When decent stories drown in harem crap

After eight episodes of creepy lolicon harem shenanigans, Ryuuou no Oshigoto! finally made a funny joke:

What watching Ryuuou no Oshigoto! feels like

It’s funny because it’s true. That’s what’s watching the show feels like, as a sixteen year old shogi wunderkind is oblivious to the advances of his harem of nine year olds –and younger– shogi proteges. There are also a couple of older women interested in him, like his senior in the shogi group he grew up in, or the hapless co-presenter of that shogi livestream he was commenting on and much of the “humour” in the series is his young disciples getting jealous of them and interfering. Now, as with the joke here, much of why this is offensive is not so much what’s being told as how it’s being told. The show continuously directs attention to its own lolicon tendencies by having people commenting on how much of a lolicon our protagonist supposedly is. So here you have one particularly adorable cute girl giving a chaste kiss to cheer our hero up, but the way it’s presented and commented on by the audience and the characters on screen make it lewd. The show keeps setting up situations like this, where nothing overtly lewd takes place, but the presentation and he way the characters respond to it make it lewd. So our hero teaches another nine year old shogi and when his first student catches him at it, he and she react as if she caught him in bed with another woman.

Meanwhile, under that veneer of unfunny and downright creepy harem shenanigans, there’s an actually decent sports story hidden. Shogi, like chess, is a male dominated sport, where female players have their own league and no woman has yet become a professional shogi player through the traditional promotion system, where you train in a shogi study group as an amateur and through a series of exams get promoted to professional status. What Ryuuou no Oshigoto! does that’s so infuriating is that it takes this seriously. If it was just using shogi as an excuse to build a harem for its protagonist I could write this off, but because it keeps coming back to the struggles of its female cast members to create a space for themselves in shogi, I keep watching.

Ryuuou no Oshigoto!I coming up against your limits

On the most basic level, there are the protagonist’s two pupils, both blessed with talent, discovering for themselves how far that talent can bring them while building experience, as well as their less gifted friends doing the same and having to cope with those two geniuses among them. There’s also his senior in his old shogi group, aiming to become the first female shogi professional and already having claimed two titles. She’s the idol others measure themselves against. More interesting is another member of that group, the twenty six year old daughter of their master, also aiming to become a professional shogi player, but who is running out of time to do so. Her story is the easiest to sympathise with, coming to the limits of your talents and having to decide whether giving up is the right choice. All these women are finding their place in the shogi world, having to struggle against disappointment and loss and if only this harem crap wasn’t there it would be an utterly compelling series. As it is, it’s really not recommendable to anybody.

Ryuuou no Oshigoto! — First Impressions

Ryuuou no Oshigoto!: a sixteen year old shogi master takes on a nine year old girl as his disciple: Sangatsu no Lion, but trash.

Ryuuou no Oshigoto!: 9 year old discipline

Kuzuryu Yaichi is a sixteen year old shogi prodigy, who has won the ryuu title when he was only sixteen, but has entered a bit of a slump in the three months since. Returning home one day he finds the nine year old Hinatsuru Ai in his flat, who want to become his student. He plays a couple of games with her, gets called in by his own sensei who gives his blessing and enters her in a training group at the shogi hall. This episode was mostly setup then, introducing the main characters as well as a fair few of the supporting cast. It did however also have a satisfying amount of shogi show, done in a way that showed this series loves shogi. Not that I understand the first thing of shogi, but I could tell more attention was paid to the shogi playing scenes than it really needed to for the sort of heart warming slice of moe series this seems to want to be.

Ryuuou no Oshigoto!: sister vs student - who will win

A shame it has to ruin it by being so goddamn bloody anime. A nine year old girl who wants to become the student of a sixteen year old shogi master: that immediately rings alarm bells. The episode started off well and my fears seemed unfounded, until eleven minutes in, when we got an unnecessary shower scene, followed by a “hilarious” misunderstanding as Kuzuryu’s shogi “sister” Sora Ginko — two years younger than him but his senior in shogi — came to visit. At first it seems she’s concerned about why exactly he has a nine year old girl in his home, but that soon morphs into jealousy towards Ai-chan. That’s obnoxious enough when it’s two age appropriate girls getting jealous over a boy, but when one literally is a child…

Ryuuou no Oshigoto!: shiny knees

The thing what annoys me the most about this flirtation with pedophilia is that it’s so bloody cynical. Ai-chan is constantly glamourised,like in the shot above in a way that isn’t quite outright sexual, but that’s clearly meant to hint at it. The other female characters shown so far didn’t have the sheen to them that Ai-chan’s shiny, shiny knees have. Ai-chan getting jealous of Sora, Ai-chan casually walking out of the bathroom naked, Ai-chan talking about SM persons, all there to make her into a lust object for the viewer, but with just enough plausible deniability built in. This could be just an innocent nine year old having a crush on the boy she met once, but the show is constantly nudge-nudge wink winking at you. You know nothing will come of it, it’s just there to appeal to the lolicon tendecies of some anime viewers, because if you have a series costarring a nine year old girl, why not sexualise here and get that audience, hey?

But it didn’t have to. It could’ve skipped all that and justy focused more on Ai-chan discovering the wide world of shogi, of Kuzuryu rekindling his own love for the game through her enthusiasm. There are hints that the rest of the series may improve, as a few other elementary school shogi players were introduced at the very end, but I fear that the lolicon elements will continue to crop up whenever the writers run out of ideas or fall back on old anime cliches. Will I keep watching? For the moment yes, until the more unsavoury elements of this show will get too much for me.