Re:Prism
Oshimeter
Synopsis
When two high school girls decide to perform an original song together at their school music festival — that's the whole setup, and somehow it's enough. Ruka is a quiet, classically trained pianist who mostly keeps to herself. Hinata is her opposite: loud, full of energy, and singing everything like the room is already a stage. They form a duo called Weather Planet, and their song is called Re:Prism. What follows is less about drama and more about watching two people figure out how to actually make something together when their instincts pull in different directions. The animation leans into the music hard — performances feel expressive in a way that goes beyond just watching characters play instruments. The soundtrack itself blends classical piano with contemporary pop, which fits the whole Ruka-and-Hinata dynamic pretty neatly. It's worth knowing upfront that this is a single music video, not a full series, so you're getting one tight, self-contained piece rather than an ongoing story. If you've seen Re:Stage! Dream Days or K-On! and liked how those handled the quieter, more genuine side of making music with a friend, this sits in similar territory. It doesn't have the emotional gut-punch of Your Lie in April, but it shares that idea that music is how some people say the things they can't put into words otherwise. Wholesome, easy to sit with, and the song is genuinely good.
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