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A reboot of VS. Arashi with four new male idols. Early verdict (⭐️ 4/5): Surprisingly better than expected. The physical games (climbing walls, dodging gacha balls) are identical, but the new cast is openly chaotic—they insult each other, unlike the polite Arashi. Only complaint: Too many sponsor integration pauses (30 seconds every 7 minutes).

While the original Makanai was a gentle slice-of-life, the 2026 sequel takes a sharp left turn into corporate espionage. The plot follows two young geisha apprentices who use their culinary skills to expose a black-market real estate ring. A reboot of VS

The Verdict (4.5/5 Stars): It shouldn't work, but it does. The juxtaposition of quiet tea ceremonies with high-stakes hacking is bizarrely addictive. Actress Mei Nagano delivers a monologue in episode 4 about the ethics of fish sourcing that is surprisingly the most thrilling TV moment of the year so far. Skip this if you don't like subtitles that mix Shakespearean elegance with modern slang. While the original Makanai was a gentle slice-of-life,

Current state (2025): The annual New Year’s special has declined. The “Thai kick” and “onigiri slaps” are now predictable. Score: 2.5/5 – nostalgic, but new hosts lack the fear reaction of the original cast. Better alternative: Freeze (Amazon), where comedians must hold a pose while absurd things happen behind them. Fresh and genuinely hilarious. Current state (2025): The annual New Year’s special

Premise: A perfect office lady (30) who never makes mistakes suddenly quits, moves to Hokkaido, and falls for a fish market vendor who has never used a smartphone. Review (⭐️ 3/5): Visually stunning (the snow cinematography is real), but plot-light. The chemistry works during the silent scenes—chopping fish, shoveling snow—but flatlines whenever they open their mouths. The twist: It’s actually a meditation on burnout, not a romance. Go in for the vibes, not the kisses.