Need Monday Motivation? ‘Tawawa on Monday’ Season 2 Streams on Crunchyroll
One cannot imagine anime without the sea of fanservice that floods the internet everywhere. The enticing eye candies are so rampant that even “for-children” series are guilty of it.
‘Tawawa on Monday,’ an anime series inspired by the doujin(self-published) illustration of illustrator Kiseki Himura, is a prime example of fanservice. But where the series sets itself apart is rather than incorporating eye candies in the plot, ‘Tawawa on Monday’ puts the plot in eye candies.
The official website for Kiseki Himura’s ‘Tawawa on Monday’ anime series recently announced that the second season would be streaming in North America through Crunchyroll and Asia through Muse Asia Youtube channel.
The first episode is being delivered on ABEMA!
Anyone can see it for free, so please take a look ♪
We will deliver a scene cut from the first episode!
Delivery URL: https://abema.tv/video/title/11-40Anime Tawawa 2
English Translation, Twitter Translate
The anime centers around a set of recurring characters, each named after their defining characteristics. A few notable characters include a salaryman known only as Oniisan, a well-endowed high schooler named Ai, and the duo of Kouhai chan and her Senpai.
Each episode is just four minutes long and has a basic self-contained plot with tons of jiggle physics, ‘accidents,’ and just morally dubious actions.
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The anime adaptation of ‘Tawawa on Monday’ first started in 2016 with a 13 episode ONA followed by two OVAs. The current season started airing today and will air one episode per week. So if you have already caught up to the latest episode, you can pass the time with the 2016 ONAs.
If you were already a fan of the 2016 series, then the second season is sure to hit all the right spots. As far as I could tell from the first episode, the anime delivers tremendous motivation on lazy Mondays. So be sure to check it out.
About Tawawa on Monday
It is a collection of illustrations by Kiseki Himura. The graphics are well known for their blue monochrome art style, and while they mostly contain no dialogue, they all follow a similar theme and characters.
The work received its first adaptation as an ONA, which followed the tale of a salaryman who has a chance meeting with a girl named Ai on the train. They begin to meet every Monday on the train, with the man serving as her bodyguard on the crowded commute while they chat.
Source:Official Website
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