
New City, New Friends!
Oshimeter
Synopsis
In a peaceful coastal town, a pair of kids stumble upon an abandoned music studio along the shore and decide to fix it up. That's basically the premise, and honestly, for a short music special aimed at younger viewers, it works really well. Haru plays guitar, Sora sings, and together they start pulling in other locals — like a retired music producer named Mr. Tanaka who clearly has stories he's not telling, and Mei, a pianist who's too nervous to perform in front of anyone. The whole thing builds toward getting the community together for a concert, which sounds simple, but the way it handles the small struggles — broken instruments, self-doubt, convincing people to care about something old — gives it more heart than you'd expect from a one-off collaboration between Odekake Kozame and Pinkfong. The animation has this watercolor-painted quality to the backgrounds that makes every scene feel warm and lived-in, and the original soundtrack blends genres in a way that keeps the musical moments from getting repetitive. If you liked the gentle, exploratory vibe of Amanchu or the kid-friendly adventure energy of Kaiketsu Zorori, this sits somewhere in between. It's also got a bit of that Sasami: Magical Girls Club charm where the real magic is just characters connecting over something they love. A single-episode watch that's wholesome without being saccharine, and genuinely pleasant to sit through.
Episode Guide
MANGA BRIDGE
This season covers Chapters 1-null of the manga. Continue reading from Chapter 1.

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