tfm_animation★★★★★AnimeSummer Pockets
Oshimeter
Synopsis
Following his grandmother's passing, Hairi Takahara makes his way to a quiet little island called Torishirojima, ostensibly to help his aunt sort through old belongings. Really, though, he's running from something in the city — something he doesn't quite want to name yet. The island is the kind of place where afternoons stretch on forever and nobody's in a hurry to do anything. He meets Shiroha Naruse, a girl who keeps to herself and carries this air of gentle mystery, along with a handful of other characters — his energetic cousin Umi, the adventurous Kamome, the enigmatic Tsumugi — each with their own stories simmering just below the surface. If you've ever watched Clannad or Air and felt that slow emotional build where everything seems peaceful until it quietly breaks your heart, this is cut from the same cloth. It's a Key visual novel adaptation, so you kind of know what you're signing up for: warm summer days, an evocative soundtrack that does half the emotional heavy lifting, and character arcs that start light before pulling you somewhere deeper than expected. Studio feel. handles the island setting with real care — you can almost feel the sea breeze. At 26 episodes, it has room to breathe and let these relationships develop naturally. Fans of Kanon will recognize the rhythm. Just don't expect to get through it dry-eyed.
Episode Guide
Characters
Shiroha Naruse
Isolated islander, Shiroha is composed yet struggles with social interaction, often wishing others wouldn't get involved.
Portrayed by Kohara Konomi
Ao Sorakado
Beloved islander, known for her kindness and mysterious naps, works at a local sweets shop.
Portrayed by Takamori Natsumi
Tsumugi Wenders
Diligent half-German girl searching for her path, Tsumugi helps clean the island's shores.
Portrayed by Iwai Emiri
Hairi Takahara
City-bred Hairi flees to his late grandmother's island estate to escape a past trauma.
Portrayed by Chiba Shouya
Community Feed
tfm_animation★★★★★Anime
mumumu★★★☆☆AnimeThe time-loop mystery that should drive the plot gets buried under harem-comedy filler, the protagonist stays an empty vessel the entire run, and the emotional payoff never lands because the narrative contradicts itself every other episode. Visually pretty and sonically polished, sure. Kayo's soundtrack and Doga Kobo's animation do heavy lifting but the writing can't bridge the gap between "cute island slice-of-life" and "existential time-loop drama."
ahmaddanialikhwan789★★★★★EP 26What a beautiful ending, it really brought tears to my eyes, the soundtrack and the animation are really beautiful. 10/10




