Just read the title. It's 3 years later. Ruriko is 17, when she was 14 in chapter 1.
And there aren't that many characters that you'd get lost. And no, they are not drawn "similarly".
Kyouko (black hair)
Nacchan (long light hair)
Ruriko (short hair)
I understand that people are frustrated that it wasn't a yuri end, but I think it was a really good manga. It depicted the complexity of love and how to deal with heartbreak. The author made use of Japanese poetry in chapter 4 to hint at the tangled feelings of Ruriko (symbolized by black hair), when she couldn't accept that she had been in love and that this love had ended. Both the poems read by Kikuchi are tanka poems about love. The lesson in class cites "The tales of Ise", a collection of poems and the one the teacher talks about is from someone declaring his love.
I get the impression that the author used a very subtle Japanese way to express feelings and relationships, but it's lost on most non Japanese readers who only see a drama about being dumped.
I get that some want happy stories about happy yuri couples, but others are able to appreciate the way a story is woven, even if the ending isn't what they'd hope for.
last edited at Nov 9, 2021 6:32PM