei-gumi, and Chitoge Kirisaki, the daughter of a boss in a rival gang known as Beehive. They unexpectedly meet when Chitoge hops a wall and knees Raku in the face. After she runs off, Raku realizes he has lost his locket which was given to him by his childhood sweetheart with whom he made a secret promise. After discovering Chitoge is a new transfer student in his class, he forces her to help him look for the locket. During the search, they begin to dislike each other.[12]

Upon returning home, Raku learns that the Shuei-gumi and Beehive gangs have agreed to settle their feud by pairing their leaders' children. Raku learns that his girlfriend-to-be is none other than Chitoge. For the next three years, they must pretend to be in a relationship to maintain peace between the gangs. This turns out to be quite a challenging task, not only because of their hatred for one another but also because Raku has a crush on another schoolmate, Kosaki Onodera, whom he secretly wishes was the girl who bears the key to his locket. Various developments complicate the situation, including Chitoge's over-protective bodyguard, a female hitman, a girl who claims to be Raku's fiancée, and the existence of multiple keys. Yui Kanakura, the newly appointed head of the Char Siu Mafia and Raku's childhood friend, also joins in as a fiancée with yet another key to the locket.

After numerous adventures with the girls, Raku realizes he has fallen for both Chitoge and Kosaki. When Chitoge learns that Raku and Kosaki have liked each other since they were in middle school, she tries to support their relationship by leaving Japan. This prompts Raku and the others to look for her. They discover more about the book that tells the story of the keys which helps them recall more of what actually happened ten years ago.

Characters[]

Raku Ichijo (一条 楽, Ichijō Raku)
Voiced by: Koki Uchiyama (drama CD, anime)[13]
Raku is a high school student who aspires to pursue a normal career as a civil servant when he graduates, although he is the son of a Yakuza family leader.Ch. 1 When he is placed in a fake relationship with Chitoge Kirisaki, he hides his feelings for the girl who he has a crush on, Kosaki Onodera.Ch. 4-5 He wears a locket that symbolizes a promise of love he made to a girl ten years ago while traveling with his father abroad and hopes he can reunite with the girl who bears the key to unlock it. He shows kindness and care to the girls but remains unsure as to which girl he likes the most.Ch. 63, 100, 171, 176-178 After Marika withdraws from pursuing him, she reveals to him that he loves both Kosaki and Chitoge, and should choose between them.Ch. 195 Raku realizes that he does like Chitoge beyond just friends,Ch. 199, 200 and despite learning that Kosaki was his promised girl, he ultimately chooses Chitoge. In the final chapter, it is revealed he has become a government worker in the city's public safety department and is the second boss of his family's Yakuza gang who helps him protect the city. He and Chitoge are married and have a son named Haku who inherited their respective traits.Ch. 229
Chitoge Kirisaki (桐崎 千棘, Kirisaki Chitoge)
Voiced by: Nao Toyama (drama CD, anime)[13]
Chitoge is a half-Japanese transfer student from the United States, and the daughter of the leader of the Beehive Gangsters. She is annoyed by Raku, who calls her a gorilla woman, but pretends to be in a relationship with him in order to prevent their family gangs from going to war.Ch. 1 Ten years before, Chitoge makes a promise with a boy, but does not realize it could be Raku until she finds a key that could potentially unlock his locket.Ch. 21 She develops feelings towards Raku and becomes jealous when girls such as Marika show open affections towards him.Ch. 35 Eventually, she realizes that she truly loves him, and changes her internal attitude while keeping the external appearance of still finding him annoying.Ch. 49, 51 She is very smart and capable at almost anything,Ch. 56 except cooking.Ch. 67, 116 She and her mom had a "cold" relationship until Raku helps them reconcile with each other on Christmas.Ch. 59 Later, she accidentally found out that Raku and Kosaki had liked each other since middle-school. To help them get together she runs away from home, unaware that Raku also likes her. After being convinced by Marika to be honest with her feelings, Chitoge confessed her love for Raku at the place where Raku made the promise with the promised girl, and was happy when Raku accepted her feelings. In the final chapter, it is revealed that she is married to Raku and has become a fashion designer.Ch. 229
Kosaki Onodera (小野寺 小咲, Onodera Kosaki)
Voiced by: Kana Hanazawa (drama CD, anime)[13]
Kosaki Onodera is a kind and sweet classmate of Raku. She has shoulder-length dark brown hair and chestnut brown eyes. Although Raku likes her, she does not reveal that she also likes him. She bears a key that could unlock Raku's locket but denies it when Raku asks and becomes extremely shy and easily flustered whenever they have a potential romantic situation.Ch. 4, 5 Her family owns a dessert shop where she fashions good-looking treats, but she makes terrible food when left to her own devices.Ch. 7, 19 She is not as academically strong as her friends, but studied hard to enter the same high school as Raku.Ch. 98 As time passes her love for Raku grows and her determination to get him notice her feelings becomes stronger, declaring she will fight for it.Ch. 126 She and Raku have similar personalities, showing care for others, but are shy when it comes to confessing their mutual feelings. It was revealed that Kosaki was the promised girl.Ch. 221 While looking for Chitoge after she ran away at the place where they made the promise, Kosaki realizes that Raku has fallen for Chitoge, and despite a final confession, is gently rejected. In the last chapter, she has become a pastry chef, and is making the wedding cake for Raku and Chitoge.Ch. 229
Shu Maiko (舞子 集, Maiko Shū)
Voiced by: Yuki Kaji (drama CD, anime)[13]
Shū is Raku's best friend. He enjoys doing anything for a laugh and often makes perverted passes or comments without shame to his friends. He is perceptive of Raku's relationships, knowing immediately that Raku was not really dating Chitoge, that Raku and Kosaki have secret crushes on each other,Ch. 8 and that Tsugumi has developed romantic feelings for Raku.Ch. 20 Academically, he places next to "glasses buddy" Ruri, much to the latter's chagrin.Ch. 56, 58 He has not expressed romantic interest in Raku's friends, but in one storyline, he has a crush on their homeroom teacher Kyoko.Ch. 84 He has known that Chitoge has become more than just a friend to Raku before Raku even does.Ch. 195 In the final chapter, he had become a teacher and is living with Ruri; he organizes the wedding for Raku and Chitoge.Ch. 229
Claude (クロード)
Voiced by: Takehito Koyasu (drama CD, anime)[13]
Claude, one of the leaders of the Beehive gangsters, is one of the few characters who suspects the relationship between Raku and Chitoge is fake.Ch. 2 He stalks Chitoge regularly to make sure Raku does not take advantage of her.Ch. 3, 5 Chitoge stated that when she was young, she was unable to make friends because of Claude's overprotectiveness and background checking. He raises Tsugumi as a hitman, gave her a boy's name, Seishirou, completely oblivious of her gender.Ch. 17 In the final chapter, he has become Beehive's new leader after Chitoge's father resigned in order to live his life with Hana, and is getting along better with Raku.Ch. 229
Ruri Miyamoto (宮本 るり, Miyamoto Ruri)
Voiced by: Yumi Uchiyama (drama CD, anime)[13]
Ruri is Kosaki's best friend. She often speaks what is on her mind, and actively pushes Kosaki to get closer to Raku,Ch. 8 setting up many scenarios to help her. She regularly beats up Shu for his perverted comments,Ch. 10, 11 although sometimes she respects what he has to say.Ch. 58 In later chapters, she realizes she has fallen in love with Shu as she is drawn to his inner struggle.Ch. 209 She eventually confesses to him and states that she will wait for Shu to let go of his feelings for his first love Kyoko.Ch. 223 In the final chapter, she is working as a translator and lives with Shu.Ch. 229
Seishiro Tsugumi (鶫 誠士郎, Tsugumi Seishirō, also: Seishirou Tsugumi)
Voiced by: Mikako Komatsu (drama CD, anime)[13]
"Black Tiger" Tsugumi is a hitwoman who was raised and trained by Claude of the Beehive Gangsters.Ch. 14-16 Originally introduced as a transfer student in Chitoge's class, she prefers to dress in shirt and pants of the boys uniform, and is mistaken for a boy by Raku and the others. Suspecting Chitoge was forced by Raku into the relationship, she tries to fight him.Ch. 15 She and Chitoge are childhood friends; she tries to keep a promise made ten years ago of becoming strong to protect Chitoge.Ch. 16 After Raku treats her nicely, she begins to develop feelings for him, even though she is too stubborn and embarrassed to admit it.Ch. 18, 20, 40 She shares a rivalry with "White Fang" Paula McCoy.Ch. 54 She does well academically, having ranked next to Chitoge on an early exam.Ch. 56 Raku has occasionally confided with her as a good friend and also for romance advice.Ch. 68, 79-83 She occasionally has vivid daydreams of being Raku's secret lover. She does not realize Raku and Chitoge's relationship is a fake one until much later in the series.Ch.204-206 In the end chapter, she has become the exclusive fashion model for Chitoge and has grown out her hair.Ch. 229
Marika Tachibana (橘 万里花, Tachibana Marika)
Voiced by: Kana Asumi (drama CD, anime)[14]
Marika transfers to Raku's class and is introduced as Raku-sama's fiancée; she bears a key that she thinks will unlock Raku's pendant, and is the most vocal about expressing her love to Raku. She is the daughter of the police commissioner, Gen and has been in love with Raku for the past ten years.Ch. 33 She does not get along with Chitoge; she states she hates girls with long hair despite the fact that she also has long hair.Ch. 34 Although she has a reputation of being a fighter, she has a frail constitution; ten years prior, she was frequently visited by a young Raku, who brought her gifts and sparked a friendship with her. Because Raku mentions he likes a girly girl with long hair, she grows her hair out and tries to speak politely and feminine, only reverting to her crude Kyushu accent when flustered.Ch. 35-36 Her worsening health condition has motivated her to spend as much time with Raku as she can while hiding the burden from him.Ch. 169 She has a story arc where her failing health prompts her mother to withdraw her from Bonyari and forced to marry her mother's cousin. Although Raku and friends rescue her, Marika tells Raku that she will have to get treatment for her illness in America for two years or it will become fatal. She expects Raku to choose Chitoge or Kosaki by then or she will take him for herself.Ch. 180-195 In the final chapter, she cut her hair short and has completely recovered from her disease, and has the difficult task of finding a man that was better than Raku.Ch. 229
Paula McCoy (ポーラ・マッコイ, Pōra Makkoi)
Voiced by: Manami Numakura (drama CD, anime)[15]
Paula is an assassin for the Beehive gangsters who has trained in America; her alias is "White Fang."Ch. 54 She is a colleague of Tsugumi, whom she considers her rival as she has finished second to her in many missions. She is upset that Tsugumi has gotten soft after going to Japan.Ch. 54 When she challenges Tsugumi to a match where the goal is to steal a kiss from Raku,Ch. 54 she eventually loses and has to give up on Seishirou returning to America with her.Ch. 54, 55 She later returns to Japan as a student at Tsugumi's school.Ch. 75 After seeing that Tsugumi acts shy and embarrassed when near Raku, she sets up romantic situations where the two are together.Ch. 79, 80 She eventually opens up to the possibility of being friends with people after talking with Haru Onodera.Ch. 81, 82 In the final chapter, it is revealed that she went to graduate school and works in a lab as a scientist, something that was unexpected by everyone.Ch. 229
Haru Onodera (小野寺 春, Onodera Haru)
Voiced by: Ayane Sakura (drama CD, anime)[16]
Kosaki's sister who is a school year younger than Raku Ichijo and the gang.Ch. 75, 76 On her way to school she is saved from some delinquents by a mysterious prince (actually Raku)Ch. 75 and ends up with his locket.Ch. 76 Her first impression of Raku is negative as she believes that he is a womanizer who is trying to trick her sister, a dangerous yakuza, and a pervert for looking at her panties.Ch. 75, 76 She also refuses to return his locket until Raku convinces her that he is helping the prince.Ch. 78 Unlike her sister, she is a good cook.Ch. 77 She later reveals that she was helped by a guy in a mascot costume (also Raku) who treats her with vanilla ice cream.Ch. 94 Later, Haru finally warms up to Raku and realizes she too has fallen in love with him, although she puts her feelings aside to support her sister.Ch. 109 However, her attempts to have her sister and Raku draw closer often backfire and result in her interacting more often with Raku (much to her dismay).Ch. 110 In the final chapter, she has taken over the family business which became more popular due to her dessert.Ch. 229
Suzu Ayakaji (彩風 涼, Ayakaji Suzu)
Voiced by: Kotori Koiwai (drama CD, anime)[17]
Suzu Ayakaji, also known as Fuu (風), is the best friend and classmate of Haru Onodera and also one of the classmates of Paula McCoy.Ch. 75 Fuu has light fair skin with indigo eyes. She has thick, dark auburn hair that sports a braid with a pink ribbon on the left side of her hair. Fuu is very kind and understanding. She tries her best to make her friends happy and supports them.Ch. 107 She always looks for Haru and truly wishes for her to be happy.Ch. 171 Haru states she is a bit weird at times like when she asked Haru to model for her and getting a nosebleed in the process.Ch. 131, 132 When Haru starts to have feelings for Raku, Fuu is able to understand her feelings for him and tries to find situations where she and Raku could be together.Ch. 131 In the final chapter, it is revealed that she has become a journalist who wrote a feature article about Haru and her shop.Ch. 229
Yui Kanakura (奏倉 羽, Kanakura Yui)
Voiced by: Yui Horie (drama CD)[18]
Yui is a childhood friend of Raku and the head of the Char Siu mafia from China.Ch. 118 Her family name is Japanese but given name is called by Chinese (羽 ). She comes back to Japan after spending several years overseas. She also knows Chitoge, Kosaki, and Marika, and like them, holds a key which could unlock Raku's locket.Ch. 119, 120 Although she is only two years older than Raku, she becomes Raku's homeroom and English teacher, having skipped many grades.Ch. 119 She also has romantic feelings for Raku, who views Yui just as his older sister.Ch. 126, 178 She has a story arc where she has one last bid for Raku's affection before her coming of age ceremony.Ch. 176 In the last chapter, it is revealed she is living in China and is pregnant.Ch. 229

Media[]

Manga[]

Nisekoi is written and illustrated by Naoshi Komi and began as a one-shot manga, published in Shueisha's seasonal Jump NEXT! magazine on January 8, 2011,[19] before beginning serialization in Weekly Shōnen Jump's 48th issue on November 7, 2011.[20] A voice comic (vomic) was also produced and its first episode was released on June 1, 2012.[21] The manga finished on August 8, 2016.[22] Nisekoi's individual chapters have been compiled into 25 tankōbon volumes, which were published under Shueisha's Jump Comics imprint between May 2, 2012, and October 4, 2016.[23][24] The ninth volume was released simultaneously with a special edition, bundled with a drama CD, on November 1, 2013.[25][26]

In December 2011, Shueisha published the first chapter in English online.[27] The manga has been licensed in English by Viz Media and published in their digital magazine, Weekly Shonen Jump since November 26, 2012, under the name Nisekoi: False Love.[28][29] They also released the first volume in print on January 7, 2014, and plan to release a new one every two months.[30][31]

A spin-off manga illustrated by Taishi Tsutsui titled Magical Pâtissier Kosaki-chan, which features the character Kosaki Onodera as a magical girl, began serialization on Shueisha's Shonen Jump+ website on December 1, 2014,[32] and has been compiled into four tankōbon volumes.[33]

Anime[]

A 20-episode anime adaptation was produced by Aniplex, Shaft, Shueisha and Mainichi Broadcasting System and directed by Akiyuki Shinbo, with Shinbo and Shaft staff (credited as Fuyashi Tō) handling series composition, Nobuhiro Sugiyama designing the characters and Naoki "naotyu-" Chiba, Kakeru Ishihama and Tomoki Kikuya composing the music. The series aired from January 11[34] to May 24, 2014. The first opening theme is "Click" by ClariS.[35][36] The first ending theme besides "Click" for episode 1 is "Heart Pattern" by Nao Toyama, starting from episode 2. The second ending theme is "Recover Decoration"[Jp. 2] by Kana Hanazawa, starting from episode 8.

The ending theme for episode 14 is "Step" by ClariS, while the same song is the second opening starting from episode 15.[37] The third ending theme is "Trick Box" by Mikako Komatsu, starting from episode 15. The fourth ending theme is "Hanagonomi"[Jp. 3] by Kana Asumi, starting from episode 18. The ending for episode 20 is "Sōzō Diary"[Jp. 4] by Toyama as Chitoge Kirisaki, Hanazawa as Kosaki Onodera, Komatsu as Seishirou Tsugumi, and Asumi as Marika Tachibana. On the Japanese Blu-ray version, the fourth ending theme is "Order×Order"[Jp. 5] by Yumi Uchiyama.[38]

A total of four OVAs were produced and packaged with manga volumes 14, 16, 17, and 21.[39]

A second season[40] aired between April 10 and June 26, 2015.[41] The first opening theme is "Rally Go Round" by LiSA,[42] and for episode 8, the opening theme is "Magical ☆ styling" by Kana Hanazawa.[43] The ending theme for the first, third, and sixth episodes is "Aimai Hertz"[Jp. 6] by Toyama as Chitoge Kirisaki, Hanazawa as Kosaki Onodera, Komatsu as Seishirou Tsugumi, and Asumi as Marika Tachibana. The ending theme for the second episode is "TrIGgER" by Komatsu. The ending theme for the fourth episode is "Sleep Zzz" by Toyama. The ending theme for the fifth episode is "Matadō Rabu"[Jp. 7] by Asumi. The ending theme for the seventh episode is "marchen ticktack" by Ayane Sakura. The ending theme for the tenth episode is "Tooriame Drop"[Jp. 8] by Yumi Uchiyama.

Film[]

A live-action adaptation premiered in Japanese theaters on December 21, 2018. It was directed by Hayato Kawai and stars Kento Nakajima as Raku Ichijo and Ayami Nakajo as Chitoge Kirisaki, and was distributed by Toho.[44][45][11][46][47]

Other media[]

A three-volume novel series, titled Nisekoi: Urabana,[Jp. 9] was published by Shueisha under their Jump j-Books imprint. The novels are written by Hajime Tanaka and illustrated by Naoshi Komi. The first volume was published on June 4, 2013. It has stories concerning the main characters such as Kosaki sprouting cat ears from a virus, and Marika as a hit-woman.[48] The second volume was released on December 28, 2013 with stories about the play and side stories such as the gang working at a maid café.[49] The third volume was released on April 3, 2015.[50]

A vomic (voice comic) was released by Shonen Jump published in 3 videos covering chapter one. The first video was first released on September 6, 2013, and features Yoshitsugu Matsuoka as Raku Ichijo, Haruka Tomatsu as Chitoge Kirisaki, Hisako Kanemoto as Kosaki Onodera, and Daichi Kanbara as Shuu Maiko.[51]

A visual novel titled Nisekoi: Yomeiri!?[Jp. 10] was developed by Konami and released for the PlayStation Vita on November 27, 2014.[52][53][54][55] Konami also released a game for Android and iOS named Nisekoi: Majikore[Jp. 11] from January 2014 until its closure on December 26, 2015. Chitoge appears as a support character in the Bandai Namco Games' crossover fighting game, J-Stars Victory VS, released in Japan in March 2014 and in North America and Europe in June 2015.[56] Two Super Mario Maker Event Courses designed by Komi, along with an unlockable Mystery Mushroom costume of Chitoge for the game, were released on February 18, 2016.[57]

Reception[]

New York Times Manga Best-Seller List
Volume
No.
Peak
rank
Notes Refs
1 5 4 weeks [58][59]
2 3 3 weeks [60][61]
3 7 3 weeks [62]
4 3 3 weeks [63]
5 4 2 weeks [64]
6 2 3 weeks [65]
7 8 1 week [66]
8 4 3 weeks [67][68]
9 6 1 week [69]
11 8 2 weeks [70][71]
16 7 1 week [72]
17 7 1 week [73]
Oricon Japanese comic rankings
Volume
No.
Peak
rank
Notes Refs
1 13 1 week [74]
2 12 2 weeks [75]
3 10 2 weeks [76]
4 9 2 weeks [77]
5 8 3 weeks [78]
6 9 2 weeks [79]
7 6 2 weeks [80]
8 5 2 weeks [81]
9 8 3 weeks [82]
10 6 3 weeks [83]
11 8 3 weeks [84]
12 6 3 weeks [85]
13 4 3 weeks [86]
14 6 3 weeks [87]
15 3 3 weeks [88]
16 2 3 weeks [89]
17 4 4 weeks [90]
18 3 3 weeks [91]
19 7 3 weeks [92]
20 4 3 weeks [93]
21 5 2 weeks [94]
22 6 2 weeks [95]
23 11 3 weeks [96]
24 3 3 weeks [97]
25 3 3 weeks [98]

Manga[]

Nisekoi was listed at number 30 out of Oricon's top 30 manga series sold in 2013, with 1,542,417 copies sold.[99] In 2014 it was ranked 16 out of top 30 manga series sold in 2014, with 3,816,372 which is more than twice the sale of 2013.[100] As of April 2018, the manga had 12 million copies in print.[101]

Rebecca Silverman of Anime News Network writes that the Nisekoi manga has a large lack of originality, such as "nearly every plot point can be traced back to another shounen series (primarily Sumomomo, Momomo in terms of Raku's home life)." Also "seasoned readers of shounen romance will recognize elements from at least three other series in there." However, she enjoyed the art and overall sense of fun.[102]

Andy Hanley of UK Anime Network found Nisekoi: False Love to be "packed to the rafters with clichés" but light-hearted and fun to read. He said the character designs were traditional but the author knows when to detail backgrounds or keep things simple. The translations were decent and the dialogue smooth.[103]

Anime[]

In reviewing the anime, Theron Martin of Anime News Network saw the "plot twist coming a mile away" but "the setup shows promise." Hope Chapman critiqued the show's pacing: "Telling a simple story in a complex way kills the pacing, in this case. Plot points and character moments that could be communicated in one minute take three in Shinbo-style, and it just doesn't add anything when the story is this small and straightforward." Carl Kimlinger found the "improbably romantic fantasy" done right, a story relatively enjoyable after having reviewed No-Rin.[104]

In his UK Anime Network review of the first five episodes, Andy Hanley found the series an exercise in box ticking, if viewed cynically, but it "has simply taken old concepts and polished them until they're gleaming and immaculate - and it works." He felt that Shaft's animation style was a bit overbearing in the first episode, but settles well in accenting the important parts of the show. The voice cast captured the characters well, and the overall presentation was top notch.[105]

Notes on inline citations[]

  • ^ "Ch." is a shortened form for chapter and refers to a chapter number of the Nisekoi manga.

Explanatory notes[]

  1. ^ Credited under the collective pen name Fuyashi Tō.
Japanese
  1. ^ Japanese: ニセコイ, lit. "Fake Love"
  2. ^ リカバーデコレーション, Rikabā Dekorēshon
  3. ^ はなごのみ, lit. "Fondness for Flowers"
  4. ^ 想像ダイアリー, Sōzō Daiarī, lit. "Imagination Diary"
  5. ^ オーダー×オーダー, Ōdā×Ōdā
  6. ^ 曖昧ヘルツ
  7. ^ またどーらぶ, lit. "Matado Love"
  8. ^ 通り雨drop, lit. "Shower Drop"
  9. ^ ニセコイ ウラバナ
  10. ^ ニセコイ ヨメイリ!?, Nisekoi: My Wife is Among Them!?
  11. ^ ニセコイ マジコレ, Nisekoi: Majikore

References[]

  1. ^ Eisenbeis, Richard (May 27, 2014). "Nisekoi is the Epitome of a Cliché Rom-Com Anime". Kotaku. Retrieved May 2, 2020. Nisekoi isn't particularly fresh or new in what it delivers. It's a harem love story with stereotypical characters in cliché high school situations. It goes nowhere and is happy enough to play around spinning its wheels.
  2. ^ "The Official Website for Nisekoi: False Love". Viz Media. Retrieved December 7, 2017.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b "Animax Asia's Nisekoi Ad Reveals May 5 Premiere". Anime News Network. Retrieved May 25, 2016.
  4. ^ 2014-08-05, Nisekoi: Yomeiri!? Japanese release date set, Gematsu
  5. ^ "Nisekoi School Romantic Comedy Manga Inspires Anime". Anime News Network. May 27, 2013. Retrieved May 27, 2013.
  6. ^ "Bakemonogatari Director Shinbo Make Nisekoi TV Anime". Anime News Network. Retrieved July 3, 2013.
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b ""Nisekoi" Anime Slated For January 2014". Crunchyroll. August 22, 2013. Retrieved August 22, 2013.
  8. ^ "Aniplex USA to Stream World Conquest, Nisekoi Anime". Anime News Network. Retrieved December 19, 2013.
  9. ^ "New shows on DAISUKI.net: 'Buddy Complex' (worldwide), 'World Conquest Zvezda Plot' and 'Nisekoi'". Archived from the original on January 12, 2014.
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