The 100 Girlfriends Who Really, Really, Really, Really, Really Love You Season 2

君のことが大大大大大好きな100人の彼女 2期 (Kimi no Koto ga Daidaidaidaidaisuki na 100-nin no Kanojo 2nd Season)

8.5(1)
OtakuDen
7.9(88,770)
MAL Score
Ranked #994
Popularity #1525
  • Comedy
  • Romance
  • Harem
  • Parody
  • School
Episodes
12
Duration
23 min per ep
Aired
Jan 12, 2025 to Mar 30, 2025
Status
Finished Airing

Synopsis

Rentarou Aijou learned he’s destined to meet 100 soulmates during high school, and life has only gotten more chaotic—and more joyful—since then. With six girlfriends already by his side, each bringing her own distinct personality and quirks, his days are packed with heartfelt moments and constant comedic curveballs.

The circle grows again when Rentarou crosses paths with Kurumi Haraga, whose appetite seems bottomless, and Mei Meido, the devoted maid of the Hanazono family. As more fated encounters follow, Rentarou throws himself into the impossible task of dating everyone at once—because failing any of them carries a dire consequence—and he’s determined to give every girlfriend the love she deserves.

Otaku Consensus

Season 2 confirms The 100 Girlfriends as one of anime’s rare harem comedies whose escalation feels engineered rather than accidental, with Hikaru Satou’s direction and Takashi Aoshima’s series composition keeping the parody, slapstick, and ensemble rotation from collapsing into noise. Critics and fan reactions converge on its adaptation strength: it preserves the outlandish gag density while giving character beats and even darker material enough respect to avoid feeling smug or preachy. The recurring limitation is also clear: viewers who dislike harem excess on principle may find the sheer volume of romantic chaos exhausting, even when the show is deliberately mocking the form.

Why You Should Watch

Watch Season 2 if you want a harem comedy that goes all-in on polyamory, meta jokes, and surreal gag escalation without treating its heroines as disposable route options. It scratches the same itch as Gintama-style absurdity and Kaguya-sama-style romantic overcommitment, but filters both through a school-harem machine that keeps adding variables instead of resetting the board. Bibury Animation Studios and director Hikaru Satou lean into rapid comic timing, while the writing uses found-family warmth to keep the chaos from becoming pure sketch comedy. The best audience is the viewer who wants maximum harem nonsense with visible structure: parody sharp enough to laugh at the genre, but sincere enough that the emotional beats are not punchlines.

Key Characters

  • R
    Rentarou Aijou

    Rentarou works because the joke is not that he is indecisive, but that he treats impossible romantic logistics with the seriousness of a battle-shounen protagonist.

  • K
    Kurumi Haraga

    Kurumi adds a appetite-driven comic rhythm to the ensemble, giving the season a new physical-gag engine rather than simply another romantic archetype.

  • M
    Mei Meido

    Mei stands out as a maid character whose devotion ties the Hanazono household’s absurd wealth and etiquette into the show’s broader found-family comedy.

What Makes It Stand Out

  • 1

    The season’s AniList tag profile is unusually explicit about its identity: Female Harem at 99%, Polyamorous at 95%, Parody at 94%, Surreal Comedy at 93%, and Meta at 88%. That combination explains why the show plays less like a conventional love polygon and more like a genre stress test.

  • 2

    Bibury Animation Studios handles a 12-episode winter 2025 run built around ensemble rotation, meaning the production has to sell quick shifts between slapstick, reaction comedy, and sentimental group scenes rather than rely on one lead pairing.

  • 3

    Series composition by Takashi Aoshima is central to the adaptation’s reception because the season has to integrate new heroines such as Kurumi Haraga and Mei Meido without sidelining the existing cast dynamic.

  • 4

    Web reactions repeatedly frame the season as “dumb honest fun” and “surprisingly hilarious,” but the more revealing praise is that it handles dark, difficult topics with respect while staying gleefully comedic.

  • 5

    The design workload is visibly specialized in the credits: Akane Yano is the main character designer, while Tsumugi Maeda and Mika Nishiyama are both credited for sub-character design and costume design, a notable setup for a cast-expansion comedy.

Fun Facts & Trivia

Fun fact 1
The anime adapts Rikito Nakamura’s original story and uses Yukiko Nozawa’s original character designs as the basis for the television character work.
Fun fact 2
Season 2 aired as a complete 12-episode run from January 12, 2025 to March 30, 2025, placing the entire cour within the Winter 2025 anime season.
Fun fact 3
The core listed production team pairs director Hikaru Satou with series composer Takashi Aoshima, while Akihito Ougiyama serves as art director.
Fun fact 4
Its cross-platform reception is closely aligned: MAL lists it at 7.87/10 from 88,770 votes, while AniList records a 78/100 score and 2,079 favourites.
Fun fact 5
The show’s public-facing identity is unusually concentrated for a romance title: AniList tags it not only as harem and school comedy, but also as Polyamorous, Found Family, Surreal Comedy, Meta, and Cute Girls Doing Cute Things.

Studios

  • Bibury Animation Studios

OtakuDen Community

Avg Rating
8.5(1 rating)
Members
2tracking
In Lists
1list
Finish Rate
100%
Completed1
Planned1

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