She’s more easily shaken than Tomoe and gravitates towards more traditionally feminine things, but also works hard for her ambitions like studying to becoming a doctor. The thing I liked most about her is that unlike her appearance would suggest, she’s not one of those impossibly oblivious characters at all. Her design is pretty awkward and her voice tone isn’t as nice as Tomoe’s, but she has more growth in the story with the fraction of Tomoe’s screentime. However, I ended up preferring Tomoe’s counterpart Shizuka as a character slightly more much to my surprise. Overall she’s very likable, has a pleasant voice and her thoughts are fun to listen to – scoring pretty high points as otome game heroines go right from the start. Despite being a so-called “battle heroine”, Tomoe thankfully doesn’t fall to the stereotype of being a complete meathead who’s clueless about other people’s feelings like a 10-year-old. She’s rather hedonist for a otome game heroine and loves cake and lounging around in underwear in her apartment. Tomoe as a protagonist stands out being outspoken and confident in herself.
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