This isn't an indictment of the manga, just a point of confusion: why write and draw a character identically to a child while making her canonically an adult? It's an odd decision when you could just say she's a kid. It's not illegal, AFAIK. It feels like the same kind of 'implausible deniability' as incest stories that insist they're only step-relatives. You're not really broadening the target audience, just losing a bit of the strength of writing you get from being open and confident about the "weird" aspects.
There are real life cases of "older than they look", some adults are tiny and I've heard that when you're that small it can be easier, and even more affordable, to shop for clothes that fit from kids selections, especially shoes.
In terms of this story and fiction though, the gap between physical appearance and real age creates it's own novel situation, for lack of better wording. I remember there was a comedy series awhile back where the MC was in kindergarten but he looked like a full grown man so the police kept arresting him for stuff like hanging out with his friends lol
That is all true, although I would contend that this doesn’t really have the feel of an “older than they look” story. Sakura doesn’t read like a grown woman who looks childish, she reads like an actual child claiming to be older than they are. It’d be one thing if she was just a bit childish, but everything about her feels like they’re at the level of an actual child. Her mannerisms, her personality, her interests, her appearance, her overall knowledge, even the ways that she interacts with the other characters. Heck, the last two chapters focused on her not knowing where babies comes from, and the rest of the cast finding her innocence too charming to tell her the truth.
And don’t get me wrong, I think there could be potential in the idea that she actually does have a mind on par with that of child’s, while still trying to live an ordinary adult life. The problem is that there is no Indication that that is the author’s intent, and combined with all the other factors I listed above, it just makes it feel like the author wanted to create an oneeloli love story without having to deal with any of the less savory elements inherent to those types of stories. Which is fine, but it does kinda give these stories a “painted over” feel.
last edited at Apr 12, 2026 6:20PM