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Discussion, Resources, Roundtables, & Reviews

love & magic academy

Love & Magic Academy: Who Cares about the Heroine and Villainess? I Want to Be the Strongest in this Otome Game World, Vol. 2

November 2, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Toyozo Okamura and Parum. Released in Japan as “Renai Mahou Gakuin: Heroine mo Akuyaku Reijou mo Kankeinai. Ore wa Otome Game Sekai de Saikyou wo Mezasu” by GC Novels. Released in North America by Cross Infinite World. Translated by Jordan Taylor.

This was the second book in a row I read where the narrator is essentially a very powerful, emotionless void who casually breezes through everything. Fortunately, with this book, we do get the occasional hint that the author is going somewhere with this other than “isn’t he really cool?”. Now, a lot of this is the standard romance novel shtick of “the girls all like him but he is too dense to notice it”, though with Arius it’s less dense and more does not even understand the emotion at all. He once realized he liked a girl, discovered she was engaged to someone else, and since then the part of his brain devoted to love was simply turned off. But there’s also a sense that Arius has to remember that just because he can do everything himself so the others don’t have to endanger themselves doesn’t mean that’s always the best choice. That said, he can be dull sometimes.

Eric is still trying to find concrete evidence to prove that Duke Jordan is evil, but hasn’t quite got it yet. To help things along, he’s asked the duke’s hotheaded son to participate in the upcoming fighting tournament – third-years normally don’t – so he can beat him, force him to throw a tantrum, and see if the Duke then tries to kill Eric. This works incredibly well, of course, mostly as Arius is not the only one who is trying to make it through this world while depending on absolutely no one. Arius, of course, wins the tournament itself, and in his spare time also solos extremely hard dungeons and teaches his friends and not-quite-love interests how to fight. Unfortunately for Arius, the legendary battle between the hero and the demon lord is about to start again – and they both want him.

This world appears to attract reincarnations like flies. We’ve already got Arius, whose childhood friend was obsessed with the otome game he finds himself in. Then there’s Milia, who is doing much better now that she’s had it explained to her that she does not have to try to do exactly what the game said. And in this volume we get Alisa, who is the power behind the new hero (an arrogant idiot who wants to rule the world – we know the moment we see him we don’t have to care about him). She reveals to Arius that she’s not only reincarnated, but knows he is as well. I’m not entirely certain if there’s some sort of driving force behind all these isekai’d Japanese folks messing up the plot, but if so it’s working but also it’s not – this volume ends with the new Demon Lord kidnapping Arius and spiriting him away to their territory. Which means, much as I do think the other characters get to have lives of their own and concerns of their own, that the book itself still has to revolve around him. He is the main character.

Despite the narrator being another of those poker face/poker voice sorts, this is an improvement on the first book. If you like otome game narratives and don’t mind that it stars a guy who can do literally everything (except understand that women are attracted to him), it’s a good one.

Filed Under: love & magic academy, REVIEWS

Love & Magic Academy: Who Cares about the Heroine and Villainess? I Want to Be the Strongest in this Otome Game World, Vol. 1

February 18, 2025 by Sean Gaffney

By Toyozo Okamura and Parum. Released in Japan as “Renai Mahou Gakuin: Heroine mo Akuyaku Reijou mo Kankeinai. Ore wa Otome Game Sekai de Saikyou wo Mezasu” by GC Novels. Released in North America by Cross Infinite World. Translated by Jordan Taylor.

For obvious reasons, I write these reviews as if people are coming across these reviews individually rather than sequentially. That said, if you are reading these day by day… boy, there’s been a lot of overpowered protagonists, right? I mean, yes, Sean, it’s a light novel, but even more so than usual. Arius in particular, in this book written around 2021-22 or so, feels like a Fanfiction.net story from 2009 or so. You know, the ones that have “Dark/Grey/Independent Harry” in the summary. I will not lie, this book is filled with tedious scenes of Arius marching through dungeons, or criticizing others for marching through dungeons wrong, and generally being the best thing since sliced bread. That said, I did find things here to like. Most of them have to do with the parts of this book that are not a dungeon crawl, as it’s another otome game reincarnation story.

A nameless college researcher dies from overwork and finds himself as a baby – with his full memories from Japan – and realizes he’s in the otome game Love & Magic Academy. His childhood friend was obsessed with it and forced him to play it, so he knows how it’s supposed to go. He also knows that the makers of the game wanted to make an RPG, but it failed, so they laid over the otome game setup but kept the RPG undertones, meaning this world is filled with terrifying monsters (who are polite enough to stay in dungeons). Arius, as he grows up, decides to become a strong adventurer and fight amazing battles. That said, he does also need to do the whole “I am the son of a marquis and have to attend the noble magic academy” thing. But he’s not following the plot.

So I did promise I’d talk about what’s interesting. The interesting thing, for me, was that this is a rare case where no one is particularly trying to stick to the plot. Arius isn’t. The “heroine”, Milia, at first feels she has to, but eventually Arius convinces her that these are not characters but people. And there is not, so far, any “guiding force” that is forcing the events of the game to happen regardless of how everyone acts. It’s honestly refreshing, a huge “free will, boys!” moment that suffuses the book. I also appreciated how, for all his cool “I’m not interested in romance” bullshit, Arius actually does get to be a teenage boy near the end of the book, as he clearly realizes he likes noble “villainess” Sophia, but she’s engaged to the prince, so welp. (It’s also heavily hinted, but never stated, that Milia is the “childhood friend” he had in Japan.) More of Arius being uncool, please.

I’m not sure there’s enough here to make people want to read it unless their ability to tolerate OP bullshit is high (he’s speaking full sentences to his parents at six months old). But if you gotta catch all the otome game books, this won’t make you angry. Decent-ish.

Filed Under: love & magic academy, REVIEWS

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