Fuufu Ijou | Raw [upd]
If you're looking for a "good piece"—meaning a standout chapter or moment from the raw/latest releases—here are the most significant recent beats:
This paper explores the manga series FuuFu Ijou (Love After Marriage) by Yuki Kanamaru. While initially presented as a standard trope within the "forced cohabitation" and "arranged marriage" genres, the series distinguishes itself through its subversion of the Will They/Won't They paradigm by answering the question immediately. This analysis examines how the series utilizes the "Love After Marriage" framework to deconstruct initial incompatibility, the psychological barriers to intimacy, and the evolution from contractual obligation to genuine emotional dependency. fuufu ijou raw
The series went on an indefinite hiatus in early 2025 to allow creator Yuki Kanamaru to prepare a high-quality ending. If you're looking for a "good piece"—meaning a
The series emphasizes service —doing things for the other person without expectation of reward. Jirou’s realization that he enjoys caring for Akari, and vice versa, marks the turning point of the narrative. The "raw" depiction of their mundane interactions—cooking, cleaning, managing finances—ground the romance in realism. It argues that love is not merely a spark, but a habit formed through shared labor. The series went on an indefinite hiatus in
This creates a "Netorare" (NTR) or cuckolding adjacent feeling for the audience, despite the protagonists being technically single in spirit. The "raw" emotional turmoil Jirou and Akari face is that falling for their assigned partner feels like a betrayal of their "true" loves. This moral ambiguity elevates the series above standard rom-com fare. The characters are not just fighting external circumstances; they are fighting their own sense of loyalty to a fantasy, preventing them from accepting the reality in front of them.
Beyond the Contract: An Analysis of Narrative Subversion and Character Psychology in FuuFu Ijou (Love After Marriage)