I Love Yuri and I Got Bodswapped with a Fujoshi, Volume 1

May 24th, 2021

If you are a long time reader of Okazu, you know that I have almost never enjoyed a body-swap comedy manga, because the comedy has almost always been about the wrong things. But here we are again…and this time, there may be hope?

Reiji Yoshida is a Yuri fan.

Reiji is also a super-uptight, mildly self-loathing teen boy. His obsession is *blackmail-level top secret,* never to be shared with anyone. His classmate, a well-adjusted and outgoing fujoshi, Mitsuru Hoshina, inspires his worst fears. How is she not…y’know..terrified all the time? Of course, Reiji’s not asking that, it would be self-aware and he’s not in the business of understanding his fear. So, when Reiji and Mitsuru swap bodies, she’s all over his collection and learning to love Yuri and being a boy, while Reiji cowers in fear of…mostly everything.

I Love Yuri and I Got Bodswapped with a Fujoshi, Volume 1 is meant to be a comedy. I know it is, because use of the phrase “hijinks ensue” in the write-up indicates that it is. But I have some “but…”s ready. For brevity’s sake, I’ll stick with the most obvious point: It is supposed to be absolutely hilarious that Reiji is so terrified of his interest being uncovered. Why? How? In what society on this planet is a male adolescent shamed for being into girl-girl anything? So let’s just set Reiji aside completely for this volume. He adds very little to the story except silly noises and facefaults. ^_^

If we stop paying attention to Reji (who is absolutely unlike any actual human, much less any Yuri fan I have ever met in half a century of life) we’re left with Mitsuru. Mitsuru is an absolutely delight. She’s ridiculous, unfettered, unembarrassed and, when she wakes up in Reiji’s body is totally all-in on watching his anime and reading his manga and finding something to love. In fact, I think they missed the real plot here – if Mitsuru was a Yuri-loving girl and Reiji a closeted BL fan the whole thing would have so much more sense. Instead, we get a kind of dysmorphic Reiji, who apparently loathes men’s bodies, and it also really uptight about his own body and his Yuri fandom, which feels like yet another different – and better – story, we might have read. Oh well. ^_^ To Reiji’s credit, he does start watching and reading Mitsuru’s BL and finding things to like about it.  This is, by far, the most endearing bit of the manga. And it gave me a little hope.

Ajiichi is a creator whose work is mostly Yuri, and so I was a little surprised to see Reiji’s discomfort with his own fandom. And his discomfort made me uncomfortable about him as a protagonist. I don’t expect teens to be more than half-cooked, but. Dude,it’s comic books and cartoons, no one gives a shit – and if they do, it’s them. Trust me on this.

Ratings:

Art – Too many /ack!!/ faces, but otherwise solid
Story – I’m honestly not sure here, because of my own biases. Is this funny? I can’t tell
Characters – Mitsuru is the reason I would (and probably will) read volume 2. “Reiji is a total zero” is a whole mood here
Service – Not as much as you might think, since Reiji’s a prude
Yuri – Tangentially

Overall – 7, with potential for better or for worse

As this volume comes to a close Mitusuru’s childhood friend, who has an obvious crush on her, waltzes in as a new plot complication. I know how I’d handle it, but I would suck at writing body-swap comedy (because it is never funny,) so I almost kind of want to see what happens? Love isn’t going to save the day, but I’d be super happy if Mitsuru redeems Reiji’s tormented soul.

Thanks very much to J-Novel Club for providing me a review copy!

3 Responses

  1. Sam says:

    A male character who is afraid that someone will find out about his love for lesbian content? I have seen girls accused of loving BL, but to be honest, I personally have never seen a straight guy accused of loving yuri. Perhaps this is some purely Japanese thing?

    Otherwise, this looks like a another semi-serious study of the Japanese same-sex romance manga audience, it will be quite interesting to look at at least the first volume. Some of the topics you mentioned seem familiar to me, but I don’t want to jump to conclusions until I buy a copy myself. Thanks for your review!

  2. CW says:

    “Why? How? In what society on this planet is a male adolescent shamed for being into girl-girl anything?”

    This is a complicated subject, but a boy feeling he needs to hide that he’s a big fan of yuri is realistic. Something like being a shipper of magical girls is solid gold material for humiliating jokes.

    • I mean, sure…there are situations and people who make liking anything a problem . And, of course, boys are subject to intense scrutiny and pressure to conform, as are girls, in different ways. But I’d think of all the things for a guy to be able to pass off relatively easily it would be lesbian manga…even if the lesbianism was not his actual interest. Reiji is clear about his negativity about men’s bodies, which is more about his dysphoria than about being a Yuri fan. If this end up as a trans narrative, it would finally address that weak point. If not…it’s just that comedic to me.

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