
Shikaru Neko
Oshimeter
Synopsis
Somewhere along the quiet streets of a small Japanese town, a nameless cat wanders without purpose, and that's basically the whole show. Shikaruneko doesn't belong to anyone — it just drifts from street to street, poking its nose into shops, startling old ladies, stealing scraps, and occasionally sitting with someone who looks like they needed the company. Each episode is a small vignette: the cat crosses paths with a kid on their way home from school, or lingers near a lonely shopkeeper, or gets into a standoff with the neighborhood dog. Nothing dramatic happens, and that's entirely the point. The human characters cycle through — students, elderly residents, families — and Shikaruneko's brief presence in their day shifts something small, a moment of warmth or distraction that didn't exist before. The animation matches the mood perfectly, all soft colors and simple lines that feel like flipping through a picture book you forgot you owned. It's the kind of thing you put on when your brain is fried and you just want to feel okay for a little while. If you liked the quiet atmosphere of Wata no Kunihoshi, or you enjoyed the cat-centric charm of Nekopara but wished it leaned harder into the cozy slice-of-life angle, this fits that space nicely. There's no conflict, no villain, no stakes. Just a cat doing cat things in a town full of people living their lives. Sometimes that's enough.
MANGA BRIDGE
This season covers Chapters 1-14 of the manga. Continue reading from Chapter 1.

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