Tagline: Reset. Relive. Reclaim.
, these episodes condense the game's plot into high-production-value segments. Digital Distribution:
: As an adult production, it leans heavily into explicit scenes, often categorized under "Ara Ara" or "Step-family" tropes in community discussions.
Armed with adult confidence, he systematically turns the tables on his sister Saki , his classmates, and his childhood friend Sera , converting his past humiliations into positions of total dominance. Narrative Structure & Episode Breakdown
I'm assuming you meant "Gaki ni Modotte Yarinaoshi" which is a Japanese phrase. The phrase roughly translates to "Let's Go Back to Being Childhood Friends and Do It Again" or "Revisiting Childhood Friendship".
, where it remains a high-ranking title in the "regression" category. 4. Key Characters
The story follows "Boku" (a generic self-insert placeholder for the protagonist), an adult man who has reached maturity with nothing but painful memories. He has spent his life entirely isolated, possessing zero luck with women and harboring deep-seated trauma from being constantly bullied and looked down upon by the opposite sex during his formative years. His only positive memory anchors around , a kind neighborhood girl and friend of his older sister who treated him with genuine warmth.
Establishing the time-slip mechanics and reclaiming confidence in the home environment. Saki (Sister), Classmates, and Sera
But the weight of carrying two lifetimes began to crush him. He was 15 in body, 57 in mind. His friends were children. He couldn't date—the thought was grotesque. He couldn't talk about his favorite '90s bands because they hadn't formed yet. He was profoundly, achingly lonely.
Kenji looked him dead in the eye. Not with anger, but with the flat, tired confidence of a man who’s dealt with worse bosses than a six-year-old bully. "Is that a problem, Ryo-kun? You can help if you're so interested."
