“It really is trash! I felt that this was trash from the bottom of my heart. The ojou-sama heroine who suddenly falls in love after just one conflict, the close childhood friend heroine who has no sense of dignity, the senpai heroine who only exists for sex appeal… this work has nothing remarkable other than template heroines!”
“No, I didn’t ask for what made it trash…”
“In fact, I can also talk about how the characters are all insane, how the producer and scripter have no idea what they are doing, and more! Of course, I won’t name names.”
“Like I said, I wasn’t asking for that… Don’t you think it’s a waste of time to keep watching trash anime? Isn’t it better to stop watching and do something else more meaningful…”
“No, no. Katou… You are forgetting something important.”
“Am I?”
“Yeah. The time spent watching trash anime is definitely not a meaningless waste of time. For example, once you understand that some situations are unacceptable, you gain the will to never fail in that same way. That negativity can be turned into a valuable lesson for creators.”
“I personally think learning from good works would be a lot more effective.”
“Not to mention! If the plot twist in the end turned out to be surprisingly amazing, then there’s a possibility of the work becoming famous! Then those who continued watching can call themselves visionary fans who never gave up on the show!”
“Plot twist? Ah, like, for example, if the main heroine just randomly died?”
“... Katou, sit right there and don’t move.”
Then, finally during the midseason service episode 6, Tomoya’s lecture… actually, still has no end in sight.