By Toshizou and Kuro Shina. Released in Japan as “Yuri no Ma ni Hasamareta Watashi ga, Ikioi de Futamata Shite Shimatta” by Overlap Bunko. Released in North America by J-Novel Club. Translated by Tristan K. Hill.
It is sort of mind-boggling that I finished this series. My review of the first book was decidedly lukewarm, and the second one I actively hated. (The incest, the main reason I hated the second book, briefly crops up again here, and no surprise it’s the worst part of this book.) But as the series got to the third and fourth volumes, and its wet rag of a heroine paused from her description of herself as a pathetic piece of excrement lying at the side of the road long enough to instantly seduce any young woman who happened to say two words to her, I gradually warmed to it more and more, especially as it became apparent it was fighting a losing battle against another yuri series with a similar premise that started earlier, was far more popular, and now has a popular anime. There’s No Freaking Way Yuri Tama was not going to get cancelled, and sure enough it was. But we do get this last book.
We pick up where the fourth book left off. Yotsuba’s two current girlfriends have a bet with her childhood friend and wannabe girlfriend that will be resolved when they perform. All Yotsuba has to do is film the performance… wait, no, they don’t trust her to do that. All she has to do is watch the performance. Oh, and go around the festival. Then she’s approached by one of Makina’s fellow idol group members, Mio, who wants to figure out just why Makina would leave a huge up and coming idol group to go and be in high school for a while. She immediately sees that Yotsuba is a giant sucker, and so makes her own bet: If she watches the upcoming performance and is impressed, she’ll let Makina do what she wants. But if not, Yotsuba has to convince Makina to return to idol work. Fortunately, Yotsuba is armed with nothing except near lethal amounts of rizz.
It’s remarked on several times in this book that people can’t read Yotsuba’s mind, it’s just that everything she’s thinking is written all over her face. This of course extends to why she gets so many people to fall for her – it’s because she cannot help but be genuine and honest with everyone, and she really is mind-boggled by how sexy and attractive and sweet and good all the girls around her are. To the point where the girls need to actually be that good to match the expectations Yotsuba has for them. This is a final volume, as the author notes in the afterword, but there’s no real resolution (the author, to be honest, sounded a bit bitter about the low sales). The bets essentially return everything to status quo, Yotsuba is still “Two-timing” with her girlfriends, and the usage of that word still bothers me.
God, Yotsuba was annoying. but as I read more and more from her, I actually came to root for her more and more. Which is more than I can say for Renako.


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