Ore Yome. Ore no Yome ni Nare yo

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Alternativas: Synonyms: Sono Me de Mitsumenaide.
Japanese: オレ嫁。~オレの嫁になれよ~
Autor: Sano, Airi
Modelo: Mangá
Volumes: 10
Capítulos: 60
Status: Finished
Publicar: 2014-08-05 to 2017-03-15
Serialização: Sho-Comi

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4.6
(5 Votos)
60.00%
40.00%
0.00%
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0.00%
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Alternativas: Synonyms: Sono Me de Mitsumenaide.
Japanese: オレ嫁。~オレの嫁になれよ~
Autor: Sano, Airi
Modelo: Mangá
Volumes: 10
Capítulos: 60
Status: Finished
Publicar: 2014-08-05 to 2017-03-15
Serialização: Sho-Comi
Pontuação
4.6
5 Votos
60.00%
40.00%
0.00%
0.00%
0.00%
0 Lendo
0 Quero ler
0 Ler
Resumo
Nakagawa Hinata, an ordinary high-school student, is arranged to marry Joumori Zen, a rich heir. The engagement was arranged by her grandfather. When the time comes to meet her future husband, she finds that he is the complete opposite of how her grandfather described him! Now, what do you think will happen in Hinata's life?

(Source: MU)

Included one-shot:
Volume 2: Sono Me de Mitsumenaide.
Avaliações (5)
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Ore Yome. Ore no Yome ni Nare yo review
de
bitsypookums2413
Apr 05, 2021
Ore Yome is a series that is probably easy to enjoy as long as you choose to ignore its glaring flaws, which is mainly the actual story. It gives you enough coupley moments that progresses rather quickly and smoothly

It starts off as an arranged marriage in this day and age - which is trope-y, but I actually enjoy these when done well. Two people are put into a situation where they're forced to interact with one another and end up liking one another - I can get behind that whatever the shady unexplained reason for the marriage in the first place. What matters more is how it goes from there.

But that's where the problem lies. The story is kind of weak if you look at what actually happens. Most of these stories have some sort of obstacles in the path of the main couple, and they'll get past it together and strengthen their relationship while giving us cute lovey-dovey moments. That's okay... if done at least semi-well!

When reading this I almost feel like the author has a magic hat and every few chapters she pulls a new trope out to use for the next small story arc. This problem's solved... let's find something new.. oh, I'll bring in love rival 2.0 next! Okay that's done, let's throw in some family issues next, then something else!

It's not like these mini challenges can't be interesting - they're staples of the genre after all. But they just kinda lack depth in general, just thrown in to get a little drama going and then gets fixed quickly. The good thing is that it gets solved rather quickly so there's not as much needless drama as it needs to be - and then we get lots of couple moments during and after - but the bad thing is that the way it gets solved is kinda meh in general. There's also not much long-lasting effects when it comes to these things, it's like certain characters or situations are introduced to start up some trouble - then they get pushed aside and irrelevant to the story! If you can turn off your brain and just be like oh okay whatever, let's just enjoy it and don't think so much, then it's pretty fun to just enjoy the couple moments and cheesy lines as a result of their struggles. It helps that the situation doesn't get overly annoying because you know it doesn't last long and won't pose that much of a trouble, so at least it's one good thing. I actually think I'll prefer if the story doesn't go down the serious route from here on out, it'll probably be annoying because I don't trust it to settle it satisfyingly. It's one of those where you wish everything will just be kept simple and just focus on the couple parts which is its main draw.

Other than the rather weak story, it's actually quite okay. It's a manga that knows what kind of stuff people like (probably), and just finds ways (aka random short plotlines) to give it to the readers. There are no short of actual couple-moments, so you'll get lots of sweet confessions, some lewd moments, lots of cheesy stuff to fulfill your shoujo needs. The characters are okay - not deep characters, but okay in personality (shoujo story wise). If you like your characters a little forceful in their romantic advances (compared to vanilla blushing all day long), and you squeal when they show their possessive sides - then good for you, you'll get enough of this to be satisfied. Now if you're looking for an actual serious portrayal of a good relationship then you may not like it that much.

The main guy looks a bit like a shota and I'm reading it for the guilty pleasure of witnessing that, pretty much. I can turn off some of my brain for cute boys... YMMV in terms of how much you like the characters, though. Anyway, you'll get the gist of how the manga works quite early on in the story since it's kinda rinse and repeat after a while, so it probably won't hurt to read a little and see if it's your kind of stuff or not.

"Ehh? This part of the story is kind of stupid?? Oh, but we get kisses and cute stuff? Okay, sign me up!" As long as you're someone who'll say this, I guess it's okay. Just don't be critical, adjust expectations, ignore the weak parts and enjoy the fun.

TLDR;
Story and characters are more than a little silly and shallow, but if you're sick of drawn-out drama and the zero/slow romantic progression of many mangas out there - you might like this. Just remember to turn off your brain a little and it's actually quite enjoyable.