My gripe with Hana to Hina is that the "world" in which they live is almost devoid of any relevant other character or environment. The shop owner is forgettable, the teachers are unknown, the friends at school are nondescript and I couldn't remember the name of one for the life of me. The parents are quasi-absent, there are no siblings or anyone that could, you know, provide an external point of view, that could put some spin to this story. There's only the "ex" who shows up randomly and we can only assume that she will eventually provoke some artificial tension between the two.
Hana and Hina are like two cute fishes in an aquarium, with some background accessories. We watch them turning around each other in the water and sometimes another fish comes and goes, but everyone knows these two are fated to be together so, whatever. Beside the shop and the school, there are no other relevant places in this story.
In contrast, Girl Friends had a whole cast of supporting characters (Tamamin, Sugi-san, the whole gang of friends, the homeroom teacher), they had parents, they had siblings. Morinaga had created stories inside the story, she had created a living world.
Part of the appeal of Girl Friends is that it was a very girly manga, in tune with its readership, a manga about fashion, about makeup, about purikura, about goukons, about life choices, about how changing your looks can change your life, interwoven with a love story between two girls in high school. It made Mari and Akko real and relatable.
Hana and Hina just feel two dimensional in comparison. They are not fleshed out enough to be interesting.
I will keep on reading, but it doesn't rate very high for the moment. This is only my opinion though. YMMV.
last edited at Nov 23, 2016 2:03PM