Fuufu Ijou, Koibito Miman. Chapter 80 |work| | Works 100%

By Chapter 80, the “Marriage Practical” has long ceased to be a school exercise. The love triangle—Jirō Yakuin (MC), Akari Watanabe (the gyaru partner), and Shiori Terafune (the quiet childhood friend)—has reached its breaking point. Jirō, after years of denial, has finally admitted to himself (and, messily, to others) that he loves Akari. However, he promised Shiori he would “try” with her, and Shiori, in turn, has become more assertive. Meanwhile, Akari has been suppressing her feelings to avoid hurting Shiori, despite Jirō confessing to her earlier.

Why? Because the series’ title is More Than a Married Couple, But Not Lovers. The entire premise deconstructs the idea that “lovers” is the only valid romantic state. Jirō and Akari have already acted as a married couple (domesticity, jealousy, intimacy, bickering). What they lacked was commitment without condition. fuufu ijou, koibito miman. chapter 80

By asking her to “never let go of my hand,” he’s not asking for romance—he’s asking for . It’s a promise of presence, not passion. That’s far more resonant after 79 chapters of emotional turmoil. It says: I don’t need to define us. I just need you to stay. 4. Akari’s Response: The Punches and the Collar Grab Akari doesn’t say yes. She doesn’t say no. She punches his chest weakly—frustration, relief, exhaustion, love—then pulls him close by the collar. This is pure Kanamaru-style characterization: Akari has always expressed emotion through physical action (slapping, hugging, pushing). Words fail her here because she’s been hurt too many times. By Chapter 80, the “Marriage Practical” has long