Tsuma Netori Rei Boku No Ayamachi Kanojo No Sen... Review

In so many of these stories, the protagonist (Takuya) is a helpless victim of circumstance. But here? The "Ayamachi" (Mistake) is the catalyst. The story creates a fascinating dynamic where the protagonist isn't just being unlucky; he is being negligent. He creates the vacuum that the antagonist fills. It adds a layer of frustrating realism—you aren't just mad at the bad guy; you are disappointed in the husband. It forces the viewer to confront the idea that apathy in a relationship is just as dangerous as an active threat.

The character of Rei (the wife) is written with a surprising amount of agency—relative to the genre. The "Sentaku" (Choice) in the title implies that while she is manipulated, the tragedy lies in her mental gymnastics to justify her fall. It’s not just mind-break for the sake of it; it’s a psychological degradation where she begins to weigh her loyalty against her new reality. The tragedy isn't that she is stolen; it's that she eventually chooses to stay stolen because the villain provides something the husband failed to deliver—attention. Tsuma Netori Rei Boku no Ayamachi Kanojo no Sen...

Lilith (the studio/brand) has a very distinct, high-polish art style that usually lends itself to high-fantasy or pure-power fantasies. Using that level of production quality for a grounded, gritty, domestic tragedy makes the pill harder to swallow. It looks beautiful, but the situation is ugly. That dissonance is what makes it memorable. In so many of these stories, the protagonist

Since the title you provided cuts off, I am assuming you are referring to the popular visual novel and anime adaptation (Wife Netori: Rei - My Mistake, Her Choice). The story creates a fascinating dynamic where the