Beautiful Girl Hunter
Oshimeter
Synopsis
Before it even started, Tetsuya's life was broken. Born from his mother's assault, raised by a man who resented his existence, he grew up in a household where cruelty was routine and escape felt impossible. The early episodes sit with that damage — the neglect, the small humiliations, the way years of that kind of treatment quietly reshape a person into something unrecognizable. By the time he's an adult, Tetsuya isn't looking for redemption. He's looking for targets. This is a 4-episode OVA from 1989, produced in the gekiga tradition — that raw, heavy-lined art style that treats ink like it has weight. If you've seen Violence Jack or Shura no Hitsugi, you already know the aesthetic: ugly, deliberate, not interested in softening anything. The visual approach matches the subject matter in a way that cleaner animation simply couldn't. It's grim in a way that feels purposeful rather than gratuitous, at least in how it frames Tetsuya's psychology and the environment that produced him. Fair warning — this is hentai with violent content, and it earns its reputation as difficult material. It's not something you put on casually. But if you're drawn to dark psychological narratives in the vein of Violence at Noon, and you're curious about what late-80s underground anime was willing to explore, this sits in that specific, uncomfortable niche. Approach it knowing exactly what it is.
Episode Guide
MANGA BRIDGE
This season covers Chapters 1-null of the manga. Continue reading from Chapter 1.

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