Okazu Staff Reviews Studio Élan’s Dandelion Set

October 6th, 2024

In pink and white, a girl sniffs white daisies with yellow centers next to words in pink that read "Élan Garden Variety." Below, in white letters on a yellow bar, it reads"Dandelion Set."Studio Élan has announced a 4-story collection of short Yuri VNs as part of their own internal Yuri Game Jam, titled Garden Variety: Dandelion Set. Each of these stories are developed by a different team working with Studio Élan. All four of these games are playable on desktop. Individual games may be playable on Android or IOS. The idea of not having to log in, download, signing in, etc, piqued my interest – and short stories appealed. So, I reached out to our Okazu Staff members and we agree to each take one VN.

Today, Okazu presents 4 short reviews for the 4 short VNs of Studio Élan’s Garden Variety: Dandelion Set on itch.io!

 

Connect Rain! (v1.03 Gameplay Update) - Upwards, Rain! The Post Office ... Upwards, Rain!, Eleanor Walker

This was a sweet little game with an adorable twist at the end and I enjoyed it enough that I’d like to see more stories from this world/a sequel which explores the MCs’ relationship a little more. The characters are well thought out, I particularly enjoyed a certain one who only appears on screen towards the end and isn’t as black and white as she first seems. One minor character casually uses they/them pronouns which I thought was a nice touch as well. My only slightly minor gripe is that the puzzle solving could get a little repetitive, but that might just me not being very good at puzzles. Especially recommended if you’re an animal lover.

Overall – 7

 

On Wings Bringing SleepOn Wings Bringing Sleep | vndb, Matt Marcus

In a dark fantasy world, the fae, known as the Folk, live a secluded life in the forest. In ages past they had preyed upon humans, but after a human found a way to slay their immortal adversaries and avenge her loved ones’ deaths, a peace pact was formed. One day, a young Folk named Morgaine, shunned due to her inability to use magic, meets a beautiful human girl on the edge of the woods. I can imagine you can see where this is going.

If “dark fantasy” doesn’t give you enough of a hint as the tone of what the story includes, the developer includes a content warning for “implied domestic abuse, explicit violence, animal death, and toxic lesbianism”. If that doesn’t push you away, there are the bones of a good story here, if not a tad cliché. Morgaine’s magic struggles may make you think that ableism could be a central theme, but the story breaks a different way. To say any more about the story will spoil it, but I do like that our main character has an ex, and that the history of their relationship isn’t exactly what you’d expect. One thing I found odd was a recurring element of food being used more or less as magic recreational drugs, which makes a couple scenes that are intended as romantic feel unintentionally twisted. There are no interactive elements here, which could have allowed for some interesting narrative branching paths. I think there is some potential to expand this into a fuller game. It’s not going to blow your mind, but it certainly held my interest for the hour or so I played it.

Overall – 7

 

Yuri PaddleComments - Yuri Paddle: An Anime Convention Murder Mystery by Studio Élan, reviewed by Christian LeBlanc

I really wanted to like Yuri Paddle, because it has some good things going for it: murder mystery at a realistic-feeling, poorly-managed anime convention? Check! Compellingly charming artwork with a monochromatic pink color scheme? Check! Snappy, fresh-sounding dialogue with references to contemporary anime and manga touchstones and fandom/online culture? Also check!

Where the game falls apart for me is the characters. At one point, the manager of the convention talks the protagonist into temporarily ignoring a crime for the sake of the success of the convention, even though it could mean putting their guests and attendees in mortal danger. So while a panelist we meet is written as every negative, miserable person online who lives only to fight with people, I couldn’t help rooting for her, especially since she was directing her hostility at our protagonist.

For a murder mystery, we don’t even have a suspect, until the main character accuses someone in the middle of a conversation and the game just…ends. If the developers had had more time, then I think the story was meant to continue on from there and introduce us to multiple suspects, but as it was, it just felt jarring.

In spite of my negative impressions, I’d really like it if you could play this game yourself because you may have a completely different experience. The premise is solid, and the snappy banter and immensely enjoyable artwork may be more than enough for you to overrule my objections.

Overall – 4

 

Witch You Want | vndbWitch You Want, reviewed by Erica Friedman

It was a cute, fluffy Yuri romance. You are a young witch who suddenly finds herself in need of a job and the worst-rated potion shop in town (1 stars on Whelp!) needs help. What could go wrong?

We help Mirabelle, the bewitching store owner, who is flighty as a rescue kitten and as flaky as pretty much most of the witchy shop owners I have ever encountered (Which is actually quite a lot, now that I think about it. ^_^;) Can we help her rescue her reputation and save the shop? Well.. sure. And we fall for her, because it is a Yuri romance. This was the only weak area of the story. We think she’s hot from the beginning, but there isn’t any real time for us to bond. On the other hand, this is so short it now is the third VN I’ve made it all the way through, so yay for that!

Game play is in the form of relatively simple puzzles to build the potions and  and while they were not complicated, I still managed to screw up my last go. Luckily that didn’t affect the outcome. Recommended if you need some fun Yuri fluff.

Overall – 8



Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – October 5, 2024

October 5th, 2024

In blue silhouette, two women face each other. One wears a fedora and male-styled attire, one is in a dress and heels. Their body language is obscure - they may be dancing, or laughing or fighting. Art by Mari Kurisato for Okazu

This week was a veritable cornucopia of licenses and cover reveals, but before we get in to this week’s news, I want to say this – Okazu will not be reporting on, supporting, or listing on the Yuricon Store, any AI-created or localized anything. All AI in actual existence is “trained” on the work of humans, often without their consent, AI companies have been clear that without stealing content they are not profitable. Equally, the environmental cost of AI is devastating and this planet is already teetering on the edge of no return for climate change.  Every AI prompt consumes 20 bottles of water on an already-warming Earth. Lastly, and most importantly – no one is guaranteed success in any creative endeavor, but one is especially undeserving of success when one cannot even be bothered to do the actual work.  Okazu is about the celebration of human creation; the art, the stories, the media we make for each other so our stories are told. 

That all said, let’s jump into things – there’s a lot of human creative effort to talk about today. ^_^

 

Yuri Manga

Viz Media took to X to announce the extremely fun license of webtoon Not So Shoujo Love Story, by Curryuku. I guess I haven’t managed to review this, but it is a fun little shoujo Yuri story that I still read when I have time to catch up. I’m pleased that it will be coming out as in collected volumes.

Also from Viz, we’re getting Girl Crush, by Midori Tayama, which Senior YNN Correspondent Sean Gaffney assures us has some non-binary and LGBT content, even if it isn’t a Yuri title.

Kodansha announced the cover reveal for Volume 1 of I Want to Love You Till Your Dying Day, by Nachi Aono. This orphanage/school story is pretty violent. Look, I’m just gonna say it – CW: it’s about an immortal little girl who gets her body chewed up in battle, over and over. For Important Reasons. This manga  ran in Comic Yuri Hime for a volume or two, then was moved over to their Pixiv Yuri Hime account, I presume because of the loli guro.

We’ll be getting I’m In Love With The Villainess, Volume 7 of the manga from Seven Seas this month. Fans of Cardinal Lily are in for a treat as we move into Lily-centric territory. Woops, it looks Like I never reviewed volume 7 in Japanese. It was fun with some filler that serves a purpose later.

 

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Baihe News

Seven Seas has licensed some Baihe!

We’re getting The Beauty’s Blade: Mei Ren Jian by Feng Ren Zuo Shu. According to my Baihe colleague, Douqi, this is an older title. I hope that this leads to a LOT more. And maybe some of the Thai GL novels. …I really want to really all of this stuff, okay? ^_^

Which brings me to my second editorial opinion of this report. Some folks online were crowing that they had “bullied” Seven Seas into licensing Baihe and when I pointed out that “bullying” is a shit idea to get anything, they claimed they were using the term as a joke.

The way to get companies to license stuff is to share it, support it, and ask nicely for it. Tell them you want it – don’t be a jerk about stuff you don’t want. “Companies” are made of individual people working very hard to get us what we want and to make money. Buy the stuff you like, ask politely for more. Fill out surveys. Be positively engaged and trust me – companies are doing everything they can to get what they can, if it will sell. I swear to you.

Also, seriously, my beloved Okazu readers, “jokes” that are mean are not jokes and we all know this. Please do not. As I said on X, “remember to support the Yuri love, suggest more to companies, be kind to other fans and don’t make “jokes.”” I would absolutely hate to see a small group of malcontents make Yuri toxic, when I have been working for decades to keep Yuri accessible, welcoming and kind. Yuri is for everyone, let’s keep it that way.

Also in exciting Baihe news, Taiwan Travelogue, the upcoming English translation by contemporary Baihe author Yáng Shuāng-zǐ (the same Yáng Shuāng-zǐ who wrote Girls’ Love: The Development History of Lily Fan Culture in Taiwan’s ACG Industry 2023 Revised Edition (少女之愛:台灣ACG界百合迷文化發展史 2023增修版), which I reviewed here on Okazu in May of this year,) is nominated for the 2024 National Book Award for Translated Literature! Translated by Lin King, this story sounds absolutely fantastic. I’ve already pre-ordered a copy, because this book hits every damned button I have and I cannot wait to read it!

 

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Light Novels

I’m in Love with the Villainess: She’s so Cheeky for a Commoner, Volume 3 by inori-sensei is out now from Seven Seas. Review as soon as I have a moment, but once again, it was absolutely worth reading, as there is a ton of new material. It’s not just a reverse point of view of content you already know.

ANN’s Joanna Cayanan & Rafael Antonio Pineda team up to tell us that Gen Urobuchi’s Fate/Zero Novels are getting a musical stage play in 2025. Since that is the story that gave us suit-wearing Saber and Irisviel as a couple we’d like to see more of, I thought this was worth mentioning. Also because I have spent all day singing the Fate/Zero anime opening theme, To The Beginning, for Important Reasons, none of which have anything to do with the fact that Kalafina is getting back together for a January concert. (But it didn’t help to get the song out of my head, for sure.) Rafael Antonio Pineda has the details of that on ANN.

 

Other News

Animo on X has announced a new pop-up shop for  Sasayakuyouni Koi wo Utau anime, which given the lack of completion of the anime, seems even more like a cash grab than usual. But the goods are pretty cute. If you find yourself in Akihabara from October 11-20, drop by.

ANN’s Alex Mateo has the very interesting news that Kadokawa is running a global “wordless” manga contest. Interesting idea and a chance to get your work out to a broader audience.

We’ll wrap up the week with this article from Comics Beat by Samantha Puc about MISMATCHED, by  a graphic novel that “successfully queers” Jane Austen’s Emma. Written by Anne Camlin and art by Isadora Zeferino, Samantha calls this “a delightful rom-com that reads like a movie, with fast, quippy dialogue.”

 

If you’d like to support Yuri journalism and research, Patreon and Ko-Fi are where we currently accept subscriptions and tips.  Our goal now, into 2024, is to raise our guest writers’ wages to above industry standard, which are too low!

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How Do We Relationship?, Volume 11

October 4th, 2024

Two girls holding guitars, standing before an orange background decorated with posters. One girl with long hair, wearing a green blouse open over a white t-shirt, smiles broadly, making a fist bump towards us, the other girl with her dark hair in a red bow, wears a dark blue tee shirt, and a tentative expression. by Matt Marcus, Staff Writer

Content Warning for discussions of sexual coercion

My grandfather remarried when I was seven years old. This was fantastic news for me, since both of my grandmothers passed before I was forming permanent memories. Most summers of my childhood, my family would visit my grandparents at their second home in the Poconos (I never learned why they chose that area; perhaps the Catskills were too posh). During one of those visits my step-grandmother served a peach Jello mold for dessert. For whatever reason, my eight-year-old palette was delighted by this dish, and told my new grandmother this emphatically. She was, of course, ecstatic to hear this, so much so that she would remember to serve it every time we visited.

Every time we visited.

For fourteen years.

Peach Jello, mixed from a box, formed in the shape of a bundt cake.

I can’t remember exactly when I started to dislike eating it, but it had to have been early in my teenage years. Loathed was I to admit that I no longer enjoyed this loving gesture from the only grandmother I have ever known. I still made sure to eat it, of course. To do otherwise would be simply inconsiderate. But the taste no longer appealed to me.

Volume 11 of How Do We Relationship? will be many reader’s peach Jello.

Where we left off in Volume 10, both of our deuteragonists’ relationships had started on downward trajectories. Miwa and Tamaki still seem to not be connecting in the bedroom, while Yuria’s seemingly sudden mental health struggles start to erode her relationship with Saeko, who is doing her damnedest to support her as much as possible.

The volume opens up where the previous volume left off with the visit to Yuria’s hometown, including her backstory. Seeing how hairdressing pulled her out of a depressive hole is nice and all, but the thing I really appreciate is how her difficulties didn’t feel tacked on or written in the moment; if you go back to Yuria’s introduction and pay attention to what she says here and there, most of what is covered here was mentioned, if not elaborated upon. I think it’s a sign of strong writing (or at least good planning). And while I’m not super convinced on the turn their relationship has taken, the conversations Saeko and Yuria have here are affecting. Still, despite their willingness to discuss their vulnerabilities, Yuria’s mental state does not seem to be improving.

I do like that we see some moments of Saeko listening to Miwa’s problems and offering her support, though I wish she would be more forthright with Miwa about sharing her struggles with Yuria. I thought that they would be a little tighter after Volume 9 but that hasn’t quite come to pass. It makes sense that they aren’t attached at the hip like they were freshman year, given that they are juggling class, part-time jobs, band practices, job hunting, and spending time with their partners (including summer trips), but it does feel like a half-step back in their friendship.

Chapter 100 lands in the middle of this volume and it’s hard not to see it as a bit of a fanservice victory lap. This is because Shiho comes to Tokyo on the job hunt and meets up with Miwa to catch up. Miwa’s pain from volume 5 had healed, and now she sees her first crush as a dear friend. It’s really sweet! Sure, I’m a bit bummed that this basically wraps up Shiho’s part in the story with a nice little bow, but I’m happy at least that she’s still a part of the tapestry. Also, in lieu of an artist comic, Tamifull-sensei included a short story of Shiho and her younger sister which is also cute.

There are some other subtle story-telling things that I caught, such as how Saeko upgraded her guitar from a no-name S-style to a Dakota Red Fender Telecaster. That’s a big upgrade, and it shows that she’s taking her band with Tamaki seriously without even a line of dialogue. Now, unfortunately drawing instruments have never been Tamifull-sensei’s strong suit, and there are a couple panels where the guitars look truly awful. It’s really the only mark I have against the art at this point. That said, I have to say that I love the cover art for this volume. It feels like a lost riot grrrl album cover, and I think it would look fuckin’ rad framed on my wall in my house (please, Shogakukan, VIZ, SOMEBODY make this happen).

[This next section may be triggering for some readers; if you would like to skip, head to the next note with brackets]

So, I’ve done enough beating around the bush: we have to talk about Miwa and Tamaki. We have seen trouble brewing in their relationship for some time, and so the only question was how badly would it go when it does break bad. And it is nearly as terrible as you could imagine. After an incident where Tamaki angrily tells Miwa how frustrated she is that every date night ends in sex, Miwa decides to forgo sex completely. This also angers Tamaki, who isn’t wholly against sex but just doesn’t want it with the same frequency.

Things boil over after the amusement park gig and Tamaki demands to have sex. Miwa wants to stand firm on her celibacy stance, but she ultimately gives in, both to Tamaki but also to her suppressed desire. It’s a very upsetting scene. While it is a bit of a meme that Miwa as a character only exists to suffer, this is the first time I felt that the story was intentionally cruel to her. As someone who explicitly states that sex quells her anxiety over whether she is loved, the fact that her body responded as it did in a very unloving context is an extreme betrayal. 

I found this situation very similar to the one the Okazu staff discussed over Yuri Is My Job! Volume 12. As a character development-focused plot turn, it makes perfect sense. But I did not enjoy reading it and felt that the point could have been made without the intensity shown here; to go back to my mixology metaphor from my previous review, it’s as if Tamifull-sensei spiked the Negroni with moonshine. It also makes me really dislike Tamaki, a character I have grown quite fond of—and who has some fantastic moments in this very volume. The way the story is paced here, every happy moment within this relationship is immediately tainted by how each outing has ended. I have to again contrast this with Saeko and Yuria, who have had heartwarming moments and opportunities to grow; Miwa doesn’t get such luck.

I think the worst part is where the volume cuts off, leaving Miwa at her lowest moment. Knowing what happens next (thank you simulpubs), it would have been a much kinder stopping point if this volume were three chapters longer. I can’t imagine what it would have felt like to have to sit in this moment for 6 months waiting for Volume 12.

[End of section]

I think ultimately the biggest criticism I can levy here is that we, the readers, can tell that both of these relationships had to be blown up for the sake of the ultimate ending. At this point, I’m almost relieved by the Commentary Track comics that all but explicitly say that Miwa and Saeko get back together, because it makes this difficult stretch feel less gratuitously nihilistic. Tamifull-sensei created this series on the premise of exploring relationships between mismatched people, and thus far we’ve seen several ways in which that can cause breakdowns, but I wonder where this story will draw the line on what constitutes a “happy compromise” that leads to a stable, loving partnership. The only such relationship we know of is Yuria’s sister Erina and her boyfriend Kaito, and we don’t get all that much of them here.

The full wrap on this volume is that it really is a whipsawing experience. Reading through, I find there are many funny moments, several good scenes of characters talking through their problems, and even joyous highs, but it can be difficult to enjoy those moments when the tone dips so low with such regularity. Also, knowing what happens over the next few chapters, I really hate where this cuts off. I’m still ride or die for this series, but I know this volume will turn off quite a few readers and it pains me to think that for them this story will become a flavor that was once loved, but is loved no longer.

Ratings:

Art – 9 The art is still great but Tamifull-sensei did Pete Townsend-level damage to those guitars, yeesh
Story – 7 The bright spots are dragged down by the heavy ones
Characters – 7 There are still good moments of talking through stuff, though it’s mostly with Saeko and Yuria
Service – 9 Only scoring this as a Shiho Appreciator
LGBTQ – 10 You know the score by now

Overall – 7 The dosage here makes the poison

Volume 12 of challenging college romance story will release in January 2025

Matt Marcus is a cohost of various projects on the Pitch Drop Podcast Network, as well as the writer for the blog Oh My God, They Were Bandmates analyzing How Do We Relationship in greater depth.



Maou to Yuri, Volume 2 ( 魔王と百合)

October 3rd, 2024

A girl with long black pigtails, wearing a black suit and cloak stands back to back with a blue-haired maid. How DARE this series make me feel things?

Back in 2022 I read and reviewed what I considered to be a slightly amusing, slightly forgettable manga called Maou to Yuri, Volume 1. I bought the next volume not because I cared what would happen, but because I like to have some manga on tap for those days I have nothing else of consequence to read. This has been hanging out in my Bookwalker Library waiting for that day. And then I read everything on my Kindle in the first to days of vacation and needed something to else read. Voila! And there I was 3/4 way through and yelling at my phone as my eyes teared up! How very dare, I tell you.

Maou to Yuri, Volume 2 ( 魔王と百合) goes from great to great in ways that are simply shocking, given both the premise and the characters.

To recap, a female Demon Ruler is trying to figure out a way to repare relations with the humans, after  the war and settles on marrying one. The choices are as follows: A Princess Knight, a righteous and energetic Hero, a Wizard, a Witch, and a Maid. For character details, visit my review of Volume 1. They each can be summed up in a sentence or less. No one has a name here, only a title.

As Volume 2 begin, Yuri Bachelor begins as the five women “compete” in a variety of stupid competitions to allow the artist to play dress-up with them. The “winner” they are told will get to be Demon Ruler for the day. When Maid-san wins, she dons the Demon Ruler’s cloak and begins a deep clean of the castle’s dungeons. Along with the wolf-headed guard I enjoyed so much in the first volume, the Maid gets down to the DO NOT ENTER portion of the dungeon, releases the violent spirit of Maou’s ancestor and defeats him, thus cleaning out any malevolence and dust in basement. It was an amazing chapter that completely had me floored.

Maou, as clueless as she is, is suddenly aware that she really like Maid-san, and notes, in a moment of weakness, that she never smiles. But even worse is on the horizon when wolf-guard guy bursts in and says that the kindgdom in the West is getting ready to attack! Weird, because the Princess Knight is one of the candidates to marry Maou…what if they just do that?!? But no…it’s too late, her sister is on a rampage and she needs to go home and become Maou’s enemy.

Maid-san makes a cheesecake hoping to share it with everyone, but realizes their happy group is no more. Maoh comes across her standing despondently in the garden where they took tea. Maid-san turns to her crying and Maou runs over to embrace her. I stopped reading for a moment, raging that this stupid book made me emotional! The story wraps in a much better way than I might have imagined with the premise and I find myself smiling far more than I might have expected. How. Dare.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 8
Characters – 7 At least two of them develop a sentence’s worth of personality
Service – 4
Yuri – 5

Overall – 7

I still loved wolf guard guy, “Maou! The humans from the kingdom to the West are massing to attack!” What a job.



Is You and Don’t Mess with Senior

October 2nd, 2024

Promotional poster for the Cambodian yuri series Is You. At the top of the poster are Kun (left) and Sour (right), nuzzling nose to nose. At the bottom of the poster are Sour (left) and Neang (right); both have pulled-back hair and bright red lipstick, and are staring at the camera, not smiling.Continuing our tour of Southeast Asian live-action yuri, we come to Cambodia, a country that has a much smaller population than either Thailand or Vietnam, and a per capita GDP as small relative to Vietnam’s as Vietnam’s is to Thailand’s. It’s therefore a surprise to find that Cambodia has produced a number of live-action yuri series, due primarily to the work of media entrepreneur Bun Channimol and her production company Sastra Film. Thus far Sastra Film has produced almost a dozen yuri series (some short-form, others longer), distributed through its own streaming app and on YouTube. Here I look at two series chosen at random from its output.

Is You is an adult yuri series, with six episodes plus a final “special episode” available on YouTube with English subtitles. It tells the tangled tale of TV host Neang (Ya Sophanmai), her husband, actor Kun (Sok Sunny), and fitness trainer Sour (Rachana Ravady). Neang is secretly married to Kun, who chafes at her reluctance to make their relationship public. Sour, a guest on Neang’s show, is also (unknown to Neang) Kun’s girlfriend from many years ago. Kun seizes the opportunity of Sour’s reappearance (and his apparent single status) to renew their relationship. After learning of Kun’s infidelity, Neang strikes back by beginning her own affair with Sour (as one does).

Unfortunately for yuri fans, this turn doesn’t occur until the end of episode 4. A good part of the first few episodes is taken up with Kun’s and Neang’s frustration with each other and Kun’s gloating to himself about having found a new love. After Kun is exposed and Neang and Sour begin their affair in earnest, the final episode destroys any goodwill one might have had toward the series: First Neang tests Sour’s love for her with a cruel prank that Sour should have slapped her for, and then Kun ends the episode monologuing like a B-movie villain about his desire for revenge. This implies that there may be a second season, but frankly I have zero interest in watching it.

Story — 5
Characters — 4
Production — 5 (mediocre subtitles, with some episodes on the Sastra Film app lacking them entirely)
Service — 3
Yuri — 5 (Neang and Sour get together because it’s ostensibly a yuri series and the plot demands it)
Overall — 3

Promotional poster for the Sastra Films yuri series Don’t Mess with Senior, showing the lead characters Dy and Lin.After watching Is You I badly needed a palate cleanser, and fortunately Don’t Mess with Senior fit the bill nicely. Season 1 is on YouTube and the Sastra Film app, with a second season starting October 19. (There’s also a short form series, Don’t Mess with Senior: Part-Time Love, that’s set after the events of season 1 and presumably before the events of season 2.) Its premise is a classic yuri trope: first-year university student Dy (short, brown-haired) enthusiastically pursues her senpai Lin (taller with black hair), who initially resists Dy’s advances but eventually finds herself responding to them.

As we saw in Blank: The Series, there are two keys to making this trope work: the actor playing the younger pursuer must walk a fine line between being cute and being annoying, while the actor playing the pursued character must effectively portray the transition from being annoyed to being intrigued to being in love. An Mengly (nickname “Lily”), who portrays Dy, does about as well at this as Yoko did in season 1 of Blank, playing things a bit too broadly at times, while Som Monipich (“Pich”), who portrays Lin, isn’t as convincing as Faye in her character’s evolution. Nonetheless Lily and Pich as Dy and Lin play well together and make a cute couple, even when Dy’s antics get to be a bit too much.

Don’t Mess with Senior is also noteworthy for its setting: most of season 1 takes place on a university trip to rural Cambodia to study the local ecology and plant mangrove trees (which entails everyone schlepping around almost hip-deep in the water). The trip offers plenty of occasions for Dy to try to get closer to Lin, to play pranks on her fellow students (including Lin) and their professor, and to get jealous at Lin’s being friendly with the professor’s daughter.

The season ends somewhat inconclusively, with the final episode being a combination of recap episode and a Q&A session with the two leads. The latter features questions a bit bolder than those posed to other yuri leads, including asking Lily whether she and Pich are in a relationship off-screen (“No!”) and what she thinks of homosexuality (“I can’t see anything wrong [with it]. I want our society to accept them as well.”). Lily adds that people tried to discourage her from appearing in the series (her first role) based on the subject matter, but “I don’t care at all.” For her part, Pich is happy to have been cast in Don’t Mess with Senior: “I’m into that kind of series. Now I’m able to act in my kind of series.” Lily and Pich conclude by thanking their supporters and asking them to watch the upcoming season 2; I think I’ll take them up on that suggestion.

Story — 5 (you’ve no doubt seen it before, and likely more than once)
Characters — 6 (somewhat one-note, but often amusing and endearing)
Production — 6 (location shooting greatly improves the look and feel of the series)
Yuri — 6 (a reciprocal confession from Lin must await season 2)
Service — 3 (a drunken kiss)
Overall — 6

Is You is eminently skippable, but those interested in live-action yuri beyond Thailand might want to check out Don’t Mess with Senior, especially if you want a break from the typical urban settings of Asian TV series.