The 100 Girlfriends Who Really, Really, Really, Really, Really Love You Season 3
君のことが大大大大大好きな100人の彼女 3期 (Kimi no Koto ga Daidaidaidaidaisuki na 100-nin no Kanojo 3rd Season)
- Comedy
- Romance
- Harem
- Parody
- School
- Duration
- 23 min
- Aired
- Jul 5, 2026 to ?
- Status
- Currently Airing
Synopsis
In the third season of *The 100 Girlfriends Who Really, Really, Really, Really, Really Love You*, the story continues to follow the charmingly chaotic life of its protagonist, as he navigates the complexities of romance with an extraordinary harem of devoted girlfriends. Each episode delves into the unique dynamics and humorous situations that arise from his relationships, showcasing the quirks and personalities of his many admirers.
As the group faces various challenges, from misunderstandings to comical school events, the bonds between them deepen, offering a delightful blend of laughter and heartwarming moments. This season promises to amplify the antics and emotions, providing a fresh take on love and friendship in a vibrant school setting.
Otaku Consensus
Season 3 is landing as a confident continuation for viewers already tuned to 100 Girlfriends’ wavelength, with Hikaru Satou’s direction and Takashi Aoshima’s series composition keeping the series’ slapstick, meta jokes, and expanding cast from collapsing into noise. Its strongest asset is adaptation discipline: Bibury Animation Studios and Akane Yano’s character-design team make the polyamorous harem concept feel visually organized rather than interchangeable. The recurring criticism is just as clear: the show’s boundary-pushing harem humor, including taboo-adjacent tags such as incest and age gap, remains a hard filter rather than a minor quirk.
Why You Should Watch
Watch Season 3 if you want a harem comedy that treats escalation as a craft problem, not just a numbers joke. It scratches the same rapid-fire parody itch as Gintama while using the romantic-comedy machinery of shows like Kaguya-sama: Love Is War, but without turning jealousy into the main engine. The appeal is in how precisely it juggles slapstick, meta commentary, school-comedy setups, and a deliberately polyamorous framework while still giving individual heroines recognizable rhythms. Viewers who like clean archetype play, voice-driven character comedy, and absurd sincerity will get the most out of it. Viewers looking for grounded romance or restrained fanservice should know the series is built to test tolerance, not politely stay inside genre lines.
Key Characters
- RRentarou Aijou(VA: Wataru Katou)
Rentarou is the rare harem lead whose defining trait is not indecision but maximal commitment, which lets the comedy target logistics, ethics, and stamina instead of simple romantic dithering.
- NNano Eiai(VA: Asami Seto)
Nano stands out through her efficiency-first coolness, giving the ensemble a deadpan counterweight to the show’s louder slapstick impulses.
- HHakari Hanazono(VA: Kaede Hondo)
Hakari is one of the series’ key engines of romantic excess, with a performance style that makes sweetness and shamelessness feel like two sides of the same joke.
- HHahari Hanazono(VA: Sumire Uesaka)
Hahari is a fan-favorite source of tonal whiplash, pushing the series’ parody of harem wish fulfillment into more brazen and self-aware territory.
What Makes It Stand Out
- 1
Bibury Animation Studios handles the season, with Akane Yano on character design and Mika Nishiyama plus Riko Iwata credited for costume design, a staffing setup that matters for a cast whose comedy depends on instantly readable silhouettes and outfit-based gags.
- 2
Takashi Aoshima is credited with series composition, giving the season a dedicated structure lead for balancing rapid slapstick, meta humor, school-comedy beats, and the accumulation of recurring character dynamics.
- 3
AniList’s tag profile is unusually explicit for a romance comedy: Slapstick at 100%, Female Harem at 98%, Polyamorous at 97%, and Primarily Female Cast at 95%, marking the series as a full-commitment genre experiment rather than a conventional love-triangle romcom.
- 4
The season’s reception shows a notable gap between reach and approval: on MyAnimeList it holds an 8.23 score from 4,473 votes with a #411 rank, while its popularity sits much lower at #3339.
- 5
The creative credits preserve the manga’s core authorship line, with Rikito Nakamura credited for the original story and Yukiko Nozawa for the original character designs.
Fun Facts & Trivia
- Fun fact 1
- The original work is credited to writer Rikito Nakamura and original character designer Yukiko Nozawa, preserving the manga’s two-part creative identity in the anime credits.
- Fun fact 2
- Mika Nishiyama carries two design-related credits this season: sub character design and costume design, while Riko Iwata is also credited for costume design.
- Fun fact 3
- The art pipeline lists Akihito Ougiyama as art director and Tomoya Asami for art design, separating overall background supervision from the broader visual-design planning.
- Fun fact 4
- The season began airing on July 5, 2026 and is listed as currently airing, so its score and ranking are still based on an in-progress reception cycle.
- Fun fact 5
- Across platforms, the early numbers are aligned: MyAnimeList lists an 8.23/10 average, while AniList lists an 80/100 score and 513 favourites.
Studios
- Bibury Animation Studios












