Yuri Project
joined Jul 14, 2016
I don't really see Kimi Koi Limit as "rewarding" the main character. You don't need to ascribe moral judgments to events in a story - sometimes good things happen to bad people, or bad things happen to good people. That's consistent throughout many of Momono Moto's works. Look at this, this, this, this, and this. Either the protagonist, or her love interest (or both) does something really messed up, or even completely morally reprehensible, and yet they generally end up together.
Momono Moto generally presents love as a powerful, irresistible force. Sometimes it works out and the person you love loves you back. Sometimes it doesn't. It doesn't matter if you "deserve" it or not. And there's almost always some amount of suffering in getting closer to the one you love.
last edited at Dec 30, 2017 9:41PM