Soredemo Ashita Mo Kareshi Ga Ii 29 Review
Rating: 9/10
Soredemo Ashita mo Kareshi ga Ii Chapter 29 is essential reading for anyone who has ever been in a long-term relationship and wondered, “When did we stop really seeing each other?” It offers no easy answers, only the painful, beautiful truth that love requires constant renegotiation—and that sometimes, the hardest person to be honest with is the one sleeping next to you.
Where the story goes next: Saki’s internal dam is cracking. Chapter 30 will likely force a confrontation, either with Yukinari or with herself. The question is no longer “Does he love me?” but “Is love, on its own, enough to wake us back up?” soredemo ashita mo kareshi ga ii 29
What did you think of Chapter 29? Are you rooting for Saki to speak her mind, or do you understand Yukinari’s need for space? Share your thoughts below.
Within hours of the chapter’s release, the Japanese and English fan communities exploded. Key reactions include: Rating: 9/10 Soredemo Ashita mo Kareshi ga Ii
Speculation for Chapter 30 suggests a "dating reset"—perhaps the two will go on a first date again, but without the pressure of being "the perfect couple."
The title of the series gets its thematic anchor here. After the argument, Mei walks out of the café. She doesn’t run—she walks. Reiya follows her for two blocks, not to stop her, but to make sure she’s safe. When she finally turns around, tears on her face, she says: “I don’t want a perfect boyfriend tomorrow. I want a real one. Even if he’s a mess.” What did you think of Chapter 29
Reiya’s line, which will likely become iconic among fans, is simple: “Then let’s start over. Not as boyfriend and girlfriend. Just as two people who want to try again.”
Midway through, we get a half-page flashback to a conversation from the previous year. Yukinari, frustrated after a long day, told Saki, “You overthink everything. Can’t we just be?” Saki’s face in that panel is unforgettable—her eyes wide, not with anger, but with the realization that her emotional language and his are no longer translating.
Chapter 29 reveals that she took that critique to heart. Too much heart. She’s been suppressing her “overthinking” to keep the peace. But the result isn’t peace; it’s silence. And silence, in Fuyukawa’s world, is never empty. It’s heavy with all the things left unsaid.