We’ve come to acknowledge the possibility of a love triangle in popular culture as something a greater amount of only an angle rather than a genuine three-sided shape. There’s a vertex where main female character sits, torn between two potential love interests.
Ao no Flag takes this abused plot device and changes it in such an approach that’s altogether uncommon for Japanese manga, particularly one marketed as a Shonen. Ao no Flag is a character-driven story. It’s the developing of characters that made me put resources into this manga and the intriguing way they cooperate with one another moving along like magnets so ricocheting separated.
Furthermore, despite the fact that Taichi is our main character I feel that a larger number of things happen to him than he truly makes happen himself. That’s why the supporting cast of Ao no Flag Manga is therefore necessary, as they genuinely make the story move. Taichi Ichinose was a desolate kid.
He had few friends, yet was as yet far off. That’s till someday a lady named Futaba fell for his childhood friend Touma, whom he barely talks to. Touma is an interesting character; for the most part in the manner he introduces himself as a cheerful, proud, open book to his friends in spite of being something.
As Taichi determined to help her out because this high school romance is messy and sophisticated and has our main character falling with a lady he’s attempting to line up along with his childhood friend Touma, unaware of all the whereas that his friend has really been in love with him for years.
Ao no Flag Manga neither pussyfoots around nor fetishizes same-sex connections from various perspectives a sad number of less thoughtful stories have done. What’s more, I really hail the author and artist Kaito for that.