Monster Musume: Everyday Life With Monster Girls...
I watched Monster Musume: Everyday Life With Monster Girls aka Monster Musume no Oishasan...
Monster Musume: Everyday Life With Monster Girls follows the exploits of Kimihito Kurusu, a doctor specializing in non-human medical techniques as he deals with a bevy of ailing monster girls in the midst of political tensions between humans and non-humans. This series has quite a lot of monster girl fan service and although the fan service is suggestive at times, there are no actual naughty bits. Given the suggestive nature of the series, the youngest anime fans among us should stay away. The series has a distinct monster-of-week flavor, combined with classic harem anime goodness and a heaping helping of monster politics thrown in for good measure. The series exhibits a fair amount of pseudo-medical technical jargon pertaining to monster ailments and combined with monster politics, in my humble opinion, the series was not as engrossing or engaging as I would have liked. Overall, I would give Monster Musume: Everyday Life With Monster Girls a 2 out of 5.
No one expected the government to suddenly acknowledge the existence of demi-human species like harpies and centaurs, but when a careless Integration Agent shows up on Kimihito Kurusu's doorstep with an attractive Lamia in tow, he suddenly finds himself designated as a Host Family. This might not be so bad, except that while Miia's top half is all girl and quickly develops a crush on her new human host, her snakelike bottom half makes that crush literal with a tendency to squeeze the life out of him! Plus, there's also the little problem that it's illegal for humans and non-humans to have THOSE kinds of relationships.
With woman-in-black Agent Smith always sniffing about for improprieties, things only get more hectic in the Kurusu household when bird-brained Papi the harpy and master-seeking centaur Centorea need places to roost and stable. As the house gets crowded with even more captivating cuties, can any human male survive under such tempestuous and tempting conditions?
Monster Musume: Everyday Life With Monster Girls follows the exploits of Kimihito Kurusu, a doctor specializing in non-human medical techniques as he deals with a bevy of ailing monster girls in the midst of political tensions between humans and non-humans. This series has quite a lot of monster girl fan service and although the fan service is suggestive at times, there are no actual naughty bits. Given the suggestive nature of the series, the youngest anime fans among us should stay away. The series has a distinct monster-of-week flavor, combined with classic harem anime goodness and a heaping helping of monster politics thrown in for good measure. The series exhibits a fair amount of pseudo-medical technical jargon pertaining to monster ailments and combined with monster politics, in my humble opinion, the series was not as engrossing or engaging as I would have liked. Overall, I would give Monster Musume: Everyday Life With Monster Girls a 2 out of 5.