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Luckily this second season has yet to dwell at length on tedious dramatics. The resolution of Jun's social maladies eliminates most of the original's oppressive preachiness (and raises his likability meter a degree or two), and sequences like Shinku's apathy-inspiring moral agonizing are inter-cut with other things better suited to the series' depth and strength (or lack thereof). Like humor. Though repetitive, and sometimes irritatingly so, the series' silly-antics-centered humor divides up the bits that drag.
The story centers on high school student Kazunori Akabane, who has just been rejected by the girl he has a crush on. She is only interested in another student, somebody named Moriya. So of course the very next person that he runs into is Moriya, and he is a second away from airing his grievances when the pair are transported to another world! Turns out a princess hailing from a high fantasy world needs them to power up her magic spells. By them exchanging bodily fluids. Uhh, okay… Talk about moronic, forced plot premises. Needless to say, Moriya is oddly enthusiastic about such a prospect, and what ensues is a lot of gratuitous kissing—and just kissing—while taking out big beasties video game RPG style.

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