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The Fall Anime 2025 Preview Guide - With You, Our Love Will Make it Through

How would you rate episode 1 of
With You, Our Love Will Make it Through ?
Community score: 3.5



What is this?

ourlove01.png

When high schooler Mari bumps into a fellow tardy student, she's surprised to find out he's a beastfolk who's to attend her school. After all, it's not rare for beastfolk to coexist alongside humans, but it's still uncommon, with the prejudice and all. Nervous to meet one at first, Mari soon learns there's more to him than his furry exterior. In fact, the more she gets to know him, the more she finds herself drawn to him, his steadfastness, his kindheartedness, and…his body…

With You, Our Love Will Make it Through is based on a manga series by Chihiro Yuzuki. The anime series is streaming on Crunchyroll on Tuesdays.


How was the first episode?

ourlove02.png
Bolts
Rating:

Who is ready to get super defensive about whether or not they are furry? As an unapologetic furry myself, I was very much looking forward to this show, despite not knowing many details beyond it seeming like a typical slice-of-life setup with beastfolk. The idea of different groups of people integrating into another society is always interesting, especially when viewed through the lens of adolescence. Adolescence is already a time when characters are going through physical and psychological changes, so adding societal pressures is a great way to generate drama. I'm also curious about how exactly the beastfolk will be used allegorically and thematically.

We're already seeing that with the setup, as these beastfolk are prejudiced against in some way, although it seems as if a lot of prejudice comes from the inherent mystery around them. I'm shocked that the story takes the approach that beastfolk are not only somewhat recent but also the result of experiments. I'm not sure how I feel about that, because it could imply a hierarchical relationship between the beastfolk and regular humans, but we also don't know how the beastfolk came to be. There aren't many of them, and it seems humans are relegating them to a very specific area out of fear. I feel like a lot of the background information we were given implied a darker underbelly than how the rest of the story plays out.

The romance itself seems fine, it's just very typical. We have Tsunagu Hidaka, a big guy who's pretty sweet and soft-spoken, but because of how he looks, he gets judged and teased. Mari Asaka is the only one who sees that goodness in him, and they end up forming a special bond. If it weren't for the beastfolk angle and the above-average presentation, this wouldn't stand out as much. I'm sure the fake-out at the end isn't actually Hidaka trying to devour Mari, as I think the show is probably leaning more towards arousing results. There is clearly a connection here, but how far the show wants to take it is a different story. For now, I'm more invested in the world than in the relationship, but I can see a reality where these two interests overlap in a way that elevates the product as a whole.


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Richard Eisenbeis
Rating:

Look, I'm not going to be able to comment at all on the fetish aspect of this anime. If furries are your thing, I have no idea if this is what you're looking for or not (though, given the lack of similar anime, it's probably the best you're going to get in this area outside of BEASTARS). However, as an allegory, I have plenty to say about With You, Our Love Will Make it Through.

Outside of the final few moments of the episode, it really doesn't matter to the story and themes if Tsunagu is a “beastfolk” or not—all that matters is that he's not ethnically Japanese. This is the story of a foreigner coming to Japan and the cultural challenges (and outright racism) he encounters. As a white guy who has lived in Japan for over two decades at this point, to say I can empathize is an understatement.

Sure, I've never been locked in a storage room; however, have I ever walked into a room and had everyone stop and stare at me simply because of the color of my skin? Have I ever had people refuse to sit next to me on a train because they were afraid of me? Have I ever heard strangers cursing me out behind my back simply for existing and being different—and had to ignore it so as not to reinforce negative stereotypes? Yes to all of these—and far more than just a single time.

More than just the overt stuff, this anime does a good job of capturing the more unintentional racism in Japan. The asking of rude questions and having people assume stereotypes are true is super common as well. There's no ill intent, but it does come off as dehumanizing at the very least.

In a homogeneous nation like Japan, what's different is equal parts fascinating and scary. Some people are drawn to it, and some people shun it. It takes time and patience to cut through all the cultural baggage and really get to know each other on a personal level. Even one episode in, Tsunagu and Mari are already making solid headway in this area. So even if the furry aspect isn't your thing, there seems to be plenty here worth watching.


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Caitlin Moore
Rating:

Using fantasy racism as an analog for real-world discrimination is the oldest trick in the book, and With You, Our Love Will Make it Through has absolutely zero shame about using it. In this world, scientific experiments have resulted in the existence of a few thousand beastfolk, human-animal hybrids who live in their own walled-off society. When Mari's high school announces they'll be piloting a program for young beastfolk to integrate into mainstream classes, she and her peers are apprehensive. After all, beastfolk have a reputation for being dangerous.

From there, the story plays out exactly as you would expect. Mari has a surprise encounter with Hidaka, the new wolf-boy student, where his kindness and gentleness challenge her assumptions. She finds herself drawn to him, even as their classmates make insensitive remarks at best and bully him at worst. It even culminates with the old chestnut of him straddling her on the ground as he shields her from falling objects when other students trap them in the PE equipment shed. It is completely predictable every step of the way.

But… isn't it sad that this is so predictable? Hidaka's behavior is exactly what people who are visibly “other” try to do in order to keep themselves out of danger: keep your head down and don't stand out more than you already do. Even if someone tries to provoke you, you can't retaliate because you'll just be confirming people's suspicions that you're inherently violent and dangerous. Like I said, the show isn't subtle about its allegorical nature.

Despite doing the obvious, it's remarkably well-executed. Other than some mild animation snafus that most people probably wouldn't even notice unless they were searching for them (such as a walk cycle that doesn't quite match the speed the character is moving at), it's quite lovely to look at. Mari and Hidaka have believable chemistry, in no part due to Takuya Eguchi's performance as the soft-spoken wolf boy. Although… how does one kiss a boy with a snout?

Despite it all, it kind of broke down for me at the episode's ending, when Hidaka held Mari down and started licking her. While I understand the kink at play here, that his bestial nature is always lurking under the surface, it's at odds with the anti-discrimination message. It makes me wonder if the series will be able to square these two elements.


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