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Chito and Yuuri are two young girls who have survived the end of the world, and the series follows their journey as they explore the ruins of a towering, mechanical city. They travel together in their modified Kettenkrad as they search for food and other supplies, and they have no grand goal in mind - they just live day to day, as tomorrow's always another day. Sometimes they meet other survivors or cute robots or strange noodle creatures, but all in all, as long as Chito and Yuuri have each other, even a world that's dying is still pretty nice.
Being a post-apocalyptic series focused on travel, there's naturally plenty of potential for worldbuilding, and the relationship between Chito and Yuuri is both hilarious and sweet, and they've got an opposites-attract thing going on. The anime is twelve episodes and is available on Amazon Prime for US users, and for non-US users, HiDive is good too. Yen Press has released four of the manga volumes in English.
Gakkou Gurashi | School-Live!:
Can't get enough of the apocalypse? Then how about a zombie apocalypse? You've got four girls trapped in their suspiciously well-stocked school while the walking dead waits outside, so what do they do to survive? Why, start a School Living Club and pretend everything's normal, of course! Protagonist Yuki still believes that she's living a normal, happy school life, and her friends play along with her delusions to give their lives some kind of normalcy. The girls are resourceful and use common school tropes to keep their spirits up, but there's always an air of horror over them, especially as Yuki's delusions begin to crack.
Like with Girls' Last Tour, the apocalyptic setting and focus on slice-of-life survival allow for plenty of worldbuilding, and the strong relationships between the girls lend themselves well to femslash. The anime is twelve episodes and can be watched on Crunchyroll, and Yen Press has released nine volumes of the manga in English so far.
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Shoujo Shuumatsu Ryokou | Girls' Last Tour:
Chito and Yuuri are two young girls who have survived the end of the world, and the series follows their journey as they explore the ruins of a towering, mechanical city. They travel together in their modified Kettenkrad as they search for food and other supplies, and they have no grand goal in mind - they just live day to day, as tomorrow's always another day. Sometimes they meet other survivors or cute robots or strange noodle creatures, but all in all, as long as Chito and Yuuri have each other, even a world that's dying is still pretty nice.
Being a post-apocalyptic series focused on travel, there's naturally plenty of potential for worldbuilding, and the relationship between Chito and Yuuri is both hilarious and sweet, and they've got an opposites-attract thing going on. The anime is twelve episodes and is available on Amazon Prime for US users, and for non-US users, HiDive is good too. Yen Press has released four of the manga volumes in English.
Gakkou Gurashi | School-Live!:
Can't get enough of the apocalypse? Then how about a zombie apocalypse? You've got four girls trapped in their suspiciously well-stocked school while the walking dead waits outside, so what do they do to survive? Why, start a School Living Club and pretend everything's normal, of course! Protagonist Yuki still believes that she's living a normal, happy school life, and her friends play along with her delusions to give their lives some kind of normalcy. The girls are resourceful and use common school tropes to keep their spirits up, but there's always an air of horror over them, especially as Yuki's delusions begin to crack.
Like with Girls' Last Tour, the apocalyptic setting and focus on slice-of-life survival allow for plenty of worldbuilding, and the strong relationships between the girls lend themselves well to femslash. The anime is twelve episodes and can be watched on Crunchyroll, and Yen Press has released nine volumes of the manga in English so far.
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